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Showing posts with label dance reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dance reviews. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2016

In review: "the skeleton architecture, or the future of our worlds"

Cast of the skeleton architecture, or the future of our worlds
(photo: Ian Douglas)

Read reviews of the skeleton architecture, or the future of our worlds, an evening of site-specific improvisation curated by Eva Yaa Asantewaapart of Danspace Project's Lost and Found platform at St. Mark's Church, Saturday, October 22, 2016.

Click to read:






For information on remaining Lost and Found events, 
now through November 19, click here.


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Saturday, September 19, 2015

Writing for Time Out New York!

Eva Yaa Asantewaa
(photo: D. Feller)

Hey there, gang!

A quick note to announce that I have been invited to write dance reviews for Time Out New York (online) a few times per month. My first will be a piece on Mark Dendy's Whistleblower (now through September 26), a Dixon Place dance commission. I'll post links to the TONY reviews here, as well as on Facebook and Twitter, as they become available.

Otherwise, I'll continue reviewing dance and other arts here on InfiniteBody.

I hope you're enjoying the new arts season! See you around town!

Eva :-)

Friday, April 17, 2015

Time Out New York eliminates dance section. Take action!

I just received this news from a dance community colleague and wanted to quickly share it with you. Take action. Just do it!

*****

I'm writing with some urgent news about the state of dance coverage at Time Out New York -- and to encourage you to take action.

Dance editor Gia Kourlas has resigned. Her last day will be May 1, and the status of her replacement is unknown.
 
Gia's decision coincides with changes at the magazine that include the elimination of dance as a stand-alone section. Dance, in a much-abbreviated form, has been integrated into a new Theater and Dance section. This week, the magazine does not have a feature profiling a dance artist, and the section has been diminished to one page with just eight listings and no photos.
    
Write a letter to the magazine telling them how essential dance is to New York City cultural life, and how important -- and trusted -- TONY's coverage of dance has been. If you're a producer, ask the magazine why you should continue to advertise in a publication that doesn't respect dance on par with other art forms. If you're an artist, explain how crucial these features were in building an audience and support for your work.
 
Send letters ASAP to the following individuals:
Editor-in-Chief Terri White terri.white@timeout.com
Deputy Editor Carla Sosenko carla.sosenko@timeout.com
Managing Editor Ethan LaCroix ethan.lacroix@timeout.com
with a CC to letters@timeoutny.com 

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Dance needs a searchable database

Seeking reviews of Mexican filmmaker Alejandro González Iñárritu's Biutiful--which I just saw, stunned and humbled by its powerful beauty and Javier Bardem's soul-filled lead performance--I found a list of 220 external (i.e., non-user) reviews on IMDb. The site's subscriber edition has even more, apparently, but this will certainly hold me for a while.

Javier Bardem as Uxbal in Biutiful
That made me wonder: Where is the online database of reviews of dance?

For that matter--and I know I'm not the first to ask this--Where is the comprehensive, easily searchable database of upcoming dance performances?

Just a couple of things the community of dance artists, its journalists and its supporters could really use!

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Flamenco yesterday, today and tomorrow

Dance Magazine Editor-in-Chief Wendy Perron and I both have our say on the entertaining Flamenco Hoy by Carlos Saura (New York City Center). Check out our reviews here.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Dance Magazine invites feedback

Dance Magazine invites you to Talk Back to Critics: Join the Dialogue. Send in your feedback on Dance Magazine's dance reviews.

It seems a bit clunky--making you send an email rather than use a more convenient Comments system right on the page--but at least it's something.

Click here to read some current and archived Dance Magazine reviews and get started.

Friday, September 24, 2010

My latest Dance Magazine reviews

The October issue of Dance Magazine includes my review of the companies of Camille A. Brown, Andrea Miller, Kate Weare and Monica Bill Barnes at The Joyce Theater (August 9-14). Pick up a copy!

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

"The Dance Insider" seeks investor

Received today from Paul Ben-Itzak of The Dance Insider:
Own the turnkey publication in dance--for free. The Dance Insider Online, the most influential magazine in dance, is available for free to an investor ready to pay a salary to its editor and per story compensation to its writers for a set period of time, in exchange for a majority interest in the magazine.
The DI's assets include the most recognizeable brand of online dance journalism in the business; 12+ years of archived reviews, news, commentary, photography and art from around the world produced by the top journalists in dance; and an e-mail list of dance studio owners, company directors, college dance department directors, theater directors, media, dancers, teachers, students, and more. The DI had more than 3 million hits in 2009 from 160 countries.
Interested parties contact publisher Paul Ben-Itzak at paul@danceinsider.com.
Paul Ben-Itzak 
Editor & Publisher
The Dance Insider

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Rogoff's "Diagnosis": Get it online now!

Well, as it turns out, my Dance Magazine review of Tamar Rogoff's "Diagnosis of a Faun"--starring Gregg Mozgala--is already online here.

Dance Magazine reviews: Cardona and more

My Dance Magazine review of Wally Cardona's Really Real at BAM Harvey Theater is now up here.

In coming months, Dance Magazine will feature my print or online reviews of works by the following choreographers:

Aszure Barton (Ringling International Arts Festival, Sarasota, FL)

Deborah Hay and Yvonne Rainer (Baryshnikov Arts Center)

Tamar Rogoff (La MaMa Ellen Stewart Theatre)

Chunky Move (BAM Gilman Opera House)

Reggie Wilson and Andréya Ouamba (BAM Gilman Opera House)

and, of course, I'll let you known when these are posted or printed. As always, thanks for your interest!

