Posted by: trailerpilot | 05:03::2009

For my peeps up in Montréal.

Well, well: A gorgeous dedicated website and little bird have made me aware of yet another reason I pine for Ville-Marie: Marie Chouinard, whose company was just here, has apparently not performed in 20 years (news to me, that). At the end of this month, she’s throwing open the doors to her studio and inviting the (well-heeled) public in for a series of three solo presentations entitled Gloires du matin (morning glories) which, appropriately enough, will be held at 8am.

The press release states:

The morning glory (Ipomea) is a plant native to America, a climbing weed whose flowers open in the morning and live only a day, but it produces new flowers each day all summer long. Its seeds, if ingested in large quantities, produce hallucinogenic effects comparable to those of LSD.

Each fifty-minute piece will be slightly different and possess a unique code, MC200905270800, MC200905280800 and MC200905290800. The original music is by Louis Dufort, the costumes by Liz Vandal, and make-up by Jacques-Lee Pelletier, who have all worked with Marie for over ten years. The three performances will be followed by an informal meeting with Marie Chouinard over a cup of green tea.

This event is part of a fund-raising campaign, and receipts will be issued for income tax purposes. Seating for each morning’s performance is limited to one hundred.

On May 27, the morning of the grande première, a mimosa will be served before the performance. Doors open at 7:30am.

Needless to say, if you can go, go. Opening morning tickets are $250, while May 28 and 29 are $125.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 05:03::2009

Take Your Time

Olafur Eliasson, Beauty, 1993. Installation view at Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

The first full-scale survey of Icelander Eliasson’s work in the U.S., Take Your Time functions well as an opportunity to take in the identity of someone who, for me, has often been hidden inside his art. Last summer, for instance, when I saw his waterfalls during a visit to New York, I could interact with them in a multitude of ways, but not with Eliasson himself. His creations tend to be simply “there,” seldom including expressive flourishes, whiffs of opinion and other things often associated with art. In eleven rooms at the MCA, though, Eliasson the designer-conductor begins to show through.

[He also spoke briefly before the press tour which helped, natch. The predictably stylish, reserved man stood at the podium and introduced his show by way of a surprisingly direct statement to the corps, saying that “the work starts to exist in anticipation of it” and the writing we would do about it would directly “influence the quality” of the show; he touched on a mantra often nearby his doings these days, “Your engagement has consequences.” Gentle as he seems to be, he’s also got a firm no-bullshit air about him that turned a two or three minute statement into a hefty chunk of idea on which to chew. I wish he would have agreed to accompany us through the exhibition (although the tour by Associate Curator Dominic Molon was appropriately done and blessedly chill).]

Madeleine Grynsztejn’s introduction focused my experience of the show in a productive way; she was Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture at SFMOMA when this show débuted there, and obviously knows it and Eliasson inside and out (she also edited the accompanying catalogue). The key, as it is with Chicago choreographer Molly Shanahan, is that the work is “co-produced” by its observer, and in being viewed the research becomes complete. Grynsztejn stated that Eliasson returns the “gift of subjectivity” to his audience—my view would be that maintenance of subjectivity is the domain and responsibility of the individual, but I’m also not against anything that serves as a helpful reminder. Read More…

I’ll be covering these four artists in greater depth throughout the year, but wanting to get the word out (and swamped in last-minute errata for tomorrow’s opening night), I’ll settle for a quick copy of the rundown on each from the CDF website. Congratulations to all—looking forward to what fifteen large does for their projects.

Julia Rae Antonick

Antonick’s CDF project, Duologue, is an in-depth investigation of what it means to be a duet artist. Within Duologue, Antonick will research existing forms of duet, including Argentine Tango, Balinese LeGong, Contact Improvisation, and Ventriloquism, seeking to create new relationships between movers uncommon in contemporary dance vocabulary.
LinHixson

Lin Hixson

Hixson’s project, They’re Mending the Great Forest Highway, is a dance for three men with a female DJ and classically trained pianist. The piece integrates movement, the process of musical structures, and the concept of abandoned practices to construct the work.

Kevin Iega Jeff

Iega Jeff’s proposed piece is I Am Deeply Rooted, a multimedia work that highlights the lives and beliefs of individuals who have contributed to humanity through their dedication to the arts, education or human rights. The work will use the collection of true stories from leaders around the country as a primary source for artmaking material.

Atalee Judy

Judy will create Architecture of Fear: an excavation, a multimedia integrated dance work set in intimate settings with a small group of dancers. Utilizing video on various surfaces, live sound, and sensory experiences with multiple points of view, the work will take place in a diverse range of landscapes to discover the effect that space has on our bodies and psyches.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:29::2009

Fanclasstic.

