Part 1
Of the
several hundred Movements created and experimented
with by Mr. Gurdjieff in the last ten years of his
life, only a small percentage did he consider to
be complete and evidently to fulfill his aim so
that he then gave us permission to continue
working with them. The so-called “Thirty-Nine
Movements” are those he finished and authorized
for continued use in France and another seven he
added when we worked with him in New York during
his last visit.
These forty-six
authorized movements are what we are particularly
concerned with preserving for the future. The
American order is the exact order in which Mr.
Gurdjieff gave them to us in New York before his
death in 1949. Therefore we consider it to
be of more significance for teaching the Movements
than the French order, which simply reflects the
order in which these Movements were completed and
does not include seven of the authorized
Movements. (See below for the complete list
in the American order.)
In addition to our own
memories, experience and notations, we depend on
the valuable notes made by Jessmin Howarth and
Alfred Etievant working together in New York in
1949. These were made in response to instructions
left by Mr. Gurdjieff before he returned to France
that: “Movements must be the same in America as in
Europe.”
An even more important
documentation is the set of “definitive notes”
resulting from many summers of work in the 1950’s,
when Mme. Jeanne de Salzmann, Mrs. Jessmin
Howarth, and Mlle. Marthe de Gaigneron joined
forces in Paris to pool their memories and
notations, reconcile differences, and to
correct mistakes made in the first (1951)
Movements film.
Mrs. Howarth
transcribed this work into English and arranged
for it to be typed out in New York. One copy was
sent to Mme. de Salzmann in France. The other was
confided to the New York Foundation for ready
reference by their Movements instructors.
When Mrs. Howarth
died in 1984 it was discovered that these New
York notes had disappeared and could not be
found even after an extensive search was made!
And sadly for the future neither have Mme. de
Salzmann’s copies surfaced!
So with great effort, we have had to try
reconstituting from handwritten and carbon
copies as much as possible of these
irreplaceable and invaluable notations. But we
alert Movements "responsibles" everywhere that
we need help in completing this essential
task.
The material located so
far is being transferred onto CD for safe and
practical storage, immediate reference and
long-term preservation along with verifying
photographs and other unique material, such as
Mrs. Howarth’s suggestions to instructors,
artist’s drawings and charts, etc.
Also being scanned onto CD for preservation
and storage is definitive material on the “Six
Obligatories.” Carefully noted by Mrs. Howarth
as part of her dedication to preserving as
many as possible of the earliest Movements
(those given circa 1917-1924,) this collection
includes notations, photographs, historical
information, and helpful material for
instructors and musicians, such as special
hints for beginners’ classes, inhibition
exercises for advanced pupils, and corrected
music.
Although we do not
give out copies of these or other materials, they
are available for study. We may also consider
correcting notations, viewing videos, answering
questions, or otherwise helping those responsibly
engaged in passing on the Movements in their
correct context. By this we mean, as a part of a
complete integrated practice of the Gurdjieff
Teaching in all its aspects.
* * *
* *
Part 2
As each year
passes we find there is more confusion about
the authenticity, authorship, and exact
intended purpose of many exercises presented
as “Gurdjieff Movements” or “Sacred Dances.”
Perhaps we can help by clarifying some of the
differences.
Early Movements. The entire repertoire worked
on so intensively during the years 1917-1924,
culminating in the public demonstrations in
Paris in 1923, and various U.S. cities in
1924. (In addition to the Obligatories, these
include “Work Dances,” various round and
women’s dances, Dervish Prayers, and much
more.
“The Thirty-Nine”. The forty-six
Movements which Gurdjieff created in the last
years of his life, finally announced as
“completed”, and gave permission to people “to
continue to work with.” These consist of
thirty-nine finalized in France and another
seven added in New York.
Other Movements. Scores of other Movements
were experimented with and worked on but left
uncompleted by Mr. Gurdjieff in his second
period of renewed Movements activity, from
about 1939-49. At this time his primary aim
was no longer to use Movements in a public
display to attract people to his Work. Now he
had groups of serious pupils for whom he was
trying to develop and prove out useful tools
for their special Work. Usually referred
to by names such as “Multiplication”,
“Pythagoras”, “Prayer”, and “Enneagram”, many
of these were later used in elaborate films
made by Mme. de Salzmann during her long life.
