Charli Brissey is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and teacher who works choreographically with various technologies and materials. This primarily includes bodies, cameras, objects, instincts, language, and ecosystems. They are invested in movement practices to illuminate the role of the nonhuman in formation-practices of self and material environment, and turn to interspecies ecologies to challenge distinctions between nature and culture. They have been creating performances, installations, experimental videos, and written scholarship for over fifteen years, and have been presented in various galleries, conferences, film festivals, and performance venues nationally and internationally. This includes the National Queer Arts Festival (San Francisco, US), Movement Research at Judson Church (NYC, US), The Eye Film Institute (Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Dance on Camera at Lincoln Center (NYC, US), Center for Performance Research (NYC, US), Vancouver Queer Film Festival (Vancouver, BC), Zurich Moves! Dance Festival (Zurich, Switzerland), Paris International Feminist Film Festival (Paris, France), The Arts in Society Conference (Budapest, Hungary), Seattle Lesbian and Gay Film Festival (Seattle, US), Queer Publics Symposium (Urbana, US), International Conference on the Image (Berkeley, CA), and several others. Brissey’s work has been funded through various University grants as well as Yellowhouse NYC, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Professional Fellowship, Arch and Bruce Brown Foundation, and the Virginia Commission for the Arts. They received a BFA in Dance & Choreography and an MFA in Kinetic Imaging from Virginia Commonwealth University, as well as a second MFA from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Brissey is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Dance at the University of Michigan.
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I am currently work on an interdisciplinary multi-year study called Agua Viva: Choreographies of Water set to premiere the first iteration in September 2020. This project looks choreographically at the evolution of fish and benthic ecosystems as potentially radical sites to inform how we move through our precarious terrestrial future. This research is emerging through intersections of dance, science and technology studies, and queer/feminist theory. It will result in an evening length performance, a video series, and an interactive archival website that will document the research process and include all field notes, data sets, interviews, videos, writing samples, photographs, diagrams, and other process components.
As an extension of this project I am also developing a book manuscript titled Dancing at the End of the World: Choreographies of Time and Uncertainty. Weaving theory, speculative fabulation, personal anecdote, and science fiction, this experimental text moves between various sites, forms, and structures to examine our relationships to material environments in our current political-ecological climate. It centers dance and choreography as invaluable methodologies to research social, political, technological, and environmental phenomena.
BECAUSE ILL NEVER HAVE A BLOG HERE IS
AN ENTANGLED BIBLIOGRAPHY
OF INTERESTS, ARTICLES, HAPPENINGS & THINKERS
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THESE ARE THINGS I SWIRL AROUND
THESE ARE THINGS I KEEP AT ARMS REACH
THESE ARE THINGS THAT HAVE CHANGED ME
THESE ARE THINGS I FIND FASCINATING AND OR CHALLENGING
THESE ARE CONVERSATIONS I WANT TO HAVE
MANY OF THESE THINGS ARE LINKS
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access
animals (including humans)
attitudes
camping as research methodology
caves
dinosaurs
ecosystems
elephants
entanglements
'food'
forgiveness
gender fuckery
industrialism (getting rid of it)
interspecies interdependence
invisibility and visibility
kinship
language
nonhuman family structures
orientations
otters
phenomonology
plants
prehistory
quantum physics
Sara Ahmed's 'Feminist Killjoy'
scrappiness
self-care
sketchy shit
soccer
spacetimematter reconfigurations
sustainable creative practices
sustainable everything
systems and structures
vitalism






