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Tuesday, December 29, 2015

My year in the arts: 2015

Eva Yaa Asantewaa's List:
Most Memorable 
Arts and Cultural Experiences of 2015

Meredith Monk with Allison Sniffin (left) and Katie Geissinger (right)
Monk shared an inspiring Danspace Project program with poet Anne Waldman.
(photo: Ian Douglas)


Here are "a few" of my favorite things....of 2015. And, as I wrote last year:
Unlike the numerous "10-or-so-Best" lists you've seen in recent weeks, this list is not about sifting out a handful of elite art products. Rather, it's my chance to pay tribute to a bounty of special experiences from my year with the arts. It's personal; your experiences may vary. In fact, I encourage you to make note of your own treasured memories in the comments section below and on InfiniteBody's Facebook page.
I'm especially grateful this year to artists who sacrifice so much as they contribute so much, particularly those who commit themselves to justice.

May you all enjoy an artful, heartful and fabulous 2016. Thanks for your support of InfiniteBody!

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Yes. I meant every word I wrote for Time Out New York.
Camille A. Brown and Dancers blew the roof off The Joyce Theater
with Black Girl: Linguistic Play.

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*****


Hilarious Ronnie Burkett and his rotating cast of marionette characters
at Baryshnikov Arts Center for the New York premiere of The Daisy Theatre
(photo: Hiroyuki Ito)

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*****

Matthew! Cate! The Little Prince! What We Can't Wait to See at the Cannes Film Festival| Cannes International Film Festival, Movie News, Amy Poehler, Cate Blanchett, Emily Blunt, Marion Cotillard, Matthew McConaughey, Mindy Kaling, Quentin Tarantino
Rooney Mara and Cate Blanchett in "Carol," directed by Todd Haynes
and adapted by Phyllis Nagy from Patricia Highsmith's The Price of Salt
(photo: The Weinstein Company) 

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*****

Some members of The Ballez, Katy Pyle's innovative troupe
(photo: Hedia Maron)


@Variations On Virtuosity: A Gala Performance With The Stars Of The Ballez by Katy Pyle and The Ballez, American Realness Festival 2015, Abrons Arts Center, January 1-11

@Michael Ingle and Silas Riener performing Undersweet by Tere O'Connor, American Realness Festival 2015, Abrons Arts Center, January 12-14

@Night Light Bright Light by Jack Ferver; performed by Ferver and Reid Bartelme, American Realness Festival 2015, Abrons Arts Center, January 14-18

@Represent: 200 Years of African American Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, January 10-April 5

@Peter Blume: Nature and Metamorphosis, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, November 14, 2014-April 5, 2015

@works by Laura Owens and Mark Grotjahn in The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemporal World at Museum of Modern Art, December 14, 2014-April 5, 2015

@Modern Photographs from the Thomas Walther Collection, 1909–1949 at Museum of Modern Art, December 13, 2014–April 19, 2015

@Raja Feather Kelly and Tzveta Kassabova in Super WE at Danspace Project. With live musical performance by Aleksei Stevens and lighting design by Tuce Yasak, January 29-31

@Black Lake (video) at Museum of Modern Art's Björk exhibition, March 8-June 7

@Malpaso Dance Company performing Trey McIntyre's Under Fire at The Joyce Theater, March 3-8

@The Plains Indians: Artists of Earth and Sky at Metropolitan Museum of Art, March 11 to May 10

@Assemblage by Rebecca Serrell Cyr at JACK, March 19-21

@Glacier by Liz Gerring at The Joyce Theater. Michael J. Schumacher (composer), Robert Wierzel (design), performances by Benjamin Asriel, Brandon Collwes, Tony Neidenbach, Adele Nickel, Brandin Steffensen, Jake Szczypek, Jessica Weiss, Claire Westby. March 31-April 2


I'm conflicted about Park Avenue Armory's production of FLEXN,
but there's no way I can argue with the skill and power of its performers.
(photo: Stephanie Berger)


