Archive for September, 2010

September 19, 2010

Dance With Camera

News_Nancy Wozny_Dance with Camera_robbinschilds_AL Steiner

Courtesy of the artists and Taxter & Spengemann, New York

robbinschilds + A.L. Steiner, “C.L.U.E. Part I,” 2007, is part of Dance with Camera.

A naked man dances in the snow, while the late modern dance legend Merce Cunningham sits motionless at the opposite end of the room. A tarantella ritual explodes with a brutal raw energy, while Trisha Brown slows down time in a tucked away corner.

All of this made me stop in my tracks for Dance with Camera at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston running now through Oct. 17.

“With” is the operative word in this show.

“I describe the exhibit like a pas de deux, where the camera is partnering with dance,” says Jenelle Porter, curator of the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) at the University of Pennsylvania and Dance with Camera curator.

“These are the works of visual artists. They only exist for the camera. None are records of a dance.”

Porter makes us wonder, how a camera is like a dancer, in that it too moves, has a quality of motion, and is able to show us new and unconsidered angles for viewing. The camera is the dancer we never see, unless Charles Atlas, Cunningham’s longtime video collaborator, happens to be involved. The exhibit includes two remarkable films by Atlas, one that turns the tables on the filmmaker.

A room full of dancers mid-motion packs a wallop whether it’s live or on camera, so Porter isn’t remotely surprised by my reaction.

“I did work with Toby Kamps on the floor plan for CAMH, but it’s so different,” Porter says. “At ICA, the show was more on a path, so the pacing was very planned. In the CAM installation, there are so many works in your view immediately. You can see almost everything from the midpoint of the space. That moment of seeing all those bodies moving in space came just slightly later in my version, so there was at first this kind of moment of quiet and stillness.

“For me, it was important to have bodies at all different scales, both time scales and size scales. Some pieces are so slow, even still, and some are exuberant and frenetic. My experience of the show is quite the same as yours, dazzled, as it was for many viewers in Philadelphia.”

Not everything is in motion. Kelly Nipper’s sequence of photographs, interval (2000), asks us to connect the dots ourselves, stringing together what happens between these images. “Opening with the Nipper photographs immediately throws off your expectation of the dance and the camera, and puts you in a position to be open to all these different types of relationships between the dancer and the camera,” Porter says.

Dance with Camera is filled with abundant treasures, so pace yourself, visit often. Here are some of the dances that caught my eye.

Bruce Nauman’s Dance or Exercise on the Perimeter of a Square (1967-68) might take a little explanation. Nauman is a conceptual artist, not a dancer, yet he lived and worked around the renegade energy of the Judson Dance Theatre, coming into contact with such icons of an era as Yvonne Rainer. The written instructions for Nauman’s piece begin with the words, “Hire a dancer.”

He didn’t, and the result has become a signature performance archive. The constant clicking of the metronome becomes the unattended soundtrack for the show.

Equally curious is the zany fake ballerina, Eleanor Antin in Caught in the Act(1973). Antin learned ballet from a book and well, it shows, making a very witty comment on pretense. Antin reveals what usually remains hidden, bringing the usual ethereal nature of ballet crashing down to earth with a thud and a snicker.

Another group of non-dancers grabbed my attention in Ann Carlson and Mary Ellen Strom’s film of lawyers acting out the gestures from their lives inSloss, Kerr, Rosenberg & Moore (2007). Carlson is famous for using real people in her dances, and here the authenticity is particularly powerful.

Bruce Conner’s Breakaway (1966) busts entertainer Tony Basil into a million cuts, laying the groundwork of what would become music video decades later. Basil, recently seen on FOX reality show, So You Think You Can Dance as a guest judge, also performs the song. It’s mesmerizing and considerably more interesting than what you would find on MTV any day.

Porter includes a little history corner. Plan to park there for at least 30 minutes or make several short visits. Here you can watch Brown dancing in real time and then again in slow motion in Babette Mangolte’s Water Motor(1978).

