Butoh is an explosive, convention-shattering performance art that has redefined the limits of dance and theatre. The form was created by a handful of avant-garde postwar Japanese artists who drew upon their native agrarian myths, the iconclastic theatre of Antonin Artaud, and the influences of Western modern dance.
But Butoh is more. It is perhaps the most daring attempt yet made to translate the msyterious, often tormented life of the unconscious into the communal medium of theatre.
The first true Butoh performance, an adaptation of Yukio Mishima's novel Forbidden Colors, scandalized Japanese audiences when it premiered in 1959. Its creator, Tatsumi Hijikata, was banned by the Modern Dance Association and branded an outlaw dancer. In the years that followed, a small group of talented dancers and choreographers extended Hijikata's vision and, more recently, traveling Butoh troupes have conducted international tours in America.
In Butoh: Dance of the Dark Soul, Ethan Hoffman creates virtually a new genre of photographic theatre and gives us an invaluable contribution to the literature of contemporary dance and theatre. The performers featured include Kazuo Ohno, Yoko Ashikawa, Akaji Maro and the group Dai Rakuda Kan, Min Tanaka, and many others.
Mark Holborn's essay is based on extensive interviews with Hijikata and other major Butoh pioneers.
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