Archive for the ‘Dance Culture’ Category

#521 – Adapting to Domesticity

Sunday, January 1st, 2012

lucky plush productions, the better half @ mca chicago, 11/6/11.

Lucky Plush Productions, The Better Half (Photograph: Cheryl Mann).

Lucky Plush never quite got to their adaptation of the noir film Gaslight in The Better Half, but that was the point. This was a performance about breaking out of scripts, about the way that the real stories always start around the frame, drawing from it but never quite fully entering into it.

The very nature of the production—half dance, half theater—located the authentic tale at the interstice, the edge between forms. But Lucky Plush went further. The dancers kept interrupting the story to ask the director questions about their roles. They ran out of the auditorium and back in. Yet then they would move into quite beautiful repetitions of dance sequences, as if to suggest that we always must return to the gestures, hints, clues, roles, and rituals that existing scripts, films, norms, and forms provide for us—indeed demand of us.

The Better Half, as its name suggests, was most of all an exploration of the assumptions that steer courtship. How do two people move from being strangers to becoming intimate? How do they do so by entering into existing narrative structures yet also resisting those structures? When does the mystery of intimacy emerge in all its glory, and how?

The play portrayed individuals in a couple as dancers playing actors trying to grasp their roles in an old film script. But the actual plot of the film was not important. It was merely in the background, dimmed by the spotlights on the transformations happening through the adaptation. The two main dancers, a man and woman assigned the role of a married couple, were like metal filaments with shifting charges: sometimes they polarized, sometimes they magnetized, at first they were utterly strange to each other, but eventually they connected, at the back corner of the stage, gleaming and glowing even in the darkness that surrounded them.

They had kissed awkwardly at first, testing each other out, feigning intimacy, pretending to be an established domestic couple when they knew they were not. Then, continuing the dance, they moved dizzily through farce, burlesque, melodrama, comedy, theater of cruelty, Brechtian exposition, cheesy postmodern pastiche, athletic movement, startling weirdness, and everything in between until it mattered not what they were supposed to do, only that they had done it. They adapted—and in doing so were changed for the better halves.

The Better Half: work-in-progress excerpts from Lucky Plush Productions on Vimeo.

Links:

#512 – Quantum Leap

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011

a rant about art and science: liz lerman’s dance exchange, the matter of origins @ mca chicago, 11/12.

Liz Lerman’s Dance Exchange, The Matter of Origins. Photograph: Jaclyn Borowski

What does it mean to make good art about science?

The answer was not to be found in Liz Lerman’s The Matter of Origins. The dancers were incredible, athletic, emotive, moving, and much of the gestural language was striking too, particularly when it was at its most abstract and non-referential, but this was an extraordinarily hackneyed piece.

Dancers in hard hats and lab coats, pretending to be molecules, moving in front of backdrops of pipes and the latticework of reactor facilities, pondering the mysteries of the universe, with equations shooting across the screens to music that sounded like a computer crashing or an electric drill stripping a screw or a really bad Philip Glass composition—if this is the equation of art and science, then e = mc bad.

Lerman chose to create a dance about the metaphysics of physics, the poetry of protons, and in the process did a disservice to both art and science. Her piece emphasized the strangeness of scientific knowledge, the ways in which—gee-whiz!—the simplicity of artistic expression can help turn people on to physics. But this reduced scientific modes of understanding to trite art while reducing the art of dance to propaganda for physics. The dance failed to measure the incommensurability of these different ways of knowing.

As a physicist responded when asked how he pictures dark matter (as part of the soundtrack for the dance), “I don’t.” It’s numbers, not images. But Lerman stuck at it. Her troupe pretended to be parts of molecules in a particle collider and one dancer fell from a chair repeatedly to dramatize Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. Okay, that was kind of an intriguing idea. But overall, this was dance and science for school children.

Which is fine for school children. In fact, it’s great for school children. But not for much more. At the level of representation, Lerman’s oversimplified reenactments of theoretical physics neither illuminated the physics, nor enlivened the choreography and the talents of her dancers.

It got worse. Lerman chose to focus on the figure of Edith Warner, a poet and writer who ran a teahouse near Los Alamos during the Manhattan Project. The physicists working on the atom bomb would often spend time there, conversing about their work. The second half of the dance recreated this tea house. The audience convened in the lobby of the MCA in a kind of convivial environment, drinking tea and eating cake from a recipe that Warner used.

