A choreographic manifesto for life in motion, offering new ways to navigate change and thrive amidst instability
A sequel to Hiking the Horizontal, Liz Lerman’s Shape and Momentum: An Insomniac’s Guide for a World in Constant Motion is a choreographic manifesto for living in motion–part memoir, part creative toolkit, part philosophical inquiry. Written in a series of essays, from single-paragraph meditations to expansive chapters, the book weaves together personal anecdotes, creative theory, and movement-based wisdom. Lerman draws on Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle to frame a central question: how do we hold both shape and momentum–form and change–at once? With insight and generosity, she explores creativity as a life practice, rooted in embodied knowledge and accessible to all. Witches from her decade-long project Wicked Bodies appear throughout as fierce, funny guides, helping readers stay curious and grounded. Essays are grouped in thematic sections–lived experience, kinship, rejection, reflection, and radical imagination–culminating in an “Atlas of Creative Tools(R),” a practical and poetic resource. Bridging dance, education, politics, and spiritual practice, Shape and Momentum offers tools for navigating instability and making a more relational world.
Liz Lerman is a choreographer, writer, educator, and the recipient of numerous honors, including a 2023 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2017 Jacob’s Pillow Award, and the 2002 MacArthur “Genius Grant” Award. Liz founded and led the Dance Exchange from 1976 until 2011, where she cultivated the company’s unique multi-generational ensemble. Current projects include building the Atlas of Creative Tools®, an online resource and archive, and Legacy Unboxed™ that involves a series of site-specific research performance events called My Body is a Library™. Lerman’s upcoming book is a collection of personal essays set to be published by Wesleyan University Press in 2025. Liz continues to evolve the Critical Response Process® through the annual certification program and an upcoming fundamentals course. Liz is the author of Teaching Dance to Senior Adults (1984), Hiking the Horizontal (2014), and co-author of Liz Lerman’s Critical Response Process (2003) and Critique Is Creative (2022) with John Borstel. She is currently an Institute Professor at Arizona State University’s Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts and a Fellow at the Center for the Study of Race and Democracy.
Lerman will be in conversation with Diana Ayton-Shenker, CEO, Leonardo/ISAST (International Society of Arts, Science, Technology); Executive Director, Leonardo-ASU; Professor of Practice, ASU, and Senior Global Futures Scientist at Julie Ann Wrigley Global Futures Lab. She is an Advisor to Connected Minds, the Global Creative Economy Institute, and Connected Power. Ayton-Shenker’s four books include A New Global Agenda, and Tumbalalaika: A Collection of Poems. She produced ConstellationXR (Ars Electronica, 2023, Linz, Austria), a planet-sized art installation, and New Babel, an 18-story tall AR public art installation (2019, Union Square Park, NYC) collaborating with artist William T. Ayton. Their AR New World City won 2020 Visionary Award (2112 Foundation), was 1st AR art published by MIT Press, and was selected by the Arch Mission Foundation for experimental digital archive for International Space Station. Their Interplanetary VR Sustainable Futures, featured 17 digital galleries connecting space art to SDGs (2022, Espronceda Institute for Art and Culture, Barcelona; and Ars Electronica, Linz). As founder/CEO of Fast Forward Fund, and Global Momenta, Diana was honored by President Bill Clinton, named among “25 Leading Women Changing the World” (Good Business NY), and featured among “31 Inspiring Women in Nonprofit Management” (UNC). She was inaugural Global Catalyst Senior Fellow (The New School); Nazarian Social Innovator in Residence (Wharton); Senior Fellow in Venture Philanthropy (Bard College); she held senior roles with Human Rights Watch, P.E.N., Mercy Corps, and worked with the UN. In addition to ASU, Diana has taught at The New School, Bard, American University of Paris, and Hunter College CUNY, where she directed the first Human Rights Program in the US. She has lectured at Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Penn, and many international gatherings. Diana holds an LLM (International Human Rights Law, Univ. of Essex Law School), and an Honors BA (International Relations, Univ. of Pennsylvania)