The Moving Architects.

The Moving Architects.

And the sharing of experience-bred know-how soldiers on: Link’s Hall is the place to be for movement classes and advanced study this spring.

  • Three Mondays in May4, 11 & 18The Moving Architects‘ Erin Carlisle Norton continues offering her company class to the advanced/professional community. Held from 6:30-8pm, Norton’s clean modern technique is influenced by Bartenieff Fundamentals, Laban Space and Effort Studies, postmodern techniques, and improvisation. $12 per lesson; register here.
  • Mad skills from across the pond are coming your way courtesy Sheffield-based Forced Entertainment, Tuesday May 5 from 10am-4pm. Of particular relevance to performers/creators integrating text into their work (which includes just about everyone these days), Cathy Naden‘s workshop draws on “the creative limits of rules and game structures,” addresses improvisational text and speech, dissects relationship between process and product, and refines your understanding of what it means to be in front of an audience. It’s $70 for the all-day session; register here.
  • Last but not least, Cupola Bobber (who I adore) are caring and sharing Saturday May 9 from 12-4:30pm with a workshop exploring “non-linear collaborative performance devising strategies focused on generating dynamic intersections of meaning in abstracted text and image.” It would sound like only so much blather except, having seen their work, I can attest that that’s a perfect description of their area of expertise. “Ways to discover inspiration and how to define a co-equal performance with varied collaborators” are included as well. $40; register here.

A little further down the pike (but here before you know it) is Same Planet Different World‘s company class series at Visceral. June 3 to July 24, SPDW AD Joanna Rosenthal will be leading Intermediate/Advanced Modern class Wednesdays 12:30-2pm and Fridays 10-11:30am. Classes are $14 per but you can save a boatload by buying 10 at a time for $9 each. Rosenthal will kick your ass and you’ll love her for it. More info on these and other classes at Visceral’s lovely facilities here.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:28::2009

I’m in Time Out.

Read Asimina Chremos’ interview with myself and Julia Rae Antonick here.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:28::2009

Something for everyone.

Like mid-century ballet masterpieces? Ballet Chicago has a spring mixed bill coming up that includes Balanchine’s Rubies. Staged for The Balanchine Trust by Sandra Jennings, the 1967, erm, gem (one of three parts of the evening-length Jewels) hasn’t been seen in Chicago since 1993.

The same weekend, on Sunday, May 17, the Epiphany Dance Experiment is holding a new-works showing (talkbacks with the artists will be interspersed throughout the performance) that has some fascinating-sounding stuff on the bill:

  • Choreographer Janet Schmid, composer Steve Jarvis and film maker Ania Greiner will present Craptastic, based on “casual violence in sports and graceful recovery from wipe outs.”
  • Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting, an ensemble of movers and musicians, will show a series of “scores” based on ideas of support, landscapes, and looping born out of weekly collaborations.
  • Melissa Simo has a new work on tap exploring repetition and how it affects a deeper state of consciousness and experience entitled Entering, Exiting.
  • Andalbeitwellhahaha by J’Sun Howard promises an honest experience free of imposition developed through radical intuition.
  • Green Cross (vocalist Isa Wiss and dancers Asimina Chremos and Ayako Kato) explores with Movo-ment the cross-pollination of movement and voice.
Isa Wiss. Photo by Katrin Haunreiter.

Isa Wiss. Photo by Katrin Haunreiter.

The evening, called Simply Showing, takes place at the Epiphany Episcopal Church at 6pm—it’s 12 suggested bucks for regular folk, 10 suggested bucks for students and seniors.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:26::2009

Up next.

Lately I’ve been spending a lot of time researching, writing about dance and throwing my two cents around on a whole host of subjects. Let the record show, however, that it’s not all armchair critique around here: I’m still very much involved in the making of dance, and as a matter of fact will trot out a new trio this very next weekend. Self-promotion is frowned upon by my employers at Windy City Media Group and Flavorpill but, hey: Nobody here can stop me from telling you to get your ass down to Epiphany for the NEXT concert, produced by Mordine & Co. and happening Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Darrell Jones. Photo by Dan Merlo.

Darrell Jones. Photo by Dan Merlo.