It’s like getting a little closer to Brown’s uncanny sense of flow. There’s a rare chance to watch William Forsythe dance in Solo (1997), directed by Thomas Lovell Balogh. Rainer’s Hand Movie (1966) reveals the camera as a way to direct our attention to the protean dexterity of the human hand. But it may be Hilary Harris’ Nine Variations on a Dance Film (1966) that kept me most transfixed.

The amazing Bettie de Jong repeats the same phrase over and over while the camera chooses a different way of showing us the movement. It’s a chance to see exactly how a camera can deconstruct choreography.

The exhibit is loaded with community events, film showings and performances. Houston choreographer and filmmaker Lydia Hance ofFrameDance collaborates with Rosie Trump for Points and Coordinates on Sept. 16. Anthony Brandt of Musiqa plans a Loft Concert with video by Be Johnny on Sept. 23. The Judson icon Deborah Hay presents Lecture on the Performance of Beauty on Oct. 2, while the exhibit wraps up with Navigating the Hallway, including dances by Leslie Scates, KDNY, Becky Valls, Teresa Chapman and Core Performance Company.

Oh, about that naked guy in the snow.

The Luis Jacob film is called A Dance for Those of Us Whose Hearts Have Turned to Ice, based on the Choreography of Francoise Sullivan and the Sculpture of Barbara Hepworth (2007). Keith Cole, a well-known performance artist, actually makes several references to Sullivan’s dances during his snow dance. He is most definitely performing just for the camera, and for you, too, should you happen to wander into Dance with Camera.

Reprinted from Culturemap.

September 18, 2010

The Great Outdoors of Dance: Jacob’s Pillow

News_Nancy Wozny_Jacob's Pillow_Jason Hortin_Benjamin Wardell_Hubbard Street Dance Chicago_Deep Down Dos

Photo by Christopher Duggan; Lighting design by Nicholas Phillips

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s Jason Hortin and Benjamin Wardell in “Deep Down Dos”

Every Wednesday during the season at exactly 1:15 pm the bells ring on the grounds of Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in the Berkshire Hills of Western Massachusetts.

It’s not just any bell, but a call to signify that dancers are in the house and a week’s worth of motion is about to begin. Ella Baff, executive director, is there to greet any number of dance legends who happen to be performing that week, introduce the outstanding staff, the fearless interns and the scholars in residence, which for the past two weeks, has included me.

Last week, The Göteborg Ballet along with Australian innovator (and Houston favorite) Lucy Guerin were in attendance, along with Chet Walker and hisJazz/ Musical Theatre Dance students. This week it’s Hubbard Street Dance ChicagoThe Vanaver Caravan and the artists of the Choreographers Lab.  Also included in the mix were CultureMap president Nic Phillips, who designed the lighting for Hubbard Street resident choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo’s two world premieres, along with Houston choreographer andUniversity of Houston faculty member Becky Valls , who is joining the Choreographers Lab.

What fun to have a tiny Texas invasion.

Thanks to Nancy Henderek at  Dance Salad Festival, I had seen The Göteborg Ballet a few years back in Houston. A clever program titled 3xBolero sent three choreographers riffing off Maurice Ravel’s famous one movement orchestral work, Bolero. Johan Inger’s Walking Mad fused narrative, inventive movement and one limber timber folding fence to expand upon Ravel’s notion of crescendo. Kenneth Kvarnstrom’s OreloB(Bolero spelled backwards) echoed Ravel’s intensity and relentless engine.

Alexander Ekman’s Episode 17 played with the composer’s cumulative structure with wit and sass. I am not sure I will ever listen to Bolero the same way again. Somewhere, Ravel is reveling.

Guerin’s Structure and Sadness references the 1970 collapse of the West Gate Bridge in Melbourne, Australia. Enlisting movement based on the forces of push, pull, compression, suspension, torsion and collapse, her dancers double as engineers as they build one incredible structure on stage.

