About Gail

For forty years, American poet, eurythmist and stage artist Gail Langstroth has collaborated and performed with international artists in North and South America, Japan, Spain, Germany, Russia, and Romania.
One of her performance-pieces, Rivelets, won First Prize at the 2002 Teatro La Scala competition in Basel, Switzerland.
In ONEWORD, (The New York International Fringe Festival, 2008), she performs crucial moments experienced through her life journey. Along with… more
One of her performance-pieces, Rivelets, won First Prize at the 2002 Teatro La Scala competition in Basel, Switzerland.
In ONEWORD, (The New York International Fringe Festival, 2008), she performs crucial moments experienced through her life journey. Along with… more
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Collages
Collage
a field of attention in which previously unrelated pieces are brought into a
composition, a whole
an opportunity to arrange isolated bits and pieces together, drawing them into
new relationship
at times, my life seems a series of apparently unrelated bits and pieces
in order to make sense out of the events and parts, I must connect them
my I is the glue that connects
in life and in collage
life
a field of attention where I practice the art of collage
© gail langstroth
a field of attention in which previously unrelated pieces are brought into a
composition, a whole
an opportunity to arrange isolated bits and pieces together, drawing them into
new relationship
at times, my life seems a series of apparently unrelated bits and pieces
in order to make sense out of the events and parts, I must connect them
my I is the glue that connects
in life and in collage
life
a field of attention where I practice the art of collage
© gail langstroth
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kaleidoscope 01mixed media, 18 cm x 25 cm
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story 04mixed media, 18 cm x 16 cm
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story 03mixed media, 18 cm x 16 cm
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story 02mixed media, 21 cm x 16 cm
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story 01mixed media, 18 cm x 16 cm
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kaleidoscope 05mixed media, 18 cm x 25 cm
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kaleidoscope 04mixed media, 18 cm x 25 cm
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kaleidoscope 03mixed media, 18 cm x 25 cm
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kaleidoscope 02mixed media, 18 cm x 25 cm
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story 05mixed media, 16 cm x 21 cm
Cedar & Vine
In July, 2011, I visited an exhibition of the Sondheim finalists at the Baltimore Museum of Art. Upon entering the gallery space where nine of Rachel Rotenberg?s sculptures were on display, I knew that I had to make it possible to move around and between her works of art.
Prior to filming, I visited the gallery on various occasions. During each visit I let Rachel?s work speak to both my choreographic sense of movement and my sensitivity to language and sound. The sculptures became as harps. I listened as they played on the space and air. The present document is a video drawn from the material gathered during the hours of filming. Added to the eurythmy movements is a spoken-word text. Tonal accents from the violin, bring an additional thread to the audible dialogue.
Sculpture: Rachel Rotenberg
Eurythmy, Words, Voice: Gail Langstroth
Violin: Lucas Lechowski
Baltimore Museum of Art, 2011
Prior to filming, I visited the gallery on various occasions. During each visit I let Rachel?s work speak to both my choreographic sense of movement and my sensitivity to language and sound. The sculptures became as harps. I listened as they played on the space and air. The present document is a video drawn from the material gathered during the hours of filming. Added to the eurythmy movements is a spoken-word text. Tonal accents from the violin, bring an additional thread to the audible dialogue.
Sculpture: Rachel Rotenberg
Eurythmy, Words, Voice: Gail Langstroth
Violin: Lucas Lechowski
Baltimore Museum of Art, 2011
Poetry
poem
dewpoint of the word, crystalline heard
the I empties opens listens
to the silent movement within The Word
creating Self
the poem stands?a column
upright
condensed Halleluiah
song in praise of the highest dance
Living!
© gail langstroth
dewpoint of the word, crystalline heard
the I empties opens listens
to the silent movement within The Word
creating Self
the poem stands?a column
upright
condensed Halleluiah
song in praise of the highest dance
Living!