@ Performers of FLEXN at the Park Avenue Armory (co-direction by Reggie (Regg Croc) Gray and Peter Sellars) including Ace (Franklin Dawes), Android (Martina Lauture), Banks (James Davis), Brixx (Sean Douglas), Cal (Calvin Hunt), Deidra (Deidra Braz), Dre Don (Andre Redman), Droid (Rafael Burgos), Droopz (Jerrod Ulysse), Karnage (Quamaine Daniels), Klassic (Joseph Carella), Nicc Fatal (Nicholas Barbot), Nyte (Ayinde Hart), Pumpkin (Sabrina Rivera), Sam I Am (Sam Estavien), Scorp (Dwight Waugh), Shellz (Shelby Felton), Slicc (Derick Murreld), Tyme (Glendon Charles) Vypa (Khio Duncan), YG (Richard Hudson); lighting sculpture and lighting design: Ben Zamora, March 25-April 4

@leaves from a loose-leaf war diary by Shayla-Vie Jenkins at Movement Research at the Judson Church, April 6

@SHORE in Lenapehoking (NYC) by Emily Johnson, Emily Johnson/Catalyst at various venues (April 19-26), dance installation at New York Live Arts (April 23-25)

@Rhythm in Motion (Program B) by Tony Waag/American Tap Dance Foundation at The Theater at 14th Street Y, works by Chloe Arnold, Felipe Galganni, Susan Hebach, Kazu Kumagai, Michela Marino Lerman, Caleb Teicher and Nicholas Young, April 25-26

@God Help the Child by Toni Morrison (Knopf Doubleday)


Tendayi Kuumba performs in being Here.../this time by Marjani Forté
at Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center
(photo: Alex Escalante)

@being Here.../this time by Marjani Forté & Works at Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center, entire collaborative team, May 6-9

@9/11 Memorial Museum, architects Michael Arad and Peter Walker

@Building A Better Fishtrap/Part 1 by Paloma McGregor at BAAD!, May 22-24

@HYPERACTIVE by John Scott-Irish Modern Dance Theatre at La MaMa Moves Dance Festival, La MaMa, dancing by Kevin Coquelard, Ryan O'Neill, Marcus Bellamy, Stuart Singer, May 28-31

@Daniel Libeskind, architect, Jüdisches Museum Berlin, opened 2001 (visited June 2015)

@Sargent: Portraits of Artists and Friends at Metropolitan Museum of Art, June 30-October 4

@POUND by Marga Gomez at HOT! Festival 2015, Dixon Place, July 10-25


Tap star Jason Samuels Smith (left) and the late Kathak guru Pandit Chitresh Das
in Dean Hargrove's documentary film, Tap World.
(photo courtesy of tapworldfilm.com)

@Tap World, directed by Dean Hargrove, screened at Village East Cinema, July 12

@The Blues Project, by Michelle Dorrance, Toshi Reagon, Derick K. Grant and Dormeshia Sumbry-Edwards at Lincoln Center Out of Doors, July 24

@André M. Zachery's Renegade Performance Group (Brian Henry, Andre Cole, Johnnie Mercer, Malcolm McMichael, TJ Jamez and Stephen Galbert) performing in Dapline! at Five on the Black Hand Side/Dapline! at The Performance Project, University Settlement, July 30

@Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates (Spiegel & Grau)

@Molly Poerstel in Jeanine Durning's To Being at The Chocolate Factory, September 9-12

@Mmakosi Kgabi in Shades of a Queen, part of Queer New York International Arts Festival at Abrons Arts Center, September 21

@BLACK GIRL: Linguistic Play, Camille A. Brown & Dancers, at The Joyce Theater, September 22-27

@Adrienne Truscott's Asking For It: A One-Lady Rape About Comedy Starring Her Pussy and Little Else, written by and starring Adrienne Truscott at The Creek and The Cave, September 23-October 3

@The Daisy Theatre by Ronnie Burkett, Ronnie Burkett Theatre of Marionettes at Baryshnikov Arts Center, September 30-October 10

@Dances for Intimate Spaces and Friendly People by Patricia Hoffbauer, Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center, September 30-October 3

@Ancient Egypt Transformed: The Middle Kingdom, Metropolitan Museum of Art, October 12-January 24, 2016

@Anybody Waitin' by ponydance at Abrons Arts Center, October 7-10

@DraftWork: Maria Bauman and André Zachery at Danspace Project, October 10

@Bethlehem in The Well (work-in-progress by Maria Bauman), DraftWork: Maria Bauman and André Zachery at Danspace Project, October 10

@Kongo: Power and Majesty at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, September 18-January 3, 2016