As with all of Guerin’s work, ideas are abstracted, yet fragments of a narrative illuminate her kinetic landscape. In light of recent infrastructure failures such as the BP Gulf Coast oil spill and other disasters, Structure and Sadness feels unusually timely. More importantly, Guerin’s poignant work stands as a testament of the depth by which artists transform tragedy, crafting beauty from the dust of despair.

Dancing outside is such a profound experience I wonder why it isn’t part of our dance going habits more often. At the Pillow, watching dance against the dramatic backdrop of the Berkshire mountains and lush forests happens at 6:15 every Wednesday through Saturday on the Inside/Out Stage.

Last week, I caught Jennifer Nugent of Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company in I’d Go Out With You. Nugent moves with same agile fluidly as the breeze moving across the stage. As the week went on, I took in performances by Amy Marshall Dance Company, students from the Jazz/Musical Theatre Dance program and  Zach Morris and Tom Pearson ofThird Rail Projects. The Pillow has embarked on an ambitious Save the Stage campaign.

By next summer, a new stage will be in place. I can’t fuss enough about the sheer splendor of witnessing great dance in the great outdoors. It’s such a reminder of how deeply dance tethers to the natural world. After Morris and Pearson’s dancers scampered about the rocks in time with the music, I watched a gaggle of wiggly children rush into the space recently blessed by dance.

Leave it to joy seeking little ones to know sacred ground when they see it.

This week I’m immersed in Hubbard Street’s rich offerings, which include Ohad Naharin’s Tabula Rasa, Cerrudo’s Blanco and Deep Down Dos, and Aszure Barton’s Untouched. I had the privilege of watching Phillips in action, as both of Cerrudo’s dances virtually partner with light. On Friday night, I’ll check out the global mix masters of  The Vanaver Caravan.

Not everything is in motion here at the Pillow. An exhibit of Pilates at the Pillow includes images, footage and writings about Joseph Pilates’ time here. A 1956 Dance Magazine story by Doris Hering, caught my eye. As the frequent scribe of Dance Magazine’s Your Body column, it was fun to see the column in its earlier incarnation. Mostly, we think of dance as something that can’t be captured.

True, unless Lois Greenfield happens to be holding the camera. Lois Greenfield: Imagined Moments features an extraordinary collection of her work over the past few decades. Dance, free of choreographic constraints and created specifically for the camera, comes to life on the walls of Blake’s Barn.

It’s hard to walk around on these hallowed dance grounds and not think about all the icons who traveled these very paths. Images of founder Ted Shawn and his men dancers, along with other dance luminaries, grace the grounds. The site is a National Historic Landmark. It was even a stop on the underground railway.

Pillow history surrounds the visitor, yet the Festival is very much about what’s happening right this minute in dance. The programing is a mix of international, national and up and coming troupes, most of which are on my must-see list. I am more than halfway through my goal of watching the entire 2010 season on DVD in the Archives. Wish me luck with that.

I told many of you I would be staying in a rustic cabin with no A/C with furry wildlife about. Sadly, that didn’t happen.

Instead, I stayed in a mountain home with a deck overlooking a meadow and the Berkshires. Oh well.

On Saturday, I will be in the presence of dancing hippos in Mindy Aloff’s Pillow Talk on her recent book, Hippo in a Tutu: Dancing in Disney Animation. That may be the sum total of my wildlife experience. But I am proud to announce that I’m completely up on my Massachusetts black bear etiquette.

The Pillow is also about people. Can I help it if I hark from the best arts tribe ever? Houstonian J.R. Glover, Director of Education, filled me on the many diverse programs that happen over the summer and the outreach activities to the Berkshire community. I caught up with Caleb Teicher, a student in the Jazz/Musical Theatre Dance program, who I had interviewed years ago. It was a great joy to see what a fine dancer he has become.

