Performing Arts

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by Paul Schmelzer at 8:56 am 2007-07-26
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• Reveille sounds: The Twin Cities newspaper scene has taken a series of body blows of late, with buyouts and layoffs at the dailies, the shuttering of the altweekly Pulse of the Twin Cities, and what seems to be a mass exodus of writers from the remaining weekly City Pages. So the birth of Reveille, where many of the departed from other publications have ended up, is welcome news. The online music magazine includes staffers like Jim Walsh (formerly of City Pages); Steve McPherson, Tom Hallet, and Rob van Alstyne (Pulse); current HowWasTheShow.com editor Andrea Myers, and Kyle Matteson, who runs ArcadeFire.net, the Wilco fansite Via Chicago, and MoreCowbell.net.

• Metronomy meets Mario: Metronomy, playing Summer Music & Movies in Loring Park on August 6, just played the G! Festival in the Faroe Islands. The review? “[T]hey impress brilliantly. Combining an esoteric, Super Mario-influenced blend of dance, techno and electro with choreographed stage moves, shirts with light bulbs on them and keyboards a plenty, the band recreates a sweaty club atmosphere despite the sun shining as brightly at nine in the evening as it was five hours earlier.” Perfect for the park…

• Blue Note bonanza: Cribbed, co-opted, and celebrated, the graphic design of Blue Note Records album covers from the ’50s and ’60s remains, in my mind, some of the best design around. The Japanese site Vintage Vanguard chronicles hundreds of examples of famous and rare jazz covers from the era, including Donald Byrd Free Form, the un-PC Lou Donaldson album “Good Gracious,” The Three Sounds’ It Just Got to Be (pictured above), and the classic color scheme of for Andrew Hill’s 1964 release Judgment!

 
by Paul Schmelzer at 5:30 pm 2007-07-23
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As we reported earlier, poet, activist, and educator Sekou Sundiata died last Wednesday at age 58. In the last two years of his life, he spent a lot of time in Minneapolis. He was in residence at the Walker developing and performing the 51st dream state in Spring 2006, and this June he gave the keynote address at the Pedagogy and Theater of the Oppressed conference held in the Twin Cities. (Prior to that, he’d visited for performances three times: The Circle Unbroken is a Hard Bop and Udu, both copresented with Penumbra Theater, and 2004’s blessing the boats.)

Commemorating a writer in words can be a daunting task; luckily, Sekou left a rich body of work, in both text and — the best way to experience his work — audio and video formats. The Walker Channel now features the full video of the 51st dream state, as well as his audience Q&A. And KFAI’s Janis Lane-Ewart rebroadcast a May 31 interview with Sundiata, and includes a spoken-word/music piece by Sundiata that commemorates the birthday of Nelson Mandela. Listen here (starts at 36:10).

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by Michèle Steinwald at 5:14 pm 2007-07-23
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For Arts Sake, We peeled back our eyelids to reveal windowpanes of our souls
Unrehearsed songs of our solemn, Melodies of our origin, Laced with lyrics of our future selves, The tempo for opportunities to Jam once more, The beauty were the acceptance, While viewing rare masterpieces of art at first glance, Time well spent for the sake of the true artist. (Oneself)

By Autumn Reign, one of Nicole Randolph’s pseudonyms, to be used for “Evoking the Spirit” Collection of Souls

The last Wednesday of every month since April has been dedicated to meeting community members and partners in preparation for the upcoming performances by Congolese choreographer Faustin Linyekula. At our June meeting, one of our partners contributed this poem after our session using one of Faustin's creative mantras, "My name is ___ and I have a story.”

This Wednesday, for our July meeting we will be honoring the late Sekou Sundiata’s creative research by asking the question, “When did I first became aware of my role as a citizen, a participant in a larger community, and that I had a stake in some grand communal, national, or international project?”

I will post more observations on Thursday. I invite you to answer either one or both of these questions and for us to share in discussion.

Please contact me at michele.steinwald@walkerart.org for more information on this project.