@William Kentridge in Conversation with Andrew Hoyem at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, October 13

@Social Dance 9-12: Encounter by Moriah Evans at Danspace Project, October 15-17

@COWHAND CON MAN by Jon Kinzel at Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center, October 21-24, 28-31

@Her(e) Repetitive Blueprint by Colleen Thomas Dance at 92Y Harkness Dance Center, October 23-25

@Refuse the Hour by William Kentridge at Brooklyn Academy of Music, October 22-25

@The Minstrel Show Revisited by Donald Byrd at NYU Skirball Center for the Performing Arts, October 28-30

@Inês by Volmir Cordeiro at Danspace Project, November 6-7

Tamisha Guy, dancing in Abraham.In.Motion season at The Joyce Theater, November 10-15

@BodyBusiness by SLMDances at University Settlement, November 12-14

@Ronald K. Brown/Evidence, A Dance Company at BRIC House, November 12-22

@this is an Irish Dance by Jean Butler with Neil Martin at Danspace Project, November 17-21; set design by Frank Conway


Marlis Petersen as Lulu. (Photo by Kristian Schuller/ Metropolitan Opera)
Marlis Petersen as Lulu
in the William Kentridge production of Lulu for The Metropolitan Opera
 (Photo: Kristian Schuller/ Metropolitan Opera)

@Lulu, Metropolitan Opera, production by William Kentridge; Lothar Koenigs, conductor, November 5-December 3

@Marlis Petersen in the William Kentridge production of Lulu, Metropolitan Opera, November 5-December 3

@double nickels on the dime, choreography by Abby Zbikowski, performances by Fiona Lundie and Jennifer Meckley at Vanishing Points, Movement Research Festival 2015, Danspace Project, December 4

@Samantha Speis in Walking with 'Trane by Jawole Willa Jo Zollar and Samantha Speis for Urban Bush Women at BAM Next Wave Festival, BAM Harvey Theater, December 9-12

@Non-Sequitur by Khadijah Queen, direction by Fiona Templeton, performances by Lenora Champagne, Danielle Davenport, Helga Davis, Dawn Saito, Yon Tande, Zselyke Tarnai and David Thomson at TheaterLab, December 10-20

@Meredith Monk & Anne Waldman, with images by Pat Steir, at Danspace Project, December 17-19

@Macbeth (film), directed by Justin Kurzel, starring Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard

@Carol (film), directed by Todd Haynes, starring Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara

@TV and Comedy via Netflix: This was the year I got into Netflix binge-watching, including catching up on and falling in love with so much that, believe it or not, I'd missed over many years of not watching tv (The Sopranos, 30 Rock) and new discoveries (Luther, The Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, Jane the VirginMaster of None, Grace and Frankie, assorted Margaret Cho stand-up videos). Let me add Netflix's original production, Beasts of No Nation, directed by Cary Joji Fukunaga and starring Idris Elba and Abraham Attah.

Okay, that's my list! What's on yours?


(photo: D. Feller)













--Eva Yaa Asantewaa, InfiniteBody

Monday, December 28, 2015

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Happy Winter Solstice, everyone!

Here comes the sun, and I say 
It's all right...

Abundant blessings to you and yours in
this season of returning light.

Eva Yaa Asantewaa

Saturday, December 19, 2015

Closing tomorrow: "Hildegard (vision)" at La MaMa

Multi-talented Marina Celander is the elegance central to Hildegard (vision), a curious interdisciplinary work running now through Sunday at La MaMa. Directed by Gian Marco Lo Forte with writing by Abby Felder and music by John Sully (Pioneers Go East Collective), the hour-long piece aims to offer insight into the physiological and emotional experiences of medieval German composer, scientist and mystic Hildegard von Bingen whose migraines triggered futuristic visions.

The immediacy of setting--a row of audience seats surround performers on three sides of the narrow, rectangular, brick-lined theater--provides the sensation of a dream externalized. Colors and textures feel intimate to viewers; the attractive, live green of the abbess's plants, the gleaming clear or dark amber glass of science beakers and bottles, are particularly striking visual elements. The space contains, all at once, everything it needs, collapsing the separation between one point in history and another era. We watch Hildegard, with assistant and same-sex lover Richardis von Stade, potting and tending the plants as they converse just as we clearly see centuries ahead to the commonplace of men and women side by side in their labs.

