Like the Sea: Dancing with Mary Glass (1946-2021)听听

Speaker: Carol Mavor - Writer and Professor Emeritus, University of Manchester

A very visual lecture with images and film clips

By Carol Mavor, Writer and Professor Emeritus, University of Manchester

Along with other women, who are dead or alive, who are real or fictional鈥擬ary Glass is part of an invisible chain of dancers, painters, literary heroines, writers, figures from my life, who embrace my own story.听

You are more myself than I am鈥擨 say to all of them鈥攎y self-same-siblings.

Mary Glass, who is wildly different than me, is closest to my heart.

When I was studying dance.

I wanted to be like Anna Halprin.

I wanted to be like Yvonne Rainer.听

I wanted to be like Simone Forti.

I wanted to be like Ruth Beckford.听

I wanted to be like Trisha Brown.听

I deeply wanted to be Mary Glass (even if, at that time, I had never heard of her).

Mary Glass is an innovative dancer and choreographer, quietly instrumental to the San Francisco Bay Area art scene of the 1960s and 70s鈥barely known today鈥攁dmired for her experimental movements based on sounds and images of the Pacific.听

As a child, Glass took her first dance class with Anna Halprin on her famed redwood dance deck in Marin County, Calif. Dancing with the blue sky as her ceiling鈥攕urrounded by magical madrones and redwoods鈥 the effect on Glass was seismic. Fittingly, Halprin called her classes 鈥渄ance experiences.鈥澨

Glass鈥檚 lifestyle, anxieties and dance reflect鈥攚ith her characteristic audible (and inaudible) quietude鈥攖he geography of Northern California (human, physical, environmental). 鈥楬appenings鈥, Zero Population Growth (ZPG), object-relations theory, feminism, Vietnam, ecology. Today Glass is remembered by an increasingly diminishing handful of devotees. I am one. Like 鈥渨ater in water,鈥 we are like the sea.听听

Carol Mavor is writer who takes creative risks in form (literary and experimental) and political risks in content (sexuality, race in America, child-loving and the maternal).听

Her Reading Boyishly: Roland Barthes, J. M. Barrie, Jacques Henri Lartigue, Marcel Proust, and D. W. Winnicott was named by Grayson Perry in the Observer as his 2008听鈥楤ook of the Year.鈥

惭补惫辞谤鈥檚 Blue Mythologies: A Study of the Colour 鈥榗oaxes us into having a less complacent attitude鈥ven when it comes to something as apparently innocuous as a color鈥 (Los Angeles Review of Books).听

For Maggie Nelson, Mavor’s Aurelia: Art and Literature Through the Eyes and Mouth of the Fairy Tale is 鈥enigmatic and as full of magic as its subjects.鈥

Max Porter sees Like a Lake as 鈥a novella teasing an essay, or an erotic ghost haunting a fictional memoir, or a negative searching for its lost prints. It is an unnerving question-machine where desire, memory, loss and invention are staged, folded and held, tasted, re-made and undone. It鈥檚 a strange, vivid, troubling and beautiful book.鈥

Her Serendipity: The Afterlife of Objects is forthcoming from Reaktion Books.听

Listen to Mavor in an interview on the color blue as part of Phoebe Judge鈥檚 intriguing series on love:

Organised by Dr Alice Butler (The 91自拍) as part of 迟丑别听鈥淲hat a Hazard a Letter Is鈥: Correspondence in Feminist Art, Art Writing, and Art History, from Emily Dickinson to Now听series.听听

This event has passed.

10 May 2022

Tuesday 10th May, 5pm - 6.30pm BST

Vernon Square, Lecture Theatre 2 and Online via Livestream

Please note this event will be live streamed to allow those outside London access to the event. All those who wish to access the event via this online method should book a 鈥楲ivestream鈥 ticket rather than 鈥楲ecture Theatre鈥 ticket.

Booking closes 30 minutes before the event start time.

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