Peace,
Michele

 
by Maggie Bergeron at 9:21 pm 2007-07-22
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As I look back on my experience this past year working on a show for Momentum, I have the privilege of reflecting on what this program means in an individual career and our local dance community as a whole. I don’t think I have any responses to these ideas; I am just meandering through the landscape of how and where an artists makes work, who supports it, and how it is received. In a lot of cases, it seems that Momentum is like the first step down a steep hill……there’s a sense of weightlessness, your eyes get a little big when you see what you are going to do, and then your feet hit the pavement and you have to breathe really hard to make sure you can keep your legs going so that you don’t fall flat on your face. And there’s a lot of people watching you do this. And it’s scary and fun. But that’s just my opinion.

On Cathy Wright’s “Return:”
I really enjoyed the visceral movement and strong images that Cathy created throughout this piece. I did feel that she was able to truly articulate the intent of the piece through her solos. I was pleasantly disturbed by the use of the wigs and hair in Cathy’s solos. They gave me something really strong that still sits with me now as I write this. I wonder if more of the movement vocabulary could have come from this deep, deep place in Cathy’s gut. Another image that I was able to take home with me was a moment in “The Garden” when the dancers were coupled up. The movement went from gentle to violent in slow motion. The picture of all the performers in white costumes with this dichotomy of grace and harm is memorable. Overall, though, the group pieces were well-constructed and interesting, but didn’t grab me by the face like the solo work.

On Off-Leash Area’s “Our Perfectly Wonderful Lives:”
Yahoo for wheeling TV’s! I thought that this piece was also well-constructed, although I got lost a little in the movement and transition in the last third of the piece. Paul Herwig is a wonderful performer; he and Katie Kaufmann were highlights piece for me. The use of sets and stuff seemed a little excessive at times, but I suppose that this served the intent of the piece. I also liked the tin foil…..sparkly. I guess I felt really invested at the beginning of the piece, but by the time I got to the end, I knew where I was, but I wasn’t exactly sure how I got there. I would have also really liked to follow the stories of the public a little more. They were set up as fascinating characters, but faded into the darkness. Perhaps a choice once again……I guess this piece has a lot of potential for feeling less-than-fulfilled. It’s the whole point.

 
by Justin Jones at 6:47 pm 2007-07-22
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Congratulations to Cathy, Paul and Jennifer. It was an amazing night at the southern. Below is an account of my experience at the theater. Please feel free to send me an email with a comment or question, or just post a comment on the site.

Cathy Wright: Return
1-self

The lights come up on a woman with knee-length red hair and an Ominous Hooded figure. It's a dark image, filmic in composition. The lights fade up and down as if I am nodding in and out of consciousness, as if the lights themselves are beating like a heart. The Ominous Hooded figure menacingly strokes her hair. I feel like I am watching a David Lynch Film. Is she being held prisoner? The woman with red hair is now kneeling in front of the small clock, the music is knocking and wailing, she reaches in to the clock and ceremoniously removes two shocks of dirty-blond hair. Is it the hair of a dead lover, of a former self? Is she Medea, mourning the loss of her children? The woman with red hair crosses the stage, walking on her knees holding the disturbing relics in her hands. Her body is coursing with tension threatening to explode. The hair seems to hold her back and it is suddenly unnaturally heavy as if made of lead. She is wrapped in hair, suffocated by hair. I am reminded of hair that collects in drains, hair in my throat, hair sticking to my neck on a sticky hot day.

Phallousy

A blast of pulsating, throbbing music and bright light. Three men stalk about the stage, peacocks, soldiers, infants. They bolster themselves with displays of martial arts, throw tantrums, stalk each other. I see violence and sex, moshing and necking. They gather together and present their talons to the audience and grab their cocks. Suddenly they are a spider; a menacing, group-think creature all teeth and venom. They separate and stalk each other again, leading to the final image, a tableaux of auto-erotic asphyxiation or is it CPR?