I understand a tiny bit more about dance video and photography after spending time with Nel Shelby and Christopher Duggan. Veteran scholars Maura Keefe and Debra Cash made delightful colleagues. Archivist Norton Owen is a pillow treasure chest of knowledge. And, of course, it’s been terrific to hang out with the Houston contingent.

With two pre-show talks, an afternoon Pillow Talk with Hubbard Street’s director Glenn Edgerton and a post-show Q & A yet to do, it’s a dance-jammed day.

I have more to tell you, but need to dash now as my Pillow-palooza is still very much in motion.

Reprinted from Culturemap.

September 1, 2010

The Great Outdoors of Dance: My time at Jacob’s Pillow

News_Nancy Wozny_Jacob's Pillow_Erik Johansson_Ellah Nagil_The Göteborg Ballet_in OreloB of 3xBoléro

Photo by Ingmar Jernberg

Erik Johansson and Ellah Nagil of The Goteborg Ballet in “OreloB of 3xBolero”

Every Wednesday during the season at exactly 1:15 pm the bells ring on the grounds of Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in the Berkshire Hills of Western Massachusetts.

It’s not just any bell, but a call to signify that dancers are in the house and a week’s worth of motion is about to begin. Ella Baff, executive director, is there to greet any number of dance legends who happen to be performing that week, introduce the outstanding staff, the fearless interns and the scholars in residence, which for the past two weeks, has included me.

Last week, The Göteborg Ballet along with Australian innovator (and Houston favorite) Lucy Guerin were in attendance, along with Chet Walker and hisJazz/ Musical Theatre Dance students. This week it’s Hubbard Street Dance ChicagoThe Vanaver Caravan and the artists of the Choreographers Lab.  Also included in the mix were CultureMap president Nic Phillips, who designed the lighting for Hubbard Street resident choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo’s two world premieres, along with Houston choreographer andUniversity of Houston faculty member Becky Valls , who is joining the Choreographers Lab.

What fun to have a tiny Texas invasion.

Thanks to Nancy Henderek at  Dance Salad Festival, I had seen The Göteborg Ballet a few years back in Houston. A clever program titled 3xBolero sent three choreographers riffing off Maurice Ravel’s famous one movement orchestral work, Bolero. Johan Inger’s Walking Mad fused narrative, inventive movement and one limber timber folding fence to expand upon Ravel’s notion of crescendo. Kenneth Kvarnstrom’s OreloB(Bolero spelled backwards) echoed Ravel’s intensity and relentless engine.

Alexander Ekman’s Episode 17 played with the composer’s cumulative structure with wit and sass. I am not sure I will ever listen to Bolero the same way again. Somewhere, Ravel is reveling.

Guerin’s Structure and Sadness references the 1970 collapse of the West Gate Bridge in Melbourne, Australia. Enlisting movement based on the forces of push, pull, compression, suspension, torsion and collapse, her dancers double as engineers as they build one incredible structure on stage.

As with all of Guerin’s work, ideas are abstracted, yet fragments of a narrative illuminate her kinetic landscape. In light of recent infrastructure failures such as the BP Gulf Coast oil spill and other disasters, Structure and Sadness feels unusually timely. More importantly, Guerin’s poignant work stands as a testament of the depth by which artists transform tragedy, crafting beauty from the dust of despair.

News_Nancy Wozny_Jacob's Pillow_Suchu Dance_at_Inside_Out

Suchu Dance at Jacob’s Pillow

Photo by John Ferguson

Dancing outside is such a profound experience I wonder why it isn’t part of our dance going habits more often. At the Pillow, watching dance against the dramatic backdrop of the Berkshire mountains and lush forests happens at 6:15 every Wednesday through Saturday on the Inside/Out Stage.