"We are vessels. We are women. How can we transcend so many barriers?" Celander asks shortly before von Stade (Nehprii Amenii) pulls out a videocam from out of somewhere and trains it on her abbess's face. The subtle interactions between these two--the dynamics of Celander's faint but detectable withdrawal, her self-containment, and Amenii's confused, quiet discomfort--drew me into the work. Regrettably, the text--in it plainness and in telling us what we likely already know--lacks the poetic vision to soar with Hildegard's celestial artistry.

Hildegard (vision) has two more performances: tonight at 7:30pm and Sunday at 2pm. Seating is limited. For information and tickets, click here.

La MaMa: First Floor Theatre
74a East 4th Street (between 2nd and 3rd Avenue), Manhattan
(map/directions)

Friday, December 18, 2015

Your weekend must-see: Monk meets Waldman

Meredith Monk (left) and Anne Waldman
present their first collaboration.
(photo: Ian Douglas)

This week, Danspace Project hosts the first collaboration of two mages--Meredith Monk and Anne Waldman. That would be enough even without Pat Steir's paintings gushing fine, vibrant lines of vascular light from the altar wall. The evening--eighty minutes without intermission--is saturated by elemental sound, color, movement, intensity and mastery, crossing artificial barriers between word and body, song and image, human presence and the rest of nature.

Anne Waldman
(photo: Ian Douglas)

Waldman's opening set--Entanglement Variations, an incantation-in-progress--ensnares the listener. The spidery performer--part-rock star, part-downhome preacher, part-esoteric flimflam artist--stalks, distills, distorts and transmutes a motherload of words into fluid, musical sounds, clicking and hooting, gliding and hissing out her sticky, steely net. Monk, joined by ensemble members Katie Geissinger and Allison Sniffin and dancer Ellen Fisher, follows up with a five-song set including a work-in-progress, Cellular Songs, and makes the most of the sanctuary's warmth, dignity and sacred acoustics.

Meredith Monk
with Allison Sniffin (left) and Katie Geissinger (right),
members of Meredith Monk Vocal Ensemble
(photo: Ian Douglas)

Even without Fisher's expressive dancing (in Scared Song), it's possible to perceive the action of nerves, blood and breath inside Monk's vocal music. It feels sufficiently close to one's own internal moves and produces a near-immediate mirroring effect. Monk takes us wherever she likes, and the best of these journeys happens in between song (from impermanence), with its lyrics by Mieke van Hoek, her collaborator and companion, who passed in 2002. If there is anyone who can transport a listener, through sound, to that space "between the clouds and the night...between your hand and my hand...between the seed and the dirt," it is Meredith Monk.

Monk and Waldman
(photo: Ian Douglas)

The concluding set brings Monk and Waldman together in a juxtaposition of works and voices. The first piece--Wa-lie-oh/[Endangered] Living Thread--sounds forced, an unwieldy pattern, alternating Waldman's wilderness drift with Monk's more organized containment. But, once past that tentative beginning, they find a groove to share to the end of the night.

With sound by Ambrose Bye and lighting by Carol Mullins

Meredith Monk & Anne Waldman continues tonight and concludes  with Saturday's benefit performance for Danspace Project and The House Foundation for the Arts. As of last evening, tickets for Saturday were still available. Both evenings start at 8pm. For information, click here.

Danspace Project
St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery
131 East 10th Street (at Second Avenue), Manhattan
(map/directions)

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Thursday, December 17, 2015

New spaces to open at Gibney 280: Take the survey!

Gina Gibney (CEO/Artistic Director) and Craig Peterson (Director of Programs and Presentation) hosted a town hall meeting last evening at Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center to address the organization's goal of developing an additional 10,000 square feet of raw space at its 280 Broadway location.
The key issues we face are how to raise funds for the renovation, how to create a sustainable operating model, and how to deploy the space to best advantage [for] the NYC dance community.
Preliminary plans show the potential for as much as seven new rental spaces in an area currently rented from Gibney Dance by Pace University on a short-term basis. Gibney and Peterson describe this area as perfect for dance with less column obstruction and beautiful windows providing lots of natural light.

The town hall drew a small attendance, but Gibney Dance hopes to extend its engagement and dialogue with the community via an online survey to determine space needs, priorities and preferences.

