KARLSRUHE.- For over 50 years, William Forsythe has influenced the perception of choreographic practice through his visionary concepts and productions. The award-winning U.S. choreographer is now transferring his extensive archive to the
ZKM | Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe, which will ensure the long-term preservation of the audiovisual media and documents and make them accessible to the public.
William Forsythe (*1949, New York) has been active in the field of choreography for over 50 years. His work is acknowledged for reorienting the practice of ballet from its identification with classical repertoire to a dynamic 21st century art form. Forsythes deep interest in the fundamental principles of organization of choreography has led him to produce a wide range of projects including installations, films, and web-based knowledge creation.
The ZKM | Karlsruhes and William Forsythes work is linked by their interdisciplinary experimental practice that encompasses all artistic formats. Thus, the CD-ROM William Forsythe: Improvisation Technologies. A Tool for the Analytical Dance Eye developed by William Forsythe with the ZKM | Karlsruhe in 1999 was groundbreaking for its exploration and transmission of choreographic concepts via digital media. The transfer of William Forsythes archive to the ZKM builds on these joint artistic collaborations and opens the way forward to a new long-term perspective for scholarly and arts-based research.
The holdings of the archive cover William Forsythes creative period since the 1970s in its entirety: from his time at the Stuttgart Ballet beginning in 1976, at the Ballet Frankfurt (19842004), and The Forsythe Company (20052015) to the present. It contains an extensive collection of archival video recordings of rehearsals, performances and installations, as well as programs, posters, reviews, photographs, publications, correspondence, awards, and other documents. In the long term, William Forsythes personal production notes will also be added to the archive.
By handing over the archive to the ZKM and making it available to the public and researchers, there is now the opportunity to explore Forsythes revolutionary collective collaborations rendering it useful for future artistic research.
The long-term preservation of the valuable video holdings of the William Forsythe Archive is ensured by the ZKMs proven expertise in the field of audiovisual media as well as by the acclaimed work of the ZKMs Laboratory for Antiquated Video Systems.
William Forsythe:
My artistic relationship with ZKM goes back a considerable way, but now this relationship will go an even greater distance, into the future.
ZKM had been the incubator for one of the most important projects of my career Improvisation Technologies, and my trust and respect for my collaborators at the institution was cemented by the enduring outcome of their skilled efforts. The team of deeply engaged experts in the ZKM Archive is a continuation of this legacy of professional excellence, and an indicator for truly sound and also novel outcomes for archival practices."