A smart and articulate physicist from DePaul University discussed his work as the dancers moved around the room. He even, in a nicely playful moment, participated in the dancing. Meanwhile, “provocateurs” at each table led discussions about the performance. As the dancers served out the cake, Lerman camped up the moment with 1950s elevator music.

But this seemed the entirely wrong tone for thinking about the moral and ethical dimensions of the Manhattan Project, and the role of scientists in creating the atom bomb. I am not arguing that they were wrong to do so. That is a whole other vexing debate. Rather, my point is that Lerman once again trivialized both dance and science—and audience participation—by her choices for staging the performance and engagement. There was a kind of enforced mood of celebrating the dance performance and little space for critique and real discussion.

It was a good example of the perils of relational aesthetics, which seeks to use art to forge new social bonds by encouraging conviviality. But as Claire Bishop (pdf) and others have noticed, conviviality has its dangers. In its very niceness, it can be not nice. This is particularly so when it threatens to enforce consensus and to block paths for more confrontational critique and engagement.

Another example of how Lerman’s tone seemed wrong, trite, more like propaganda than serious inquiry: at one point two of her older dancers (Lerman is famous for including multi-generational dancers in her troupes) performed what I could only call the dance of old age. In movements that emphasized the pain of mortality, of dying, they were shadowed by words to the effect of (think physics again here): our bodies turn to light. Okay, fine, yes our bodies do turn to light eventually, and they came from light. But in the meantime, death sucks, getting old sucks, and why impose New Age numbness over that pain?

Perhaps the problem, for me, is that dance is a strange mix of the social and the material. It gets at the metaphysical, but only through the physical. In this way, it’s actually closer to physics than Lerman makes it out to be. Dancers don’t have to pretend to be molecules; they already are molecules.

This meant that the best moments of the performance were about dancing—when the dancers leaped up and down in feats of endurance, when they measured and fell and turned and collapsed as dancers, not as representations of physics or stories about the physics of Edith Warner’s teacups and trough cakes. The Matter of Origins mattered most, and was most original, not when it emphasized the philosophical improbabilities of probability theory but rather when it featured predictable things done unpredictably.

Lerman tried to make art about science when she should have concentrated more on the science of art-making. This may have to do less with art or science than with money. The main funding for The Matter of Origins came from the National Science Foundation. At the beginning, middle, and end of the show, audience members filled out survey forms about what they were learning about science from the dance. This meant that a performance that was supposed to use art to probe the meaning of science seemed to be aimed, most of all, at producing marketing and survey data for the NSF.

The audience members were the lab rats and the dancers lab technicians, but the strings (the purse, not the physics kind) were being pulled by the funders. Dance became nothing more than a controlled experiment of the worst kind, a manipulation instead of an exploration. The hope is always that art can explode with beauty, that it is about creation and can make a big bang. In this case, it proved mainly to be a focal point for a focus group.

Links:

#504 – Rovings

Friday, November 4th, 2011

quick list #3.

Sounds:

  • East of Underground (American Army bands in Germany, 1971-72)
  • Elvis Costello, Punch the Clock
  • Rubio Quartet, Shostakovich – Complete String Quartets
  • VA, That Devilin’ Tune: A Jazz History, 1895-1950 (Allen Lowe‘s compilation, insanely huge and amazing), especially Gene Greene’s extremely weird “King of the Bungaloos”

Words:

  • Wendy Lesser, Music for Silenced Voices: Shostakovich and His Fifteen Quartets
  • Nick McDonell, The End of Major Combat Operations
  • Ulrich Beck, Anthony Giddens, and Scott Lash, Reflexive Modernization: Politics, Traditions, and Aesthetics in the Modern Social Order
  • Anne Fadiman, Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader
  • Simon Frith, Taking Popular Music Seriously

Screens

  • Boardwalk Empire, Season 2
  • Homeland, Season 1
  • Thin Red Line
  • The Last Metro

