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Showing posts with label Siobhan Burke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siobhan Burke. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

"Dance Criticism in New York" -- Thank you so much!

Glitter valentine, East Village
(c)2011, Eva Yaa Asantewaa


T H A N K  Y O U !


to everyone from Gibney Dance, especially Craig Peterson,  Margaret Tudor,  Julia Vickers,  Paul Galando and the entire team

to my esteemed panelists--Rose Anne Thom,  A Nia Austin-Edwards,  Jaime Shearn Coan,  Siobhan Burke,  Charmaine Warren and Marissa Perel

and to all who attended or participated online

Dance Criticism in New York was an unqualified success with our six panelists sharing diverse experience and perspectives, each speaker demonstrating professional commitment to honest, responsible work on behalf of this art that we all love. We can all agree that our writing thrives on the dynamic energy of multiple worlds--our immediate, one-to-one encounter with artists and their work; our own histories and inner landscapes; and our life OUT THERE in our communities with readers who value dance now or might recognize its worth through our special insight and passionate example.

Moving on, we need to look at the power we invest in dance criticism, who claims access to that power and to what ends, who is denied access and the consequences of that exclusion. We need to create alternative, but adequately supported, venues for dance writing, and we need to value and compensate the dedicated time, skill and labor of that writing.

I hope our conversation will continue in many forms, generating new ideas and collaborations. Please reach out to me with your thoughts and suggestions. I am ready to partner with you.

If you missed this event or its livestream, you can access the recording here.

In the meantime, here is the text of my introductory remarks.

******


In his 2002 essay, “The Perfect Dance Critic,” Miguel Gutierrez wrote, “The perfect dance critic does not exist.” [http://www.miguelgutierrez.org/words/the-perfect-dance-critic/] And then Miguel went on to tell us the many, many qualities, abilities, tendencies and working conditions that would make it possible for that mythical unicorn, The Perfect Dance Critic, to exist.

But, perhaps, what we should be looking for in dance criticism is progress, not perfection.

Convening tonight’s panel is my way of asking, Can we get a little progress here in New York, a city that remains of great importance in dance’s history, its growth and innovation and, I trust, its future? A little progress, if not perfection?

Can we, as critics, be a meaningful part of this community? Or do we stay at the sidelines? Do we, as dance critics, have a meaningful place out in the world beyond dance? A world of beauty and also a world of inequities and injustice? Can we bridge the gap, bringing that world in, bringing dance out to that world?

Rather than perfection, can we seek humanity?  Rather than cool and lofty distance from the artist, can we respond to art and to artists with empathy?  Can we meet the poetry of dance with the poetry of words?  Rather than complacency, can we have insurgency? Provocation? Transformation? Shamanism? Can we value the diversity and complexity of a changing world in which we do not fear those changes nor fear how they require us to rigorously examine ourselves, to question our assumptions and to evolve? Can we foster communion, perception, intuition? Can we honor deep and broad experience and knowledge without resisting new questions, new tools, new pathways?

Do we truly love dance enough to give it the respectful attention and witness that it deserves?

I’m wondering. I’m hoping. And that is why we are here tonight.

Eva Yaa Asantewaa
(c)2015, InfiniteBody

Friday, April 10, 2015

[UPDATE] "Dance Criticism in New York" panel at Gibney


Tuesday, May 12 -- 6pm to 8:30pm

280 Broadway, Manhattan

DanceCriticism_Panel
Above, l-r: Charmaine Warren, A. Nia Austin-Edwards and Marissa Perel
Below, l-r: Rose Anne Thom, Jaime Shearn Coan and Siobhan Burke

Do dance critics play a useful, integrated role within New York’s dance community? How well do they serve the field and its audiences? How can dance writing and its presentation evolve to make the most of changed and challenging economic, social and technological environments?

Listen to insights from writers A. Nia Austin-Edwards, Charmaine Warren, Jaime Shearn Coan, Marissa Perel, Rose Anne Thom and Siobhan Burke, with moderator Eva Yaa Asantewaa, followed by a frank and lively discussion of your own ideas on dance criticism in New York.

Free admission

RSVP here


Note: As of Monday, April 13, we are at capacity for this event, but we will be livestreaming!


Also, we'll be taking questions for the panel via Twitter! All you have to do is tweet @GibneyDance with #AsktheCritics.

Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center
280 Broadway (entrance at 53A Chambers Street), Manhattan
(map/directions)

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Hold the date! Tuesday, May 12: Dance Criticism in New York

Dance Criticism in New York

presented by
Gibney Dance Center
280 Broadway, Manhattan

moderated by
Eva Yaa Asantewaa
InfiniteBody

Tuesday, May 12 
6pm to 8:30pm

Free admission
(RSVP information to come)


Do dance critics play a useful, integrated role within New York’s dance community? 