You are invited to participate in the survey and to share it widely with your friends and colleagues in the dance community so that more voices can be heard.

Please click here to begin.

Monday, December 14, 2015

Saturday, December 12, 2015

Brendan Connelly and Scotty Heron at JACK

In Appalachian Spring Break, composer Brendan Connelly and performance artist Scotty Heron collaborate at JACK for an hour of mayhem triggered--let us not say "inspired"--by the collaboration of Martha Graham and Aaron Copland on Graham's Appalachian Spring. Here, with each artist continually invading the other's territory, the worlds of music and dance collide--let us not say "merge" or "overlap"--again and again.

The sonic assault starts right away. From on high, the pair train clarinets down upon the defenseless audience in a shrill and gurgly fanfare. You might notice that handlettered sheets of cardboard subtly bear the word "fanfare," a nod to Copland's Fanfare for the Common Man as well as a sign of the DIY spirit of the production. Music making employs stand-alone instruments (clarinets, kazoos), a snaggle of increasingly snaggled, endangered electronics and the whimsy of amplified stuff simply hitting or being dragged along the floor. Movement involves, among other things, whippet-thin Heron risking life while, strapped into pointe shoes, he laboriously climbs to the top of a stack of tables, or channeling Graham's iconic Lamentation, tense angles stretching the fabric of what a U Michigan arts blogger once called "The Infamous Giant Sock Thing."

herta-moselsio-martha-graham-in-lamentation-no-1-coll-martha-graham
No. Not Scotty Heron this time.
The real Martha Graham performs Lamentation.
(photo: Herta Moselsio)

Heron's centerpiece work as Graham is a thing of mystery and scrupulously contained drama, gorgeous in its own way.

Appalachian Spring Break concludes with two performances tonight: 8pm and 10:30 pm. For information and tickets, click here.

JACK
505 1/2 Waverly Avenue (between Fulton Street and Atlantic Avenue), Brooklyn
(map/directions)

Friday, December 11, 2015

Your next must-see: Khadijah Queen's "Non-Sequitur"

Congratulations to Khadijah Queen, winner of the 2014-15 Leslie Scalapino Award for Innovative Women Performance Writers! Her play, Non- Sequitur, is a delight, and I can see why it won the judges' unanimous approval.

Presented by THE RELATIONSHIP at TheaterLab, now through December 20, and directed by Fiona Templeton, Non-Sequitur unfolds in the compressed, narrow confines of a tiny runway of sorts flanked by audience seating. Over just one hour, the play introduces a cavalcade of characters, each with "voices on multiple registers: the voices in our heads, under our breaths, on our voicemail, hard to have to listen to, hilarious voices, blurted voices, bodily voices." Oh, yes, depictions of such anthropological acuity--each one perfectly captured as if within a flash of lightning--such absurdity and such glee, scarcely leaving us time to breathe, that the nonstop shocks can keep a silly grin plastered on you face from start to finish.

For my dance folks out there, just go see this thing. The well-chosen cast includes a few dancers you know and love who prove to be wonderful actors. Of course! But they would be an asset to Queen's play anyway. The heightened physicality of the characters is as eloquent, stunning and giggle-producing a factor in this work's effectiveness as are the words.

With performances by Lenora Champagne, Stacey Karen Robinson, Helga Davis, Dawn Akemi Saito, Yon Tande, Zselyke Tarnai and David Thomson.

Non-Sequitur continues through December 20. For complete schedule and ticketing information, click here.

Click here to learn more about the late Leslie Scalapino and here to read more about the biennial award named in her honor.  Non-Sequitur, the book, is available here.

Theaterlab
357 West 36th Street, 3rd Floor (between 8th and 9th Avenues), Manhattan
(map/directions)

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Dancers are the music: Urban Bush Women at BAM

Members of Urban Bush Women
perform Walking with 'Trane.
(photos: Julieta Cervantes)


In Walking with 'Trane--performed this week at BAM Next Wave by Urban Bush Women and inspired by the genius and spiritual force of John Coltrane--dancers are not simply people dancing to music. Dancers are music, in turbulence and in silence.

This year marks the 50th anniversary of Coltrane's masterpiece, A Love Supreme, and the 30th anniversary season of Urban Bush Women, founded by award-winning dancemaker, educator and activist Jawole Willa Jo Zollar. When developing Walking with 'Trane, Zollar and collaborator Samantha Speis conceived the piece as an album of two "sides" divided by an intermission.