Stages

  • Timeline Theater, A Walk in the Woods
  • Goodman Theater, The Chicago Boys
  • Steppenwolf Theater, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
  • Cloud Gate Dance Theater of Taiwan
  • Faustin Linyekula/Studios Kabako, more more more…future
  • Pickup Performance Co(s), Dancing Henry V
  • Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
  • American Blues Theater, Waiting for Lefty
  • Steppenwolf Theater, Clybourne Park
  • Victory Gardens Theater, In the Next Room or the Vibrator Play
  • Goodman Theater, Red

Walls

  • Pandora’s Box: Joseph Cornell Unlocks the MCA Collection, MCA Chicago
  • Motor Cocktail: Sound and Movement in Art of the 1960s, MCA Chicago

 

#503 – Winging It

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

bill t. jones/arnie zane dance company @ columbia college dance center, 10/1/11.

When I watch recreations and restagings of Bill T. Jones’s dances with Arnie Zane from the late 1970s and early 80s, I think of wingspan.

I think of wingspan both in its literal and metaphorical senses.

Literally, dancers with arms outstretched, fingertip to fingertip, dipping down at the shoulder, reaching out the triceps, straightening the elbow, extending the forearm, uncurling the knuckles, looking down at a fingertip with a hawk’s eye.

Metaphorically, dancers reaching out to the horizon while also measuring the outer limits of their own bodies, testing the air, the self, the other, a lover, the world.

Wingspan: the effort to stretch effortlessly, the unattainable desire to take flight, the pleasure of feeling one’s body in motion, of touching another, of being on one’s own again; the playfulness of the dream of the bird’s eye view, seen from up above or out beyond yet also profoundly within corporeal limits—made all the more intense by the dialectic between the body and its transcendence. All this glimpsed, felt, believed, meditated upon, acted out, momentarily, in sequence, all actual and imagined at the same time.

There is a great athleticism in these dances, but it’s so different from, say, Pilobulus, which has an air of Cirque du Soleil show-biz acrobatics to it. No, the Jones/Zane Company is more intellectual about its athleticism, more contemplative, more reflective.

There is always an irony at work in the gestural language and performance, a sense that the dancers are looking at each other with intensity, seeing themselves through the other’s eyes while also being firmly within their own perspective. It’s a sly display of virtuosity at work in these performances, which are as amazing to see both in grainy archival footage and in their digitally-filmed recreations.

We witness the demonstration of brilliance delivered almost casually, presented with an air of detached self-amazement, appreciation, pleasure even when there is pain to be measured, expressed, and understood.

To be alive to experience these historic dances is to watch dancers winging it with such careful awareness as to seem utterly composed, yet free, flying off into the sunset and just coming into view in the same lifespan.

#497 – Double Dip Recessions

Thursday, September 29th, 2011

dancing private enterprise into the public good.

the seldoms, stupormarket (excerpt) & julieann graham, you may think i don’t know you @ other dance festival, hamlin fieldhouse, 9/22/11.

The Seldoms, Stupormarket.

The Seldoms’ stunning excerpt from their piece about the current economic crisis demonstrated how when it comes to social commentary, contemporary dance can be as powerful as an op-ed piece in the newspaper. Dance can be even more powerful for its evocations of both the individual corporeal experience of this anxiety-filled historical moment and the social dimensions of the recession.

At first, the dancers attempted to bid up various gestures in a kind of sardonic contemporary choreography free market. They announced the price of various gestures: nose scratch, booty shake, Merce, Fosse, extra-jazzy Fosse. They would pat each other on the back, or pat their own backs, announcing, “Nice job, pal.” Then the dancers blew up chewing gum to make bubbles (get it?). Pop. Finally, they wound up sitting in fetal positions, counting the number of Americans losing their jobs at any one moment. It was preposterous, playful, and, in the end, chilling for its communication of a kind of shock. Are things really this bad? Why is this happening to me? Is there anybody else out there? And most of all, what are the other kinds of social relations that lurk both in the neoliberal “free” market and beyond or outside it?

You would think that JulieAnn Graham’s deeply meditative, intimate performance, with its trio of dancers who stared into, and eventually burst through, a mirror frame, would follow jarringly on the public focus of the Seldoms. But the juxtaposition worked quite well. We moved from the economic recession to recessions deep into the self, from interactions among market participants to private spaces of introspection, from images of distopia and loss in the current financial trauma to the heterotopia of what might be found in the mirror image.

