Top 20 Quotes & Sayings by Siobhan Davies

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English dancer Siobhan Davies.
Last updated on November 8, 2024.
Siobhan Davies

Dame Siobhan Davies DBE, often known as Sue Davies, was a dancer with the London Contemporary Dance Theatre during the 1970s, and became one of its leading choreographers creating work such as Sphinx] (1977). In 1988, she founded her own company, Siobhan Davies Dance.

We need to think on a broader plane, we need to do more than we're doing.
Those 25 dancers we worked with for a day, in as highly productive a way as possible - a long class, a period of teaching bits of the repertory - in fact I didn't teach Bank, I've used parts of Oil and Water.
Well, it's not full time - my dancers are only paid for six months of the year in two three-month blocks; but yes, it is possible we could do it in another year.
Independent dance - and, fine, it's a very good thing that it remains independent - is a much tougher life: all dancers expect that, and accept that there will be periods of not being able to work, provided there are choice moments during the year when they really can work.
One of our problems is our sense of discipline - dancers have an extraordinary sense of self-discipline. — © Siobhan Davies
One of our problems is our sense of discipline - dancers have an extraordinary sense of self-discipline.
They improve greatly, and sometimes I go and see the performances they do and I am consciously aware that there isn't enough work for the good dancers.
It's not just for its influence on us, but to know that we can play a part in it, to understand the influence that we have outside our own existence.
What we do now is to be valued - but we need to do more, so that it's more exciting to other people, and therefore that excitement shines back on us and we're able to have the energy to do more, to widen our creativity.
The dance world is too small in lots of ways - it's too intense, it rattles around itself, and it needs exposing to other ideas.
Then I came in twice a week - for my own enjoyment as well as to be a guide. And then we started to apply some of the splinters of the ideas back into the piece.
The first 2 weeks, they didn't learn the piece - they went through the process of how the piece was made.
They should be working, and there isn't enough work.
I don't start a piece knowing exactly what effect it's going to have. There is a seed of an idea that I could never articulate, right at the beginning of the piece, literally like one cell.
If I only made dances about my own experience in dance, it would always be on my track, and I don't want that, I want to be on the track of where dance can take me.
There's a mass of places, really, where the idea started.
On the other hand in London you can get an audience that desires dance to go as far as it can go: they've seen the bricks of ideas built over a period so therefore there is an acceptance of what otherwise might seem out on a limb.
Yes - it's the same in any other work - the more you massage your thinking the more capable I believe you are of expanding how you go about things and learning.
We're talking about people who've already got 3-4, if not 5-6 years' experience or more, and it's about trying to help professionals develop, using us as a resource for that development.
We could ask artists from abroad to come in too, so that there could be a mixing and matching of skills from Europe, America and here which would widen our world.
It's not just for its influence on us, but to knowknow that we can play a part in it, to understand the influence that we have outside our own existence. — © Siobhan Davies
It's not just for its influence on us, but to knowknow that we can play a part in it, to understand the influence that we have outside our own existence.
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