Side A--"JUST A CLOSER WALK WITH 'TRANE," with Philip White's electronic score--opens with one supple, wriggling figure suspended in a faint wash of light against darkened space and thrumming sound. Little by little, dancers assemble on the stage, integrated and attuned to one another but each pulsing her or his own instrumental, multidimensional voice. These musical lines are never straight. Flat is not flat; flow, never one way. Destinations only open up more directions of travel.

Looming, dynamic video projections play across a translucent scrim, evoking the smokiness of a music club. Or the keys of a piano. Or a sheet of lines awaiting notes the dancers will live. Or, thrillingly, the sensation of railway tracks receding from a speeding train/'trane transporting everyone--dances and watchers--into new times and places. Speis takes a masterful solo, and Du'Bois A'Keen introduces a flavor of hip hop to his crisp, clear moves, forging an up-to-the-minute connection to Coltrane.

With the side winding down, we hear recorded voices reflecting on Coltrane's music. The final speaker's words set the stage for Side B, "FREED(OM)," a title inspired by the searching, all-embracing nature of Coltrane's spirituality.

He was free. His music was free. 
He was expressing freedom.

Composer-pianist George O. Caldwell's live music for this new section is infused with themes from A Love Supreme and carries the dancers into a space of expansion and transcendence. There's a panoramic photo of the inside of a jam-packed music hall projected against the back of the stage, giving the illusion of the performers dancing their music for this crowd. Indeed, the UBW dancers savor freedom of movement in the open space of the stage, the dancing here feels expansive and celebratory. The quirks and questions of the earlier movement in SIDE A have dispersed which, I must admit, made me value them so much more and miss them.

The dancers of Urban Bush Women are Du'Bois A'Keen, Amanda Castro, Courtney J. Cook, Chanon Judson, Tendayi Kuumba, Stephanie Mas, Love Muwwakkil (understudy) and Samantha Speis.

With dramaturgy by Talvin Wilks, lighting design by Russell Sandifer, costume design by Helen L. Simmons-Collen and video design by Wendall Harrington

Walking with 'Trane continues through Saturday with performances at 7:30pm. For information and tickets, click here.

BAM Harvey Theater
651 Fulton Street, Brooklyn
(map/directions)

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Claudia Rankine, at 92Y, on the psyche under racism

Claudia Rankine

Poet Claudia Rankine's multiple award-winning Citizen: An American Lyric (2014) artfully documents the experience of being Black and embattled by racist aggressions, both macro and micro. Some of these aggressions can be so very, very subtle as to make the person on the receiving end wonder if she is imagining things. In a society in deep, purposeful, willful denial about the legacy and continued pervasiveness of racism, Black people walk around with original trauma compounded, on the daily, in numerous ways that can tear at our overall well-being. Rankine brings all of this out in her book, and it was exciting to see this literary hero in person and hear her read passages from Citizen last night in an Unterberg Poetry Center event at 92Y.

Billed as "a conversation on art, trauma and social justice," the evening opened well with Rankine's introductory remarks and reading but took an odd turn as Cleonie White and Sarah Stemp, clinicians from the William Alanson White Institute for Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis, and Psychology, joined the author onstage. That might have seemed a reasonable pairing, given Rankine's concern for the way that racism threatens the health of individuals as well as societies. However, it turned awkward, particularly as Stemp delivered a long, labored statement before the increasingly restive audience.

Rankine betrayed no impatience, but the multigenerational, largely white crowd voiced displeasure several times, yelling "Ask questions!" at Stemp and even criticizing one another when, after something like 75 minutes, the floor was finally opened for their own questions. Even before the outbursts, though, you could sense an unhappy vibe around the hall. It felt less like a dignified literary event and more like a music gig where the crowd realizes it isn't getting what it came for.

At one point, Rankine mentioned the concept of "ethical loneliness"--that undercurrent of isolation--when you live in a society diametrically opposed to your ethics. Her observation was not only intellectual, it had a personal feeling tone that reached me. I got my pen out and made a note just as Rankine took matters further, adding how hard it is, in that situation, "if you don't have people...or you can't pay for people."