In Graham’s piece, three dancers folded and curled around each other—three women or three selves of one woman?—to the clarinet playing of James Falzone, who paced around the stage barefoot, the dancers oblivious to his physical presence but responding to his song. There was a playfulness here too, a tumbling and twisting of dancers around each other. But the mood was far more warm, more interested in going inside the self, more curious about personal enlightenment than in bringing to light the effects of the exterior marketplace.

Public sphere, private sphere; market floor, bedroom mirror; cold, warm; shocking, soothing; the self and the other and sometimes even the self in others (as in the Seldoms’ performance) or others in the self (in Graham’s piece). These two performances showed how dance can offer an awareness of both the individual body and the social body. And they revealed the multiple dimensions through which personal and public intersect.

 

Links:

 

#495 – When Faces Danced Across the Shadows

Monday, September 19th, 2011

molly shanahan/mad shak, “sharks before drowning” (excerpt) @ other dance festival, hamlin fieldhouse, 9/15/11.

Molly Shanahan, Benjamin Law and Jessica Marasa in Sharks Before Drowning.

Among the fun, sly, and often moving presentations at the second week of the Other Dance Festival, Molly Shanahan’s excerpt from Sharks Before Drowning was perhaps fullest of suggestive ideas. Shanahan’s dance included a mix of high and low culture, such as a Biber von Bibern sonata overlaid on top of Chinga’s raunchy hip-hop track “Holidae In” as if one were caught on the radio dial between the classical station and the hip-hop one; classy, almost somber dresses mixed with poses that seemed taken straight from the Thriller music video or the latest Vampire television series; a move between gestures that seemed almost balletic and others that undulated and writhed awkwardly; and an intriguing mix of forceful display and reserved introspection.

One of the most striking moments in the excerpt occurred when the dancers moved to the front of the stage in a line and did nothing but look—not quite at the audience but at something beyond them, some kind of event or trauma or revelation. They moved their eyes and jawbones and lips ever so slightly, as if dancing only with their faces.

And as we watched them watch something, its impact slowly making an impression on their bodies, I wondered: what muscles cannot be danced? To what extent can dance extend? When it comes to the body, can even the very smallest, isolated twitch or even one strand or fiber of muscle become overpoweringly culturally expressive? Yes, I think so.

#462 – Culture Rover’s Unfamiliar Quotations

Monday, June 6th, 2011

The final value of our lives is adverbial, not adjectival—a matter of how we actually lived, not of a label applied to the final result. It is the value of the performance, not anything that is left when the performance is subtracted. It is the value of a brilliant dance or dive when the memories have faded and the ripples died away.

— Ronald Dworkin

Link:

#460 – After the Dance Is Over 3: Reggie Wilson/Fist & Heel

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

reggie wilson/fist & heel @ columbia college dance center, 4/1/11

Can you imagine if I was a novelist and I had to find a choreographer to come up with a dance to let people know they should buy my book?  — Reggie Wilson to Sharon Hoyer, NewCity Stage

Reggie Wilson’s collaboration with Congolese choreographer Andréya Ouamba, The Good Dance, Dakar/Brooklyn, starts with the notion that if Westerners ground their sense of the ethics and meaning of life in texts—the Bible, the Talmud—then African and African diasporic cultural traditions use the dancing body as the central medium for communicating ethics and meaning. For Wilson, the “Good Dance” is an African version of the Good Book.

But this doesn’t mean that his group’s performance was filled with goodness. On the contrary, there was much sin and suffering, violence and rupture, displacement and disorientation in The Good Dance.

The dance is centered not only around bodies of people—people who come from around the world, people with all different size and shape bodies—but also bodies of water, in this case the twin histories of the Congo and Mississippi Rivers.

Deep, troubled, muddy, powerful, both these rivers, which appear in The Good Dance not as contiguous currents, but rather meted out in plastic bottles of water. These plastic bottles get assembled and reassembled, kicked and thrown, gathered and redistributed throughout the performance.