© gail langstroth
Eurythmy
eurythmy
an art of movement as spiritual path
the invisible made visible
how I am shaped and created out of The Word
eurythmy makes limber the limbs of listening
it inspires a recognition of the movement that has formed me
as I shape the air gesture that each sound of speech awakens when spoken
I awaken
and only out of that can I write
© gail langstroth
an art of movement as spiritual path
the invisible made visible
how I am shaped and created out of The Word
eurythmy makes limber the limbs of listening
it inspires a recognition of the movement that has formed me
as I shape the air gesture that each sound of speech awakens when spoken
I awaken
and only out of that can I write
© gail langstroth
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variations on autumn leaves: jerald harschereurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: gudrun bublitz
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asturias: isaac albénizeurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: gudrun bublitz
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prelude: johann sebastian bacheurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: gudrun bublitz
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japanese haikuseurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: estudio eulogio, santanter, spain
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asturias: isaac albénizeurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: gudrun bublitz
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opus 131: l.v. beethovendancer: thomas hartmann, eurythmist: gail langstroth, photo: erwin döring
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opus 131: l.v. beethovendancer: thomas hartmann, eurythmist: gail langstroth, photo: erwin döring
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asturias: isaac albénizeurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: frank p. kistner
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prelude: george gershwineurythmy: gail langstroth, photo: john supancic
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HalleluiahHalleluiah is a Hebrew word meaning: Let us sing, praise and dance the highest. On September 22, 1912, Dr. Rudolf Steiner gave the specific indications as to how to move this word in Eurythmy. Eurythmy is an art of movement. In Eurythmy, we attempt to make visible the invisible air shapes that appear as we speak out loud. We make visible the spoken word.
Line Drawings
line drawings
a dimension of the word without the word
leaving the sounds and thought of words, entering word's essential substance,
the line appears?baring/bearing now the essence of its wordsource?in breath
line drawings?I can create them only with the thinnest point of pencil on the
skins of transparent paper
© gail langstroth
a dimension of the word without the word
leaving the sounds and thought of words, entering word's essential substance,
the line appears?baring/bearing now the essence of its wordsource?in breath
line drawings?I can create them only with the thinnest point of pencil on the
skins of transparent paper
© gail langstroth
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boat bow, leg anchor, wing strokepencil on transparent paper 14cm x 9cm
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the healing dancepencil on transparent paper 8cm x 8cm
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edge of the abysspencil on transparent paper 20cm x 15cm
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the debt to otherspencil on transparent paper 11cm x 12cm
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fish knot, rose stem, crosspencil on transparent paper 21cm x 16cm
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abyss 07: the rose and lotus are onepencil on transparent paper 14cm x 9cm
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abyss 06: sunlit silencepencil on transparent paper 14cm x 9cm
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abyss 03: my symbolpencil on transparent paper 14cm x 9cm
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abyss 02: cold firepencil on transparent paper 14cm x 9cm
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abyss 01: the fire subsidespencil on transparent paper 14cm x 9cm
ONEWORD
ONEWORD
After a long career as an international performer, I wanted to bring the movement-artist/eurythmist, together with the poet, in a solo production. ONEWORD was born. Its title originates from an experience of the one word that each of us can speak only for ourselves. It points to that part of the self which actively listens in order to give birth to the poem.
I can say "I" only for myself. No one can say "I" for me.
- The poem is a way for my ONEWORD
- The I that I AM
- to center Self in Dance-substantiation
. . . creating.
With director, Klaus Jensen, 24 of my poems that lent themselves to a staged production were chosen. Workman's gloves, goggles, a roll of toilet paper, plastic bags, accentuated the actions and movements from the selected poems. It was premiered in January of 2007 in Hamburg, Germany.
Performer, Poems, Texts: Gail Langstroth
Director, Sound Design: Klaus Jensen
Light Design: Christian Senfft von Pilsach
Costume: Rosemarie Knoop
Film: Susan Chales de Beaulieu
After a long career as an international performer, I wanted to bring the movement-artist/eurythmist, together with the poet, in a solo production. ONEWORD was born. Its title originates from an experience of the one word that each of us can speak only for ourselves. It points to that part of the self which actively listens in order to give birth to the poem.
I can say "I" only for myself. No one can say "I" for me.
- The poem is a way for my ONEWORD
- The I that I AM
- to center Self in Dance-substantiation
. . . creating.
With director, Klaus Jensen, 24 of my poems that lent themselves to a staged production were chosen. Workman's gloves, goggles, a roll of toilet paper, plastic bags, accentuated the actions and movements from the selected poems. It was premiered in January of 2007 in Hamburg, Germany.
Performer, Poems, Texts: Gail Langstroth
Director, Sound Design: Klaus Jensen
Light Design: Christian Senfft von Pilsach
Costume: Rosemarie Knoop
Film: Susan Chales de Beaulieu
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ONEWORDexcerpts: plea
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ONEWORDexcerpts: cucurusu penduk, mannequin talks, geisha moons
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ONEWORDexcerpts: nuns, dump trucks
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ONEWORDexcerpts: everything is beautiful, the edge of remembering, if thinking is a thorn, ghost dust sweepers