That got White's attention. She quickly responded that the Institute accepts sliding scale, a defensive rejoinder that seemed to come from out of nowhere. How had White envisioned this event, then? As a marketing tool?

I turned to the friendly woman on my right and whispered, "This is just not gelling. I don't know what's going on here." She agreed--"It's like they didn't communicate beforehand"--and made an early exit. I hung on but left a little bit into the audience Q&A.

So, what to tell you? Read Citizen: An American Lyric. Just read it.

For information on upcoming events at 92Y, click here.

92nd St Y
Lexington Avenue and 92nd Street, Manhattan
(map/directions)

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Movement Research Festival: Gwen Welliver and Abby Zbikowski

Choreographers  Gwen Welliver and Abby Zbikowski shared last evening's program at Danspace Project as part of the 2015 Movement Research Festival (Vanishing Point). The two artists were selected by festival curators Beth Gill and Cori Olinghouse to explore new ways of envisioning abstraction in contemporary dance. If postmodernists stripped "fantasy, metaphor and characters" from dancemaking, would it be possible to reclaim these compelling elements in fresh ways?

Paul Klee's Was für ein Pferd! (What a Horse!), 1929

With What a Horse!--the title alludes to a Paul Klee line drawing--Welliver works on this problem by transferring her own drawing practice to physical bodies on the move. Happily, two of the bodies in question belong to Claire Westby and Stuart Singer, both excellently suited for Welliver's heroic aesthetic here, capable of bold, substantial presence in space, with a launching as noisily assertive as Jake Meginsky's sound score. When Welliver has Westby extend a leg, for instance, it resembles both a puncturing weapon and a decisive act of punctuation. In either case, we quickly get that this is not a figure to tangle with, just as the childlike, spindly lines in the Klee drawing convey the electric dynamism of its horse and rider. Amid the plumped out, sculptural lines of Welliver's abstraction, there is some galloping, cantering, trotting and the introduction of a third figure--dancer Reid Bartelme (sporting a protective vest of what appears to be black leather covering a pale, satiny shirt) who heralds something of smoother, silkier texture in both movement and music.

If, as an abstractionist, Zbikowski takes interest in stripping anything away, it's stripping our sense that the art of dance is about making things look effortless. She foregrounds effort, even discomfort. In her duet, double nickels on a dime, she brings the "outside" influences of punk, hip-hop and martial arts into the formal space of concert dance but not as fetishized artifact but as form, energy and psyche embodied, in a matter-of-factly outrageous way, by wonderful Fiona Lundie and Jennifer Meckley. Like Singer and Westby in What a Horse!, these dancers take the space in great gulps, sneakers making noisy impact, legs striding wide, bodies jutting and wrenching within organized, neat lines of structure. Watch and you feel everything--the concision of the lines, the athletic power, the attitude of being ready for anything. Every now and then, I see a performance that would make an ideal bridge from the often insular world of contemporary dance to the rest of the universe, and this is one.

The 2015 Movement Research Festival concludes tomorrow. For information on remaining events, click here.

Danspace Project
St. Mark's Church-in-the-Bowery
131 East 10th Street (at Second Avenue), Manhattan
(map/directions)

Friday, December 4, 2015

Andrea Miller's "W H A L E" of a company at the Joyce


Members of Andrea Miller's Gallim Dance Company in W H A L E
Daniel Staaf (lower left), Austin Tyson (middle),
Paul Vickers (lower right)
(photo: Yi-Chun Wu)
Daniel Staaf, Georgia Usborne, Austin Tyson,
Matthew Perez, Paul Vickers, Gwyneth Mac
(photo: Yi-Chun Wu)

I'm wondering why contemporary dance is not nearly as popular as science fiction. After all, each time dancers take to a stage or performance space, a new world is created with its own inhabitants, culture(s), rules, language(s), questions and challenges. There really can't be that much of a divide between sci fi nerds and dance nerds, and I know there's some overlap.

Anyway, all that's to say, choreographer Andrea Miller  of Gallim Dance Company creates one helluva world out of her time on the Joyce Theater's stage. She also has a valiant troupe of players--Celine D'hont, Allysen HooksGwyn Mackenzie, Matthew Perez, Daniel StaafAustin Tyson, Georgia Usborne and Paul Vickers--who must love her enough to accept the scary assignments she gives them. Seriously, my heart was in my mouth half the time as I watched the wildly impassioned and danger-courting moves in her new evening-length work, W H A L E.