Wombman

The lights come up on five women surrounded by portentous silence. Four of them hold mannequin-still while one crumbles to the ground in slow motion. She is presenting herself to us and the action seems to drains her of life, yet she continues to do so retreating further into the floor. The music re-enters and it reminds me of sampled sounds of plastic surgery, this is reinforced by the action of a woman pushing her cheeks together and sucking air in through her mouth in what looks like a mimed face-lift. The women continually present themselves to us, slapping their hips and butts. They are vaginal warriors involved in a pre-battle ritual. They gesture as if to say, "my ovaries will kill you." At times I feel as if they are putting on a show for me, presenting themselves to me, at other times I feel as if they are letting me in on a never before seen shamanistic coming of age ceremony. The ritual reaches its climax as the women chasse around each other heaving cleansing, building breaths in unison.

?

The Red Haired Woman returns, back to the chair, the cloak of the Ominous Man on the floor. Little Red Riding Hood mourns the departure of her captor and wraps herself in his cloak.

The Garden

Men and women together on stage, the sound of strings, they are dressed in white and they are slow dancing. They are in "love." I sense an irony in the music, which at times makes me feel like I'm in a music box, suggesting that perhaps I am witnessing not real love, but fairy tale love, imagined love. Soon, though, making-love fades into fucking. Romance fades into the nasty relationship negotiations; who's on top and who's on bottom. Suddenly, silence frames a dynamic moment of repeated actions performed by the couples, a clockwork of life partner behaviors. I am reminded of the repeated patterns inherent in a long-term relationship. This unfolds into a sinister waltz, romance re-enters.

A-rival

Our Narrator, the woman with red hair returns. She is in the corner with the clock, repeating movement she performed in the beginning. A voice in the music says "I" and she looks over her shoulder. (is it her voice?) Again, hair is flying. She approaches the center of the stage and shakes her head violently as if trying to shake her hair out of her scalp. She falls and I notice the wind created by her descent gently sways a golden curtain. She starts moving again and I see movement from the other sections repeated. I feel like she is explaining them to me, commenting on the previous action like a Greek chorus. Without warning, she removes her red hair, sheds her skin. Now she is no longer the woman with the red hair, she is Cathy. The sound of wind fills the theater, I hear the word "open" in the sound score. Again, she takes on the movements and postures of the previous sections as if she is ravenously eating them, digesting them, assimilating them. She retreats upstage and from nowhere a film fills the back wall of the theater. It overtakes me and my skin is covered in goose bumps, what a fantastic surprise! The film makes me feel like I am walking through a field of thorns, perhaps approaching a hidden garden or back-yard shed. A series of still images go by at lightning speed as if a life is flashing before my eyes. Family photos, vacation photos, a Pabst Blue Ribbon shirt, smiles, embraces, groups, couples, parties. Soon, the imagery slows again to a close up of tree-bark. The camera slowly climbs the tree and ascends into the sky.

