Pentagram

Passe-Partout

Digital Design

Design for an app that allows users to create a multi-layered performance from a series of dances, each with their own musical score.

The iPad offers a uniquely interactive stage for performance that creates new opportunities for how dance and choreography can be represented. Passe-Partout is an app by Pentagram that allows users to create a multi-layered performance from a series of dances, each with their own musical score. Users can select and edit from different dances to build their own choreographic sequences, which they can save and share with others via Facebook. The app is the latest project from Pentagram's ongoing collaborations with the 2wice Arts Foundation and publisher Patsy Tarr, following the previous apps Fifth Wall and DOT DOT DOT.

Passe Partout dramatizes the patterning, repetition, and layering of ballet, qualities that are foregrounded in the work of Justin Peck, a choreographer and soloist with the New York City Ballet, who choreographed and performed the app's dances with fellow New York City Ballet dancer Daniel Ulbricht. Each dance is set to a different piece of music—composed for the project by Aaron Severini—which can be layered to create a polyphonic soundtrack to the visual layering.

Users can view the dances as single, one-minute performances, or in multiple layers, constructing an increasingly complex ensemble of up to five image and sound layers. The app randomly selects five dances for any given session from a set of eight potential layers. The full set of eight dances yields 40,320 different combinations, yet the potential duration and sequences mean the results are even more diverse.

The title “Passe-Partout” is French for “goes everywhere,” and was inspired by the idea of the iPad as a portable performing arts space. (The name also plays off the French term for the method of framing and layering images in a picture mat.) By coincidence, Justin Peck’s most recent piece for New York City Ballet is similarly titled Everywhere We Go. A collaboration with the composer Sufjan Stevens, the ballet premiered in May to wide acclaim. Peck is also featured in the new documentary Ballet 422, which chronicles the making of his dance Paz de la Jolla.

Passe-Partout utilizes an elegant interface, with buttons to the left of the screen that stop and start sequences, or a gyroscopic interface that cycles through the sequences. A time code that signals which dance is activated runs across the screen while the user is building the sequence, and disappears during the “playback” mode. The buttons are color-coded according to the color of the shirts worn by the dancers. Pentagram developed the technology of the app, while Ben Louis Nicholas shot the video sequences.

The team closely collaborated to create sequences that complement each other as they merge. Each layer contains a different variation of music and movement, and the sequences have been carefully edited so they work together in any combination. Nicholas shot the sequences both from a stationary tripod and using a Steadicam that followed along with the dancers. (Five of the tracks were photographed with a fixed camera; three were shot with the Steadicam.)

The project was designed with social networking in mind, and saved dances can be viewed in the app or immediately shared on Facebook.

Office
New York
Partners
Abbott Miller
Eddie Opara
Project team
Ken Deegan
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