In a program note, Miller revealed the source of the show's title:
Matteo, our 2 year old son, wakes up in the middle of any given night pointing at the darkness, singing the world whale, as if one of these endangered mammals he loves lives in our apartment. W H A L E is dedicated to love in darkness and in light.
Matteo, it seems, also knows about alternate worlds that are also here on earth right now. What a wonderful thing!

(Top to Bottom) Austin Tyson, Daniel Staaf
(photo: Yi-Chun Wu)

The overall strangeness and emotional impact of W H A L E might benefit from a more condensed structure, eliminating the 20-minute intermission that jettisons viewers out of its world and, temporarily, out of its grip. Hold us in our seats and in that space with the id on the loose in its many manifestations--with all of the vulnerability, the unleashed exuberance, the careless aggression, the awkward, desperate need, the breathing light and breathing dark, the full catastrophe.

With help from Jordan Chiolis's music (performed live) and Nicole Pearce's lighting, waves of psychological weather pass across the stage as they pass through life and relationships. One male dancer's nudity is just one (and the most obvious) example of Miller's refusal to be delicate and of her company's bravery. Gather up your own courage, and go.

W H A L E continues through Sunday, December 6. Click here for your tickets.

The Joyce Theater
175 Eighth Avenue (corner of 19th Street), Manhattan
(map/directions)

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Tere O'Connor opens "The Goodbye Studies" at The Kitchen

Tere O'Connor's The Goodbye Studies
(photos: Yi-Chun Wu) 


Although not created alongside Tere O'Connor's new dance, The Goodbye StudiesJames Baker's original score might be considered its voice. If so, it is a voice containing multitudes strange, beguiling and fleeting. It emerges--bursts free--after a lengthy silence during which O'Connor has toyed with entrances and exits and placement coordinates for individuals and groupings within his 12-member corps. A rhythmic patchwork, the score reflects the texture of the ensemble that will dance this hour. Only dance insiders can fully appreciate the way the sight of each of these dancers--including "downtown" stalwarts like Simon Courchel and Michael Ingle--can make the heart beat a little faster in anticipation, but even newbies would surely read and get the seamless way they have learned to work together. It's visceral. And that coherence within diversity (and vice versa) is the charm of The Goodbye Studies, running at The Kitchen through December 12.

O'Connor creates an immersive ride for his audience. I don't mean the kind of immersive performance where we literally get all up in the performers' action. Here, that happens only in our heads, our shifting awareness--and, frankly, with O'Connor, that is quite enough. We zoom in and out, experience macro- and micro-awareness of the movement, the ensemble as a malleable, stretchable fabric that, at times, could even be rent apart and, in the next breath, flow back into wholeness. Within that fabric, sometimes wriggling hands claim our focus, or we might perceive tangles disentangling or wreathes of bodies unraveling themselves. Arms might issue firmly-shaped signals, graceful scoops and arcs or aimless pawing, requiring observation, discouraging interpretation. Smoothly morphing through its environment, the body of the ensemble becomes hypnotic and a satisfying force. You can be there with that.

Unwisely, I jotted notes but, the next day, wondered things like: "What exactly does 'orbital folk dancing' mean?"  I know I knew in that moment, but that moment is gone. And that seems to me to be where O'Connor lives.

The unshowy costuming--credited to performers Lily Gold, Eleanor Hullihan and Ingle--has a leveling effect, even though each garment is different, and lends a certain vulnerability. Michael O'Connor's lighting rests upon the ensemble without aggression.  The performers, well, they are everything: Courchel, Ingle, Gold, Hullihan, Tess Dworman, Natalie Green, Joey Loto, Oisín Monaghan, Angie Pittman, Mary Read, Laurel Snyder and Lauren Vermilion. They believe, and you believe. How lucky they and O'Connor are to have one another.

The Goodbye Studies continues through December 12 with performances at 8pm (no late seating). For schedule details and ticketing, click here.

Note: This is one of this season's hot tickets. Don't be late. Tickets are released to the wait list at 8pm sharp.

The Kitchen
512 West 19th Street (between 10th and 11th Avenues), Manhattan
(map/directions)

Wednesday, December 2, 2015