Off-Leash Area: Our Perfectly Wonderful Lives

I'm looking at four huge, brightly painted flowers and four televisions on wheels. The flowers immediately make me think of Andy Warhol. Four people on the floor slowly wake up and perform their morning time rituals. For each person, there is a television. They all turn them on one by one the action amplified by a Foley style sound effect that pierces through the sunrise-sounding guitar groove filling the air. There are no walls between them and yet they seem distant, and as each television turns on, it is clear why. Who needs a neighbor when you have TV to keep you company? Each T.V. is opened and magically everything each sleeping beast needs to become human is stored inside. T.V. is such a good companion. Not only does it keep them company, but also it provides them with all the products they might ever need. Each T.V. stores some electrical appliance for each character and remarkably they plug in to the flowers and turn on. Somehow the beautiful wallpaper is electrified, the art on the wall provides electricity, but not for something fancy, just to grind coffee or shave off some ungainly neck hair. Two figures are seated on the sides, framed by dressing room lights on wheels. Their backs are to us. A news reporter arrives, and informs about the meteoric rise of art-star Randy Harlow and his immensely popular paintings of sugar packets. The people with the T.V.s seem to all be watching the live action directly in front of them through their boob-tubes, more psychic distance, again, who needs neighbors or to leave the house for that matter? Now we meet Harlow, brilliantly played by Paul Herwig as an odd, obsessive-compulsive, shrinking fellow unused to the attention of a camera, his sugar-packet painting creeping to cover his face as he talks. At one point, as Harlow repeats the word "sugar," intoning it as a sort of mantra, the T.V. people all magically produce little sugar packets that match the one in the painting. They are connected; they are instantly in love with Harlow. He is as easy to digest, appreciate and love as a packet of sugar. A funky transition - T.V.s are wheeled about and the T.V. people perform a ritual dance to the gods of cathode-ray tubes and transistors. Harlow has opened a gym and the masses have joined. Everyone is running because Harlow is, because perhaps by running they might understand what it means to be as famous and wonderful as him. The running continues as the Reporter conducts a standard, 'man on the street' style interview, gathering the opinions of the plebes to send through the air to the other plebes watching at home. The running builds into a Keystone Kops style chase scene. The giant flower walls have moved and become a series of entrances and exits, hiding places. Who knew art could be so functional? The chase scene wears itself out and we are swept away to the outside of Harlow's house. Time has passed and Randy has taken a leave of absence from the public eye. The T.V. people are gathered outside, hoping to catch a glimpse standing in standard celebrity worship poses. Live-action, Campbell's-Soup-Can-Painting style depictions of adoring fans. The Publicist leads the group in a militaristic chant to rile them up, get them ready to see their perfect idol. They are chanting for Randy, pleading for Randy like lepers looking for Jesus, adolescent girls swooning for Elvis. Out he comes bearing a rolled up red carpet, which he delicately rolls out to create a physical barrier between him and his followers, to keep them from touching him too much. In slow motion he picks up his foot and sets it down. The crowd and reporters respond appropriately. At the end of the carpet, which has been rolled up in all of the commotion, Harlow rolls it out again and with the same slow-motion step, restarts the same action. Everyone repeats their part. The cycle loops multiple times as if silk-screened, mass-produced. In each repetition the roles change (except for Randy of course). The marine is the reporter, the reporter is worshiping at Randy's feet, rolling up the sacred red carpet. It doesn't seem to matter much who plays who in this oft-repeated star worship ceremony. The Stage is transformed once again, the flowers turned to reveal their slightly ungainly looking tin-foil covered backs. The reporter informs us that Harlow has opened his Studio 54 and this is the eve of the party of the year. Again a 'man on the street' interview is conducted and desperation rings through the T.V. people's voices as they describe how they ended up at this "great good place." The party begins and Randy enters wearing a super glamorous silver wig and silver leather jacket, looking something like a low-budget science fiction film visitor from the future. He comes bearing silver wigs for all and the T.V. people put them on. And now, the party gets boring. The T.V. people sit and wait at the party trying to get a moment with Randy, to touch him, hear him say their names, but he only rushes through jabbing away on a silver phone guarded by his publicist. Now the boredom really sets in as canned club-music thumps along repetitively. Here I am reminded of Warhol's boring and eventless factory films. Nothing but waiting happens on stage, they are bored, I am bored. I think of Warhol's 12 hour film of just the top of the Empire State building. And then, what breaks the boredom, everyone's favorite time waster, Drugs! Cleverly, the part of cocaine is played by yellow packets of Sweet and Low. Everyone is high and happy dancing. In the drug-infested madness, a slightly awkward orgy erupts, pants at ankles, mimed oral sex behind a television. Randy pukes into the T.V. and the party is declared over. Perhaps to indicate again the passage of time, the T.V. people pick up the silver walls of the club and spin them as Randy transforms himself on stage. He applies ghastly make-up, looking like a cross between Bozo the Clown and Robert Smith and exchanges gaudy silver for meaningful red. We are welcomed to the set of "Wendy," a hodge-podge of popular Oprah-esque mid-day talk shows. As Randy dramatically recounts his story of addiction and recovery and his escape from a life of temptation and excess I am reminded of my brief addiction to VH-1's Behind the Music where on each episode the same story was repeated over and over. I was always astonished by how the life of each star shared almost the same characteristics. Do we create these polished monsters or do they create themselves? As Randy recounts his harrowing tale, he punctuates the story with over exaggerated gestures. His arms stretched wide with big jazz-hands mouth agape, each gesture echoed by the T.V. people who are taking in the action again through their precious idiot-boxes. At the end of the show Wendy walks up the aisle presenting everyone in the studio audience with... SUGAR! She plows up the stairs plopping the white packets on our laps. One lands on me and I feel unnerved. On Stage, Randy's punctuating gestures from the interview have become a dance with religious overtones. In the music I hear what I think to be the actual voice of Andy Warhol saying "yes, well, no." Reinforcing for me again the dual nature of the pop-icon. The public face we love and the private person we are dying to know more about. I am also reminded of the duality in the art of Warhol; the simple exterior made meaningful by the complex man who made them. The poses are fervently repeated and their dancing makes me think of a cult, worshiping their leader. As they dance, they change their costumes again the silver wigs are back on, but they no longer represent the excess and temptation of the club. Now they appear to be part of the uniform of the adorers. At the conclusion of the dance sequence Randy strips away his clothing to reveal a rose adorned dance belt. He has now completed his life journey from young innocent star, to entrenched addict to immortalized soulless Icon with his followers at his side. Wendy/The Reporter/The Publicist returns from the aisle with what looks like a handful of roses, which magically transforms into a white coat lined with plastic roses to match the ones on Randy's skivvies. They all back up slowly chanting "wonderful" on a path of rose-petals as the black curtain rises to reveal a giant Plexiglas box that looks like an obscene cash-grab machine. The door opens and Randy enters and he assumes a saintly pose. He looks like a plastic action figure Jesus, packaged art. I am reminded of Jeff Koons' vacuums in Plexiglas. I think about art as commodity about popular culture as religion. It is an immensely powerful and heavily loaded image that I'll be thinking about for a long time.

