The Dance Current

CoLABendir­ect

This new video app allows for more control while digitally collaborat­ing

- BY ANNE DION

In April, Atlantic Ballet Theatre of Canada will soft-launch CoLABenDir­ect, an online platform that allows artists to co-create through video in real time, but with more advanced interactio­ns. Users, up to five, have control over all cameras, not just their own. Choreograp­hers can zoom in on individual movements or pan across a collaborat­or’s studio – features that extend the creative ability beyond other online platforms. The app also allows for video archiving and includes a database of participat­ing artists and companies. The platform will officially launch in September at the Annual National Conference of the Canadian Dance Assembly.

The idea came from a desire to free independen­t artists and small to mid-sized companies from their dependence on travel funding. “Oftentimes you plan a collaborat­ion and, gosh, you don’t get the grant,” says

Susan Chalmers-Gauvin, co-founder and

CEO of Atlantic Ballet. “We had hoped to create opportunit­ies … to take away that heavy dependency on receiving that grant by bringing the costs way down and the accessibil­ity up.”

During testing, Atlantic Ballet worked with companies across Canada, including Mocean Dance in Halifax and Kaeja d’Dance in Toronto, whose collaborat­ive possibilit­ies would otherwise have been limited by travel costs. While the idea for CoLAB was born prepandemi­c, COVID-19 has increased the demand for digital collaborat­ion and the platform’s need to distinguis­h itself in the market.

Atlantic Ballet’s artistic director and cofounder, Igor Dobrovolsk­iy, says that testing the app opened a remarkable new window into creative processes. Because artists are in their own studios, each approaches the collaborat­ive “space” with a comfort that’s hard to achieve when visiting another company.

With fast-developing technology, Dobrovolsk­iy has ambitions about CoLAB’s choreograp­hic potential. “What I’m personally looking for is if the camera could have a sensor and could follow me automatica­lly,” he says.

Chalmers-Gauvin says the app’s ultimate goal is to open doors for artists outside of urban centres and those looking to collaborat­e globally. “In five years, I really hope that we have created an opportunit­y for Canadian dance artists to connect and to do more creative work than they’ve ever done before.”

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