In a first film in 1951, she concentrated on
preserving the completed Movements— most of
the “Thirty-nine” and some of the “Early
Movements.” In subsequent films, she included
many of the other Movements that had not been
completed or for which Mr. G. had not decided
a final form. Although usually beautifully
executed by handsome young dancers, many of
whom are our present-day instructors, the
Movements shown in these later films must
clearly be viewed and evaluated differently
from Gurdjieff’s meticulously completed
creations. Unfortunately, these
Movements and the composite ”suites” of
Movements and fragments, which Mme. de
Salzmann put together in the films, are now
often given precedence in class repertoires
and even taught more frequently than the
older, pure Movements.
Preparatory Exercises. Mme. De Salzmann and
various others created many “preparatory exercises” throughout the years. Some
have been practiced so frequently that they have
been given names, and are believed to be
Movements. Some examples: “Father-I,” “I Am-I
Wish-I Can Work,” “Om-Im-Am-Um,”
“Blue-Red-Black-Yellow,” “Two Rhythms,” “I Wish-I
Am-Always-Everywhere.” These exercises may be
helpful to students if presented by an experienced
instructor in the right way at an appropriate
moment, but
they aren’t from Mr. Gurdjieff and they aren’t
Movements.
* * * * *
Part 3
GURDJIEFF'S LATER MOVEMENTS ('39-'49)
(THOSE HE AUTHORIZED US "TO CONTINUE WORKING
WITH.")
(List per Jessmin and Dushka Howarth) |
AMER
# |
FRENCH # |
(Names
sometimes used later by others, not Mr. G.) |
1 |
19 |
STOP or WHEEL |
|
2 |
5 |
POINTING
DERVISH |
|
3 |
2 |
PRAYER IN 4
PARTS |
|
4 |
30 |
CANON OF 6
MEASURES |
|
5 |
31 |
RHYTHMS |
|
6 |
No Fr. # |
AMERICAN MARCH |
|
7 |
No Fr. # |
AMERICAN. "I WISH TO BE" |
|
8 |
16 |
RUNNING or
SEAGULL |
|
9 |
18 |
BODY CIRCLING |
|
10 |
10 |
PERSIAN DANCE |
|
11 |
17 |
MULTIPLICATION |
|
12 |
13 |
ANCIENT WALTZ
or PERSIAN WALTZ |
|
13 |
12 |
"ALLELUIA" |
|
14 |
1 |
COUNTING
AUTOMATON |
|
15 |
23 |
MAZURKA |
|
16 |
32 |
AUTOMATON NOTE
VALUES |
|
17 |
24 |
SHARSSE VARSSE |
|
18 |
11 |
"LORD HAVE MERCY" |
|
19 |
27 |
CANON TO TWELVE |
|
20 |
8 |
RUNNING SIX
POSITIONS |
|
21 |
3 |
TABLEAUX |
|
22 |
21 |
REMORSE |
|
23 |
No Fr. # |
AMERICAN
MULTIPLICATION |
|
24 |
No Fr. # |
AMERICAN
MULTIPLICATION or "I AM" |
25 |
14 |
BREAST BEATING
DERVISH |
|
26 |
No Fr. # |
SLOW MORSE OR AMERICAN MORSE |
|
27 |
4 |
PRAYER FOR
INSTRUCTION or HOP |
|
28 |
6 |
CANON |
|
29 |
15 |
"LUNDI, MARDI,"
etc. |
|
30 |
7 |
WOMEN'S DANCE |
|
31 |
9 |
OLBOGMEK |
|
32 |
20 |
DERVISH or
TRAMPING |
|
33 |
22 |
MARCH |
|
34 |
25 |
BLACK & WHITE
MAGIC |
|
35 & bis |
26 & bis
|
CUTTING
MULTIPLICATION |
|
36 |
28 |
MACHINE GROUP |
|
37 |
No Fr. # |
ENGLISH TURNING |
|
38 |
No Fr. # |
SECOND ENGLISH |
|
39 |
29 |
OLD 39 |
|
40 |
33 |
COSMIC RHYTHM |
|
41 |
34 |
MULTIPLICATION |
|
42 |
35 |
MARCH |
|
43 |
36 |
CANON OF LEFT ARM |
|
44 |
37 |
DANCE |
|
45 |
38 |
TWICE SIX |
|
46 |
39 |
MEDITATION |
|
Created by
for Gurdjieff Heritage Society, Inc ~ Copyright 2006 ~ Dushka Howarth, President ~ New
York ~ All Rights Reserved ~
|