 
by Noah Bremer at 1:02 am 2007-07-20
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I took notes again. I rarely take notes during a performance, but I kind of liked it. My muscle memory tells me if I have a note pad and pen in hand and there is a performance in front of me, I need to be taking notes on moments that worked, or didn't make sense. Y'know, so I could share those things with the creative team and they could take them or leave them. Of course, that's usually in the process of making work, and when I find myself with that notepad and pen during a performance I have a hard time differing from my programming. It also puts me in a place of criticism, rather than able to be entertained.

Last week I took notes too and my blog kind of read like a critical feedback session. I didn't really like that so much. I mean, it just felt weird to be critical at that point in the process. Who knows if criticism is proper, or what the best format should be, it's a big topic, and I'm not ready to go there. Anyway, as I took notes this time something happened mid way thru Cathy Wrights piece, my notes started to change. They started to become more like a chronicle of ideas that the images in front of me reminded me of, and then I went on little mental voyages about a different idea. For instance the opening images reminded me of a Brothers Grimm meets Disney movie on LSD meets Modern dance that Harry Potter might stumble into on Diagon Alley. Dark, foreboding, moody, stylized. And that took me on a little journey about what modern dance would look like at Hogwarts, or how Rapunzel might behave on a bad hair day. It was actually really nice to have that space to free associate from the ideas, images, and sounds in front of me and not worry about being present for the artist. It was super selfish, and I have to admit, I think everyone should try it at some point.

There were things that I thought worked really well. The technique of the performers was outstanding, their commitment to the choreography, interesting movement, and definite intention behind the eyes of the performers kept the piece engaging.

