by Maggie Astor and Christina Caron, The New York Times, February 25, 2018
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Cast of Tatyana Tenenbaum's Untitled Work for Voice (photo: Liz Charky) |
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Choreographer/composer Tatyana Tenenbaum performs in her work. (photo: Simon Courchel) |
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Gabrielle Revlock and Gregory Holt in Susan Rethorst's Stealing from Myself (photo: Robert Altman) |
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bend the even danced by Mauriah Kraker (left) and Jennifer Monson Below: Monson (left) and Kraker (photos: Ryutaro Ishikane) |
Most of New York's dancemakers struggle to secure space to develop their work. But, for Jennifer Monson's latest piece, nature has provided...provided a place for research and exploration...provided motivation, inspiration, even, in its way, partnership.
The research for this project was started in February 2017 with weekly rehearsals at dawn. These rehearsals have generated material connections between light, music, and movement – not as a representation of the liminal states of dawn but as a way of accessing new frameworks for emanating presence and animacy through the three mediums. This work allows for the possibility that movement disappears and leaves only sensation, an emanation that is experienced through the skin and ears, not so much through the eyes. Through the choreographic process, the collaborators will research the physics of sound, light, and movement on multiple scales – both scientific and experiential – drawing on atmospheric science as well as particle physics to inform the dawn practice.Monson proposes something new, not so much relinquishing the choreographer's role--for the movement in this piece is fascinating and appealing as it is willful and wayward--as redirecting us to an unacknowledged result of choreography, a different purpose for it and for its fusion with other stimulants. I feel that I'm quite stuck on the edge of this desire, instinctually sympathetic with it while what's aimed for remains elusive. As audience members, we're habituated to focus on looking and listening for things and to appreciate (and, yes, interpret and judge) what we see and hear. bend the even intends disruption, or some form of liberation, but I'm caught up in its sensations.
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Above and below, Mor Mendel (at left) and Hadar Ahuvia (photos: Jakub Wittchen) |
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Arcell Cabuag of Ronald K. Brown/EVIDENCE (photo: Bill Hebert) |
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Above: Cabuag (left) with Ronald K. Brown (photo: Julieta Cervantes) Below: Brown with Annique Roberts of Ronald K. Brown/EVIDENCE (photo: Ayodele Casel) |
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Left: Kazunori (Kazu) Kumagai (photo: Maiko Miyagawa) Right: Kaoru Watanabe (photo: Yuki Kokubo) |
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Scenes from he his own mythical beast by David Thomson Above and below: Thomson, at left, with Paul Hamilton (photos: Maria Baranova) |
he his own mythical beast interrogates the complexities of American culture and draws from Hitchcock’s Rear Window, James Baldwin, the confession booth, Claudia Rankine, high school fights, Judith Butler, baptism, Roland Barthes, and Trisha Brown. Venus, a character that flirts with black face, gender ambiguity and sexuality, becomes a guide on this journey. Part beast and part myth, Venus is named after the Hottentot Venus, aka Sarah Baartman – an enslaved black woman who was exhibited as an exotic in the early 19th Century London and Paris. This code-shifting chimaera is Thomson’s response to the post-modern performance aesthetic that historically privileged neutrality as a means of subverting the personal narrative.
--promotional material for he his own mythical beast, a world premiere at Performance Space New York
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At center, Jodi Bender (left) with Katrina Reid (photo: Maria Baranova) |