How well do they serve the field and its audiences? 

How can dance writing and its presentation evolve to make the most of changed and challenging economic, social and technological environments?

Listen to insights from our panel of dance writers--

A Nia Austin-Edwards
Charmaine Warren
Jaime Shearn Coan
Marissa Perel
Rose Anne Thom
and
Siobhan Burke

--as they respond to these questions as well as "The Perfect Dance Critic," an essay by Miguel Gutierrez. Brief presentations will be followed by a frank, lively community discussion of your own ideas and strategies around dance criticism in New York.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Visiting Sydnie Mosley's Dance in the City

I've just finished up another delightful visit with the talented dancer/dance writer Siobhan Burke, choreographer-educator Sydnie L. Mosley, and Mosley's roomful of bright students from Dance in the City, a pre-college summer program at Barnard College.

L to r: Siobhan Burke, Sydnie L. Mosley and yours truly
We discussed ideas from a Deborah Jowitt essay on descriptive writing in criticism and traded responses to the current Pilobolus run at the Joyce. Answering questions about dance criticism helps me to focus on what I most value as a writer (and a reader) and what strategies work best in the often tricky work of writing about this amazing art form.

Thanks, again, to Sydnie for her always gracious welcome, to Siobhan (my former review editor at Dance Magazine) for being the perfect partner in crime, and to this summer's students for their keen interest and energy. Enjoy the rest of your stay in New York!

Thursday, October 20, 2011

To hell with Beyoncé

My colleague (and Dance Magazine review editor) Siobhan Burke has been following the uproar around Beyoncé Giselle Knowles's thievery--and, yes, I called it that. We're both fans of Slate's Culture Gabfest podcast, and Siobhan has shared a few thoughts about how this whole brouhaha--as well as dance itself--has been handled on the Gabfest and elsewhere.

Bottom line for me is, why does one of our most accomplished, respected dance artists have to get ripped off by a pop superstar for dance to get any attention at all?

Read Siobhan's posts on PHASE.SHIFT: "Big Moment" and "On Second Thought..."

Sunday, April 24, 2011

AUDIO PREVIEW: Jill Sigman

Above/below: Jill Sigman in Hut #5
(Photo: Lindsay Comstock)


The Edges of Performance

A workshop led by Jill Sigman

Saturday-Sunday, June 4-5 (2-5pm)

Location: The Border
1 Grattan Street, Studio 221, Bushwick, Brooklyn
(Take L train to Morgan Avenue)

$15/workshop day


from Hut #5 (Photo: Lindsay Comstock)


 AUDIO PREVIEW

Dancer-choreographer Jill Sigman
talks about The Edges of Performance

Where do the edges of performance lie? Does performing rely on a state of mind, a mode of presentation, a kind of activity, an audience? We will investigate these edges beginning with fine-grained movement explorations that are fueled by the visual and aural fields around us. We will then let ourselves be guided by touch, task, and taste, and eventually arrive at explorations of such activities as planting cooking, or building. We will test out the borders of performing through these activities—performing for ourselves, each other, the space, and the street below.
It is encouraged to take both days of the workshop for a more complete investigation, but it is possible to take one day as a discrete experience.
This workshop is part of the ongoing series CLASSCLASSCLASS. It also coincides with Arts in Bushwick Open Studios.
For more information, 
click here.

Jill Sigman asks questions through the medium of the body. Trained in classical ballet, modern dance, art history, and analytic philosophy, Sigman has been making dances and performance installations since the early 90s. In 1998, she founded her company jill sigman/thinkdance as a vehicle for her performance experiments. In the same year she received her Ph.D. in philosophy from Princeton University. Equally comfortable on a proscenium stage or crawling in the dirt armed with fluorescent waterguns, Sigman transforms deceptively simple actions into explorations of politics, gender, and society; her work currently exists at the intersection of dance, theater, and visual installation. Sigman’s dances have been produced by such New York City venues as Dance Theater Workshop, Danspace Project, Dixon Place, PS 1 Contemporary Art Center, Dancing in the Streets, and the 92nd Street Y Harkness Dance Center. Internationally, her work has been shown in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Croatia, Hungary, Slovenia, and India. As a teacher, Sigman offers workshops nationally at colleges and universities; she has been a member of the dance faculty at Princeton University, a movement tutor at the Imaginary Academy in Groznjan, Croatia, a frequent guest teacher in Belgium, and a professor of aesthetics and performance theory at Brooklyn College and The New School. She has recently been teaching in Oslo, Norway, and is currently at work on a multi-site project about huts and sustainable living. See: www.thinkdance.org

Learn more about Jill Sigman in an interview with dancer-writer Siobhan Burke on her blog, phase.shift and on Performance Ritual, a new blog Burke shares with Isabella Bruno. Click here and here.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

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