(more…)

 
by Paul Schmelzer at 8:47 am 2007-07-19
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sekousundiata.jpgIn an interview with Performing Arts Curator Philip Bither last spring, Sekou Sundiata spoke about the “special agency” of art:

“When we encounter a work of art, things are not only unfolding before us. They are happening to us. When the hero falls, we fall. When the hero triumphs, we triumph.”

In his work blessing the boats, audiences shared in Sundiata’s personal terror and triumph over kidney disease and an organ transplant. But today we share in sadness: Sundiata died yesterday of heart failure. He was 58.

A writer, spoken-word artist, and educator, Sundiata has presented his work at the Walker four times; most recently, he visited in early 2006 to develop his latest work, the 51st dream state, a personal search for “what it means to be an American” in a post-9/11 age. “I have never been interested in patriotism,” he told Bither. “I am interested in a citizenship of conscience and in critical citizenship. These ideas emphasize a moral, ethical, and critical relationship to the state above a prideful and supportive one. The first proposes a kind of uncritical blindness; the other proposes a look at America that does not flinch or blink.”

In developing the piece, Sundiata traveled the country in hopes of reconnecting with America — and “America.” He hosted citizenship dinners and communal singing events, recording the people he encountered for inclusion in the 51st dream state. Friends shocked and saddened by this news have been emailing around this excerpt from that project, a reminder of Sekou’s inimitable voice and spirit — and a reminder of questions we might all consider asking in this short life:

What if we were Life
Or Liberty
Or the Pursuit of something new?
Between the rocks below
and the stars above
What if we were composed by Love?

And what if we could show
that what we dream
is deeper than what we know?
Suppose if something does not live
in the world
that we long to see
then we make it ourselves
as we want it to be

What if we are Life
Or Liberty
and the Pursuit of something new?

And suppose the beautiful answer
asks the more beautiful question,

Why don't we get our hopes up too high?
What don't we get our hopes up to high?
High!

All of us at the Walker share in grief with Sundiata’s family, his wife, Maurine (Kazi) Knighton, daughter Myisha Gomez, stepdaughter Aida Riddle, grandson Amman and his mother Virginia Myrtle Feaster, brothers William and Ronald and all his nieces, nephews, aunts and uncles.

Donations can be made to the National Kidney Foundation at 30 E. 33rd Street, Suite 1100, New York NY 10016.

 
by Vanessa Voskuil at 8:50 am 2007-07-13
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During Justin's Jones' the SCREEN/the THING I kept thinking it was the Ocean's Eleven of Minneapolis's contemporary dance community on that stage.

The stage setting breathed an aura of the celestial. Time and the space seemed malleable. This was most apparent when a backdrop with several painted prosceniums on it lowered slowly to the ground like an accordion to the sound score of an overwhelming vibrating trashcan. Brilliantly planted was a blue stripe on the floor that seemed to serve only as a point of reference to the choreography on stage, as if playing the role of the speed of light, the only constant. I kept being transported to a "Solaris" type place in a Tarkovsky film, except when I recognized in the sound score cuts from other film scores — it took me out of the work within a piece that seemed so otherworldly.

(more…)

 
by Noah Bremer at 12:12 am 2007-07-13
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I've never written a blog post before. I usually talk about a show after I see it, but the most I've ever done in writing has been to send a congratulatory email to the cast or director. So this is a little weird for me. Tonight I saw Justin Jones and Maggie Bergeron's work at the Southern. Let me start by saying that I'm blessed to live in a city with so much talent. The choreographers, dancers, musicians, and technicians are freakishly talented, and the support of the Walker, Southern, and Jerome Foundation is invaluable.

Okay, I'll start at the beginning. That seems appropriate. The first thing I noticed was that Jeff Bartlett was nervous giving his curtain speech. I wondered why. I have seen him give similar speeches numerous times before, so what's with the nerves. Oh, there's Elliot Durko Lynch walking across the stage during his speech. My eyes are following him, veering off of Jeff, then back to the speech. Oh, then there are more dancers interrupting Jeff's speech by entering in the light while he's talking. This wonderfully distracting. And as soon as my eyes go back to Jeff, at the exact moment he is just about to wrap up his speech, chaos erupts on stage in a bang. Extremely loud music and voracious movement interrupt Jeff's speech. No wonder he was nervous. (more…)

 
by Megan Odell at 12:10 am 2007-07-13
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…I have a blog to write.

