Laban and I Discuss Trace-Forms

CLM: I’ve read that Leonardo da Vinci was interested in “the second form of the human body” – that is, the lines traced by moving limbs on the space around the body.  He visualized these forms as circles. Were you aware of that?

R. Laban:  Not exactly.  But again, circles have been used in figure drawing to help with capturing the figure in motion.

CLM:  But your circles are “rhythmic.”   What exactly does that mean?

Laban-Trace-Forms

RL:  A circle lends itself to continuous motion.  That’s why it is often used to symbolize eternity.  I’m interested in analyzing the changing movement of the human body.  I needed something that involved time, something that broke up the smooth and uniform motion of the circle.  That’s a rhythmic circle.

CLM: A rhythmic circle is actually a polygon, isn’t it?

RL:  Right.   Polygons are still circles in the sense that they are closed forms.  But a triangle accentuates three points in the circumference of a circle, a square, four points, and so on.  Each accent means a rhythmic break and a slight change in direction.

CLM:  You also related these polygonal rhythms of the moving body to “the ever-circling motions in the universe.”  I’m not sure what this means.

RL:  Geometry has metaphysical aspects.  But more practically, I had to relate the rhythmic circles traced by the body to the space around the body.   I called that space the kinesphere. It’s our personal universe, the only universe in which we really are the center of all the action.

CLM:   So are you saying that the body is at the center of all we do?

RL:  There is no action without movement. But the body isn’t the only thing that moves.  Thoughts and feelings move as well.  Movement is the action of both body and mind!