First, let me run down the list of phenomenal peeps with whom I’m honored to share the bill:

  • Current CDF Lab Artist Grant recipient and AD of Khecari Jonathan Meyer will dance in a solo work. I gushed about the direction his work is taking in one of my first blog posts—if you missed him then, catch him now.
  • Lisa Gonzales and Darrell Jones are two of this city’s bona fide gems and, with the unfortunate cancellation of Peter Carpenter’s premiere (he’s on the mend and getting ready for a big show of his own), are now involved with NEXT, bringing their by-all-accounts-incredible duet Traitor I (stupidly) missed at ODF last fall.
  • Julia Rae Antonick is no joke and, along with myself, will present a new work commissioned by Mo & Co as part of the Emerging Artist Mentoring Project Award. Her duet is titled Loose Legged Wing Dividers and uses stillness—the evening’s theme—as a constraint through which she’s developed a movement vocabulary. We’ve managed not to see any of each others’ work in process, but I can tell you that A.) I’m very excited about it and B.) her portfolio speaks for itself.
  • Company namesake Shirley Mordine is collaborating with two artists on separate works: Sahridaya is a recent duet co-choreographed by Natya Dance Theatre AD Hema Rajagopalan and pleases me thusly: There is no ill-considered attempt to take Mordine’s modern dance vocabulary and mash it up with Rajagopalan’s Bharatanatyam technique. They remain uncompromised, and the dialogue between the two pure forms is—as always—far more engaging than some slipshod Frankenform confusing homogeneity with a post-cultural Shangri-La. She’s also teaming up once again with video-for-performance maestro John Boesche for a beautiful duet between Meghann Wilkinson and Molly Perez entitled New Ground, which neatly displays the weapons-grade talent of everyone involved.
Elizabeth Jenkins, Charles Cutler and Emma Draves in Dancing about stillness is like writing about

Elizabeth Jenkins, Charles Cutler and Emma Draves in Dancing about stillness is like writing about

I had a helluva time figuring out how to approach Shirley’s instruction that I make a dance about stillness: Analytical as I (obviously) am, I just couldn’t get past the conflict between it being this simple, universally-understood concept and at the same time completely illusory. Out of this impasse comes Dancing about stillness is like writing about, a trio for Charles Cutler, Emma Draves and Elizabeth Jenkins that, like that missing last word, is inconclusiveness cropped out and zoomed in on. My dancers have done incredible work in an amazingly short creation process and, regardless of what anyone else ends up thinking about it, I love the piece and its strange spaces of tenderness, dismissiveness and hostility.

Elizabeth Jenkins and Charles Cutler.

Elizabeth Jenkins and Charles Cutler.

Shirley observed in an early rehearsal that it’s subtly coded, like social protocol in a royal court—I agreed, took her note and ran with it. In some ways it’s a return to some of the first pieces I made, Ground won and WON TWO OWN in workshops with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. Back then (’03 and ’04) I was blathering a lot about what happens when you take a gestural signifier (a thumbs-up, a hand cupped around the ear) and place it alongside other information (a middle finger, an index “shushing” over the lips) that cancels it out. I moved onto other things in later choreographies but never until now returned to these ideas about taking body language, maximizing its clarity and communicativeness, then sequencing the images in a way that forces a choice: Either the narrative makes no sense or the images have come to mean something new. Brushed up alongside the usual low-level anxiety about sharing my work, I can’t wait to hear peoples’ reactions to and interpretations of it—especially yours, so get a ticket! Paying full price ($15 advance, $20 at the door) is always appreciated, but it bears mentioning there’s no need to: There are $5 coupons at See Chicago Dance, texting “Mordine” to 30364 gets you a reply that’s a 2-for-one coupon (green!) AND Time Out is holding a drawing for a free pair on Tuesday. Just don’t tell me you can’t make one of three shows. The space is gorgeous, there’s plenty of free wine to lubricate your watching and there’s a crazy-diverse, fascinating program of outstanding dance. Hop to it!

Emma Draves and Charles Cutler.

Emma Draves and Charles Cutler.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:24::2009

Go to your happy place.

Flavorwire has a great piece up today about buildings people love and why. Perfect little read for an eighty-degree day in Chicago.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:24::2009

Thievery with style.

snapshot-2009-04-24-00-45-17
BOOM: Lucky Plush Productions’ mega site/conversation starter/process unpacker/meta market StealThisDance.com is up and running. It’s no secret that Julia Rhoads will have my head if I don’t upload a move ASAP, but in the meantime there’s more than plenty to keep you entertained and enlightened. It’s a massive undertaking packed with content and wonderfully done. Cheers to the LPP crew—this is only the beginning of the shenanigans they’re cooking up this season, so stay tuned.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 04:24::2009

Behind the scenes.

Marissa Perel.

Despite how my opinions may come across, I’m highly interested in now-local artist Marissa Perel and the direction her work in dance-framed performance (or perhaps vice versa) is taking. To wit: Her latest blog post unpacks some of the process and reasoning behind the piece of hers I saw at Elastic, black seeds. A very good read.

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