So strange that I actually turned down the chance to talk about the Momentum Opening Night with real live people at Town Hall so that I could instead sit here in my dining room with my cat and type about the Momentum Opening Night. Being an audience member in this day and age is a funny thing.

Anyways, the Walker didn’t ask us to muse about the distancing antisocial effect of blogging and technology… They asked us to write about the show we saw! To kick off a conversation with more people out there… So that’s what I’m going to try to do. But wait, what’s this youtube button up here?

Neat. Can you see that? It has nothing to do with the show tonight but I think it’s really great.

Okay. So let’s do this thing…

(more…)

 
by Cathy Wright at 11:43 pm 2007-07-12
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Maggie Bergeron collaborated with several artists for her Momentum production of House/Home.

The miniature houses created by Russell Colliton featured a variety of shapes, sizes, materials, and architecture. The dancers deconstructed these homes in various ways as the viewer went on a trip down the rabbit hole into Alice’s Wonderland of leaving the nest and taking that giant step into the unknown! One home crumbled, another strategically dissembled, one tore like paper, and one stretched like taffy. These qualities are reminiscent of what we have all felt when leaving home for the first time- a flux of emotional material.

The dancers continued to explore new territory and then found themselves going back home to visit for the holidays- back in the thick of sibling rivalry. There was one young lady who was still the one stuck cleaning up the mess. Could this character be Maggie? Or are the five dancers all aspect of Ms. Bergeron? As a sibling of 4, I found myself identifying with the tangling of bodies, limbs, and minds like at a family reunion when we are all competing to be heard.

The music was composed by Chris Thomson, and we got to see him play the saxophone live on-stage with the dancers and their houses. Bergeron’s movement phrasing successfully complimented and contrasted Thomson’s rhythmic scores.

The costumes were created by Maggie’s dancer Sarah Baumert and they were architectured to compliment the houses. There were different fabrics, textures, and colors for each dancer. They had a natural, earthy feel within a structured sturdy shape that reminded me of a rustic farmhouse. There was weight. It was a nice contrast to the typical flowing chiffon we see at most dance concerts. Bravo!

Collaborating is no easy task, and I give Maggie Bergeron my highest compliments as she incorporated and blended so many voices to create a successful and enchanting piece.

 
by Cathy Wright at 11:15 pm 2007-07-12
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3….2…..1……BLAST OFF!! Justin Jones is a problem solver, a mathematic wizard of Oz. In the SCREEN/the THING his outstanding cast including Anna Lawrence, Elliott Durko Lynch, Laura Grant, Christ Schlichting, Karen Sherman, Anna Marie Shogren, Morgan Thorson, and Kristin Van Loon endure 40 minutes of a space odyssey.

The set entailed a trash can where a rock was dropped into and it propelled a loud throbbing pulsating sound, a set drop which turned the Southern Theater’s arch into seven-dimensions, a white tiled 4 x 4 square, a blue-taped line across the stage, and Carl Sagan at the computer. Elliott Durko Lynch’s soundscape contained white noise, vaccum cleaners and chitter chatter, bells, ocean surfing, and ended with a bang with the Chariots of Fire. Jones is fearless at tackling a “physicist’s history of physics.”

 
by Off-Leash Area at 10:57 pm 2007-07-12
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From Off-Leash Area co-directors and fellow 2007 Momentum participants, Paul Herwig and Jennifer Ilse, upon viewing opening night of Momentum Weekend ONE-Jones/Bergeron:

