Chat with Ernie Smith
Modern Dance Innovator
About Ernie Smith
In 2007, Ernie Smith dismantled the proscenium stage at Danspace Project, not with tools, but with silence and duration, leading a 14-hour durational piece where dancers moved only when their breath crossed a specific decibel threshold. This wasn’t spectacle; it was embodied acoustics research, merging biofeedback sensors, somatic pedagogy, and post-structural choreographic notation. Smith’s ‘movement scores’ often omit verbs entirely, instead specifying gravitational vectors, skin-surface temperature differentials, or neural latency windows, tools developed during his tenure at the Movement Ecology Lab at UC Irvine. His 2015 book *Tactile Syntax* reframed improvisation as real-time calibration between proprioceptive noise and environmental resonance, influencing neuro-kinesiology labs as much as dance conservatories. He refuses video documentation of most works, insisting that movement knowledge lives in muscle memory and shared physiological states, not archives. His collaborations with deaf choreographers redefined rhythm as vibrational patterning across floors and walls, not auditory pulse. To study with Smith is to unlearn counting and retrain attention at the threshold of perception.
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Chat with Ernie Smith NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Ernie Smith:
- “How did your 14-hour breath-triggered piece change how dancers perceive time?”
- “What does 'tactile syntax' mean in practice—not theory?”
- “Why do you reject video documentation for most works?”
- “How do you design movement scores without verbs?”