Last week, I caught Jennifer Nugent of Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company in I’d Go Out With You. Nugent moves with same agile fluidly as the breeze moving across the stage. As the week went on, I took in performances by Amy Marshall Dance Company, students from the Jazz/Musical Theatre Dance program and  Zach Morris and Tom Pearson ofThird Rail Projects. The Pillow has embarked on an ambitious Save the Stage campaign.

By next summer, a new stage will be in place. I can’t fuss enough about the sheer splendor of witnessing great dance in the great outdoors. It’s such a reminder of how deeply dance tethers to the natural world. After Morris and Pearson’s dancers scampered about the rocks in time with the music, I watched a gaggle of wiggly children rush into the space recently blessed by dance.

Leave it to joy seeking little ones to know sacred ground when they see it.

News_Nancy Wozny_Jacob's Pillow_Jessica Tong_Hubbard Street Dance Chicago_Blanco

Photo by Christopher Duggan; Lighting design by Nicholas Phillips

Jessica Tong of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago in “Blanco

This week I’m immersed in Hubbard Street’s rich offerings, which include Ohad Naharin’s Tabula Rasa, Cerrudo’s Blanco and Deep Down Dos, and Aszure Barton’s Untouched. I had the privilege of watching Phillips in action, as both of Cerrudo’s dances virtually partner with light. On Friday night, I’ll check out the global mix masters of  The Vanaver Caravan.

Not everything is in motion here at the Pillow. An exhibit of Pilates at the Pillow includes images, footage and writings about Joseph Pilates’ time here. A 1956 Dance Magazine story by Doris Hering, caught my eye. As the frequent scribe of Dance Magazine’s Your Body column, it was fun to see the column in its earlier incarnation. Mostly, we think of dance as something that can’t be captured.

True, unless Lois Greenfield happens to be holding the camera. Lois Greenfield: Imagined Moments features an extraordinary collection of her work over the past few decades. Dance, free of choreographic constraints and created specifically for the camera, comes to life on the walls of Blake’s Barn.

It’s hard to walk around on these hallowed dance grounds and not think about all the icons who traveled these very paths. Images of founder Ted Shawn and his men dancers, along with other dance luminaries, grace the grounds. The site is a National Historic Landmark. It was even a stop on the underground railway.

Pillow history surrounds the visitor, yet the Festival is very much about what’s happening right this minute in dance. The programing is a mix of international, national and up and coming troupes, most of which are on my must-see list. I am more than halfway through my goal of watching the entire 2010 season on DVD in the Archives. Wish me luck with that.

I told many of you I would be staying in a rustic cabin with no A/C with furry wildlife about. Sadly, that didn’t happen.

Instead, I stayed in a mountain home with a deck overlooking a meadow and the Berkshires. Oh well.

On Saturday, I will be in the presence of dancing hippos in Mindy Aloff’s Pillow Talk on her recent book, Hippo in a Tutu: Dancing in Disney Animation. That may be the sum total of my wildlife experience. But I am proud to announce that I’m completely up on my Massachusetts black bear etiquette.

The Pillow is also about people. Can I help it if I hark from the best arts tribe ever? Houstonian J.R. Glover, Director of Education, filled me on the many diverse programs that happen over the summer and the outreach activities to the Berkshire community. I caught up with Caleb Teicher, a student in the Jazz/Musical Theatre Dance program, who I had interviewed years ago. It was a great joy to see what a fine dancer he has become.

I understand a tiny bit more about dance video and photography after spending time with Nel Shelby and Christopher Duggan. Veteran scholars Maura Keefe and Debra Cash made delightful colleagues. Archivist Norton Owen is a pillow treasure chest of knowledge. And, of course, it’s been terrific to hang out with the Houston contingent.

With two pre-show talks, an afternoon Pillow Talk with Hubbard Street’s director Glenn Edgerton and a post-show Q & A yet to do, it’s a dance-jammed day.

I have more to tell you, but need to dash now as my Pillow-palooza is still very much in motion.

Reprinted from Culturemap.

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