JUSTIN JONES
Justin hit us with a kick-ass start, apologies to J Bartlett who was whisked off stage by the energy of the dancers, hyper-kinetic gestural figures wailing arms and feet…..then a substantial amount of drifting in space, pairs, singles, figures in wobbly motion across the grid of space-gravity…and in the end a dynamite portrayal of String Theory’s multidimensionality, with a tall solo dancer in a center spot, his smaller doppelganger downleft who’s shadow looms large above him, whose tripleganger is barely visible behind the Southern’s great archway……I spent a lot of time reading about String Theory when the specials hit PBS a couple of years back, bought a book, and was able to read a page each night over several months - rapt, imaginative, I didn’t know what the hell was going on after page 50! Bring on the chaos and beautiful assimilation of the small and the large - one couldn’t go far enough with a subject like this!

MAGGIE BERGERON & COMPANY
Another powerful start, this time with the simplicity of miniature homes - farmhouse, log cabin, etc. - each with a dancer inside, and then limbs and bodies begin emerging, bursting through plastic and reaching through doorways and breaking through rooftops. This use of the set is a wonderful strength in the show, as each time the dancers re-enter, deconstruct and rebuild the homes, the metaphors are always clear and artfully done. There are other strong moments in the space that is danced in outside of the homes, and they are those joyful moments in dance when the movement just seems to happen, the technical ambitions of creating it are transcended by this thing we call art.

 

Almost a year after announcing the four local choreographers commissioned by the Walker and the Southern theater, Momentum: New Dance Works is opening tonight!

Here is a little primer for the two weeks of premieres:

Written by the choreographers themselves, here is a list of adjectives they use to describe their new work:
- Justin Jones: complex, strenuous, corporeal, electric, distal, fast, rigorous, polyrhythmic, surprising, elaborate
- Cathy Wright: raw, real, potent, provocative, mythological, primitive, timeless, psychological, tragic, hopeful
- Jennifer Ilse and Paul Herwig of Off-Leash Area: kinetic, unbound, colorful, open, emotional, moving, entertaining, visual, physical, collaborative, interdisciplinary
Maggie Bergeron chose to list adverbs instead to describe her process in making work: quietly, methodically, instinctually, hopefully, searchingly, inquisitively, openly, introspectively, collaboratively, collectively

Jones continues by describing his favorite moment in his piece, the SCREEN/the THING: "Anna Shogren stands alone on stage with her arms up. Pause. She steps forward, and spirals. Pause. She is lost in the cosmos, she is looking up, she is pondering how she will die and if it will matter. Billions of years of dust have settled, and organized into this one ponderous pause. The base movement of this moment is part of a larger movement phrase. I isolated this one bit of movement and stretched it over time. I love this moment because it reminds me of time I spent alone as a child shining flashlights up to the stars hoping to communicate with them somehow, wondering if I mattered to something as far off and imponderable as a star."

Bergeron shares her inspiration on making House/Home: "This work is inspired by my experience growing up on a very small farm in rural Minnesota. I never really felt like I was in a community that supported my ambitions. I had to destroy my home in my mind in order to be able to recreate who I am and how I interact with the world. I am still learning about who I am, and how I find support in what I do. This idea of destruction, then using the pieces that result to make something new has laid the framework for the concept and much of the movement for this work."

Wright breaks down the potent metaphors and symbols in Return: "Hair because of identity and how it is viewed in different cultures (ethnic, gender, socio-economic) and how it connects and disconnects us from animal species. Also, hair has a personal significance in most of my own life experiences from childhood to present. A box for its containment and mystery. Animal "shape shifting" in the movement vocabulary to make the story universal in all levels of species and to explore the question of nature vs. nurture. What is instinct and what is learned? Repetition for ceremony - of cleansing, death and rebirth, and cycles. "

Off-Leash Area looks back at how Our Perfectly Wonderful Lives has changed since they began making it: "It has become less about Warhol’s art ideas and more about people whose desires overwhelm them."

This year's Momentum artists along with previous Momentum participants Noah Bremer, Vanessa Voskuil, and Megan Odell of Live Action Set will post their observations on the series’ performances. You can read their words on this blog as well as join in the conversation.

 

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