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Two more takes on Merce

Grand Old Master
by Tobi Tobias, Seeing Things, ArtsJournal.com, April 17, 2009

Merce Cunningham, Turning 90: Meanings Still Pour From Movement
by Alastair Macaulay, The New York Times, April 17, 2009

Two prominent dance critics weigh in on Nearly Ninety, which runs through tomorrow afternoon at BAM. And what did your humble blogger friend think of the piece? You'll have to wait for the Dance Magazine (or DanceMagazine.com) review to find out!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Ishmael Huston-Jones reflects on writer Burt Supree

On BURT SUPREE

From Movement Research Performance Journal #6, spring / summer 1993, heroes and histories

[re-posted with permission from Ishmael Houston-Jones]

I hate moving. I hate making Solomon-like decisions of whether to toss or keep my mountains of magazines. I hate going through archeological digs through molehills of cash receipts. I hate trying to pack my files but finding it impossible not to read every item in each drawer. This has been my life for two months. While wallowing in this neurosis I came upon two ancient reviews by Burt Supree which, of course, I read. Burt’s keen observations about these two pieces made two and a half years apart tell a lot about my work as an artist and how it is informed by the times and frame of mind in which I live and create.

The first piece was Cowboys, Dreams, and Ladders a collaboration with Fred Holland that premiered at The Kitchen in February 1984. In Cowboys Fred and I used a collage of movement, text and visuals to explore and deconstruct the “western” myth through the eyes of two Afro-American “downtown” male performance artists. Trying to place our identities within and without this myth was key, and although we used familiar western iconography, (movie music and crickets on the soundtrack, tumble weed and cacti made of urban debris as sets), the idea of making a performance piece about “Black Cowboys” was often greeted by nervous or ironic giggles by our white peers. I worried that people would not get it. In his review Burt concluded that Fred and I “with the very potent intimacy of performers who have worked a lot together ... give Cowboys, Dreams, and Ladders the translucent depth of a world you’re not in a hurry to leave. And like diving to see the creatures of the reef, you’ve got to come up slowly when the air runs out.” In other words, he got it. He also wrote that he was able to find such easy empathy with our particular cowboy roles because “... it’s a cinch when they favor antic grace over stiffness of brutality.” I remember reading this review over breakfast at 103 feeling that I had found a critic friend who understood what it was I was trying to do.

The second review was of THEM a collaboration for six male dancers with writer Dennis Cooper and composer/musician Chris Cochrane performed at PS 122 in November 1986. Burt had seen an earlier work-in-progress version but found the completed piece “grimmer ... as if too many emotional and sensual options have been terminated since then.” And though he conceded that THEM wasn’t a piece about AIDS, “AIDS constricts its view and casts a considerable pall.” So again Burt’s critique was on the mark. By November 1986 I already had friends, ex-boyfriends, heroes who were dying of The Plague and making an upbeat work about the ways six men could possibly be together seemed impossible then. I remember feeling nervous the evening Burt came. I knew that his companion had died earlier that week and I was anxious about the nerves the piece tweaked. In the end he wrote a respectful review of a piece that I doubt he liked very much. He ended with what I took as a plea for Ishmael to lighten up (just a little bit) by writing – “Simple pleasures and affections are far away. In Houston-Jones’ outlook the bullying, clamorous, brusque, torn-up aspects of ... relationships are intrinsically knotted up with our passion and tenderness and need... (B)ut our rough human grace is overwhelmed by frustration and defeat.”

I hope that in the years since then, I have learned to regain some of that rough, human (and occasionally antic) grace.

I hate moving.

Ishmael Houston-Jones, 1993

Ishmael Houston-Jones has been living and making work in New York since 1979.

Monday, December 8, 2008

David Parker on negative reviews

Choreographer David Parker of The Bang Group writes on reacting--and moving on from--a negative review in this Dance Magazine essay.

And speaking of David Parker, if you have yet to see Parker play Liesl in Doug Elkins's Fraulein Maria--his gender-bending, vestpocket version of The Sound of Music--what the heck are you waiting for? Check it out this weekend on the unbelievably tiny stage at Joe's Pub. Click here for all the details.

Friday, October 3, 2008

No quarrel with Jones

Bill T. Jones's A Quarreling Pair, which regrettably closes tomorrow evening at BAM's Gilman Opera House, is a huge, generous apparition--95 minutes of full-tilt, multidimensional vaudeville of the mind. Blown up from a four-page, two-character puppet play written by Jane Bowles in 1945, it has become a thing of delicate and bodacious beauty, oddity, vulgarity, fierce insight and poetry in equal measure. It speaks of the nakedness, the vulnerability of the artist who ventures out into the messy, messy world.

Every artist who put his or her shoulder to this wheel gave of the highest quality: Bill T. Jones (conception, direction, originial text, and choreography in collaboration with Janet Wong and the company), Bjorn G. Amelan (set design--wow!), Robert Wierzel (lighting), Liz Prince (costume design--heavenly!); Janet Wong (video design); Sam Crawford (sound design--crafty!), and the excellent team of Wynne Bennett, Christopher William Antonio Lancaster and George Lewis, Jr. (composition and performance of original music). Jones's sublime performers include Antonio Brown, Asli Bulbul, Peter Chamberlin, Leah Cox, Maija Garcia, Shayla-Vie Jenkins, LaMichael Leonard, I-Ling Liu, Paul Matteson and Erick Montes with Tracy Ann Johnson.

Sure to stand as one of the highlights of the current season and of Jones's exceptional career, A Quarreling Pair should be seen now and revisited. I can barely wait for its return.

BAM Howard Gilman Opera House
30 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn
718-636-4100




Bill T. Jones, in Giddy Mood, Unveils Comic `Pair'
by Tobi Tobias, Seeing Things, ArtsJournal.com
(originally in Bloomberg News, October 2, 2008)

At the Next Wave Festival, a Woman Wanders in Search of Herself
by Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times, October 1, 2008

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