Each bottle, each dancer, each segment of the piece, each gesture itself becomes a fragment of a larger story, a dispersed sampling of a larger essence, the contained traces of a wellspring, the confluences of a delta, the preserved essences of a larger whole that cannot ever be reassembled again and must, instead, be danced into a narrative, a river of meaning produced from the fragments of liquid contained in our polymer present, never to quite decompose, quenching thirst even while poisoning with impenetrable residues.

There were multiple flows to Wilson’s magnificent and moving creation:

  • He broke the fourth wall by speaking to the audience while balancing a bottle of water on his head, at first it seemed like a break from the dance until slowly another dancer entered the stage, dodging and darting around Wilson, trying to knock him from his perch at the center of the piece, an example emerging of domination and the arts of resistance.
  • The music and the gestural language of the dancing continually linked African and African-American traditions, persistently noting connections that were powerfully referenced throughout.
  • Wilson dragged his dancers around at times, as if to play out power relations between a master and his subordinates at all levels, from the symbolic to the actual.
  • Most of all, his troupe collected and doled out their bits of the diasporic river traditions, picking up in new places, borrowing and imitating, crossing cultures as if trying to get to the bank on the other side and back again, alive, navigating the churning rapids, finding beauty in the baptismal moments between.

Wilson’s dance was a purification ritual, to be sure, but it was also an initiation into deeper awareness. It seeped into your consciousness with the silt of history. And like receiving a message in a bottle, a communication from the stormy deeps, one felt filled with wonder at the vast distances that expressivity can travel, the ingenious modes of survival and adjustment that humans absorb, preserve, and send along. We are bodies of water, after all.

But during The Good Dance, one also grew aware of the extended traumas of dislocation in the African diaspora, and the fragility of those hurled along on rafts of this diasporic culture, which was splintered and lashed together as those in its currents undertook makeshift improvisations, dramatic affirmations, and forceful negations and repudiations. To keep their heads above water was no small thing.

The Good Dance‘s mix of wonder and terror was more than good, then, it was great. And it was rendered beautiful by its turn from wisdom found in a frozen body of authoritative texts to knowledge gained through a carefully-corporealized text written with bodies.

Links:

*After the Dance Is Over offer a few belated posts about contemporary dance performances this year in Chicago.

#459 – After the Dance Is Over 2: Same Planet Different World

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

same planet different world @ columbia college dance center, 3/10/11

In choreographer Joanna Rosenthal’s corporeal take on the gender dynamics of classic film noir, muscles seemed to be led by other parts of the body. Bones, sinews, and tendons did the propulsion. Or, sometimes, it seemed like some kind of string was pulling and yanking on the dancers, as if they were puppets, dummies, or, perhaps, real people helplessly trapped in cinematic archetypes, mere projections of selves instead of active agents.

The dancing suggested that power might emanate from outside the self, applied from larger cultural forces to the body rather than coming from within. Forgotten elements of the past—the violent, lurking past—are still with us, the dance suggested, even if they are in black and white or out of print.

Bodies were sent corkscrewing down other bodies, twisted over themselves, ripped from the contemporary dance setting into the spoken soundtrack of a hard-boiled detective story. Bodies got lost in a descending swirl of bleak tragedy, trying to find their bearings in a world whose initial nostalgic air quickly gave way to a contemporary terror.

One was wrenched out of hip discernment into the violence that lurks in modern life, cells of celluloid whose bars were ripped asunder. Come off the reels, the anguish of cynical calculations led to an inevitable terminus, which was, given the film noir setting, perhaps a preordained conclusion of violent tragedy, one whose chalky outline of a dead body was barely covered by stylish retro garb.

Link:

*After the Dance Is Over offer a few belated posts about contemporary dance performances this year in Chicago.

#458 – After the Dance Is Over 1: Mark Morris

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

mark morris dance group, socrates @ harris theater, 2/27/11

 

Mark Morris’s choreography has always struck me as grid-like, with the ensemble moving in straight lines, either horizontally or vertically across the stage. But one of the most moving moments in Socrates was when the dancers looped back, quite literally, lacing themselves through the grids of their previous movements.

There was something elegant about the combination of rectangles and circles: not the tragedy of Socrates so much as the surprising appearance of ancient Euclidean pleasures in contemporary dance.

Link:

*After the Dance Is Over offer a few belated posts about contemporary dance performances this year in Chicago.