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In Performance: Dedicated to the Revolutions (Canada)

Dedicated to the Revolutions is a show about seven scientific revolutions that a grade eight teacher once said altered the course of humanity: Gutenberg, Copernican, Newtonian, Industrial, Darwinian, Nuclear and Information.

Erin Shields, Aimée Dawn Robinson, Chad Dembski Photo: Trevor Schwellnus
Erin Shields, Aimée Dawn Robinson, Chad Dembski Photo: Trevor Schwellnus

Six performers, not in any way experts in science and not apologizing for that, attempt to understand and question our notions of progress and knowledge and share that with an audience using things they found around the house.

Jacob Zimmer, Aimée Dawn Robinson Photo: Ömer Yükseker
Jacob Zimmer, Aimée Dawn Robinson Photo: Ömer Yükseker

With whiteboards, unrehearsed questions and answers, songs, and demonstrations, Small Wooden Shoe demonstrates the difficulty of demonstrating the effects of progress on our lives.

Small Wooden Shoe engages with the world in an honest, informal way while maintaining the need to step up and entertain. Absurd and delightful with a critical eye and a casual formalism, Small Wooden Shoe tries to help – and believes live performance might just be the best way.

Jacob Zimmer, Erin Shields, Chad Dembski Photo: Ömer Yükseker
Jacob Zimmer, Erin Shields, Chad Dembski Photo: Ömer Yükseker

Since 2006, Small Wooden Shoe has been developing Dedicated to the Revolutions by creating and presenting performances based on each of these revolutions in order to create a final piece that responds to a bigger picture of all of the revolutions and the very idea of revolutionary change.

Artistic Statement

When we made Dedicated to the Revolutions, I was thinking a lot about expertise and knowledge – about broader social questions of specialization and the assumptions that go along with them.

A culture in which some people are allowed to speak of certain things and others (hairdressers, artists and the like) should just sit quietly and then applaud at the end is what I was thinking about. I was thinking that science (and art) are areas where this opinion is particularly strong – areas where nonexperts fear to venture due to possible scorn and humiliation at the hands of the experts.

It’s an attitude that can lead to catastrophe as expertise removes itself from the everyday and we suddenly find ourselves with an economic crisis we can’t understand, a world we have to take on faith and hairdressers that aren’t allowed to do anything else.

I was thinking about how there might be room for something other than a particular kind of virtuosity and showing-off. And I love virtuosity and showing-off, but I wonder about other options – of proposing other strategies.

Of proposing vulnerability and even the importance of exposing our vulnerability in public. The show is loose and goofy in parts but always intentional. The act of standing in front of people and trying to think – as opposed to recite – with pleasure, desire and not a small amount of vulnerability was a proposal for the loosening of the structures that dictate who can think about what.

Questions of expertise and virtuosity in art are long standing and always shifting, but those aren’t the most important questions – taste in theatre and the people involved will change and change back. It’s the social questions I return to.

In bringing together thinking, vulnerability and pleasure, I wanted to find a way – for myself, my collaborators (without whom none of this would be possible) and the audience (without whom none of this would be possible) – to unite some parts of ourselves that are often pulled apart. The separation and alienation of aspects of ourselves and our culture into more specialized and exclusive chunks seems like a terrible idea to me.

Of course a 75-minute performance isn’t going to solve these problems. But maybe we can be part of a
discussion; maybe we can open up the conversation even just a bit.

That’s a least part of what I was thinking.

Jacob Zimmer
Artistic Director, Small Wooden Shoe

About Small Wooden Shoe:

Founded in 2001 by Jacob Zimmer in Halifax, Small Wooden Shoe is a theatre company now based in Toronto.

Small Wooden Shoe engages with the world around us in a curiously critical manner while maintaining the need to perform – to step up and to entertain. By being direct, honest and genial we hope to ease or transform the possible alienation between performers and audience. We do this in an attempt to find ways to ease or transform the possible alienation of contemporary living.

Believing that developing a sound artistic practice shouldn’t limit us to one performance style or genre, we have made political agit-prop (Delayed Knee Jerk Reactions, 2001), hard-boiled liveto- air radio (The Mysterious Death of WB, 2002), Chekhov adaptations (The Orchard, 2002), multi-media solo shows (No Secrets, 2003) and durational task based performances (Mostly Just Doing the Saturday Crossword). We have also created on-line think tanks, public meetings, teaching workshops, keynote lectures and publications, all of which we consider to be part of the same larger project that is Small Wooden Shoe.

Small Wooden Shoe performances are created in collaboration, led by Jacob Zimmer. Jacob brings the conceptual framework and starting points to the collaborators and the show is the result of the responses to his propositions and his response to those responses. This creative feedback-loop expands the work beyond the possibilities of a single maker, with all participants having a personal investment in the work, while maintaining a distinct and rigorous artistic vision that identifies the work as a Small Wooden Shoe production.

Wanting a local, national and international conversation about the world and about performance, we believe that touring, traveling and meeting are essential ways of extending the reach of the company and work we do while getting vital feedback and inspiration.

Video:

Highlights: Tanz Im August Aug 19 – Sept 3, 2010 (Berlin)

Tanz Im August 2010

From the Organizers:

During the 22nd edition of Tanz im August, we would like to draw your attention to a topic that has become increasingly important – not only in politics and the media, but also in contemporary dance: the ethics of human existence. More often, choreographies include appeals that we should deal with people and resources responsibly. Thus dance is given the function of social criticism. We are also focusing on dance history and young choreographers’ works. In all, we have invited 38 productions from 19 countries. There are also workshops, installations, films, lectures, discussions and the sommer.bar program.

ulrike becker, pirkko husemann, matthias lilienthal,
andré thériault, marion ziemann

LES BALLETS C DE LA B / ALAIN PLATEL & FRANK VAN LAECKE GARDENIA

http://www.tanzimaugust.de/2010/Bilder/kuenstler/lesballets.jpg

FOTO Luk Monsaert

Gardenia is a theatrical performance about hope and cherished or lost illusions. In the new piece by Alain Platel and Frank Van Laecke, the actress Vanessa Van Durme, born as a male, and six men who spend a part of their lives as women, as well as a young man and a ›real‹ woman, tell of their existence between the genders.

MEG STUART & PHILIPP GEHMACHER & VLADIMIR MILLER THE FAULT LINES

 FOTO Nina Gundlach

FOTO Nina Gundlach

Two bodies that manipulate and repair each other. They overlap, if you look in the right direction, fascinated by each other‘s vulnerability. The fault lines are the place we return to, where we are distinct by the lines that separate our bodies on impact. The promise is that we just have to trace them. After all a picture does not hurt.

After their collaboration on »MAYBE FOREVER« the Belgian-American choreographer Meg Stuart and her Austrian colleague Philipp Gehmacher 2008 collaborated on a research project in Salzburg. For this occasion they joined forces with Berlin-based video designer Vladimir Miller. All three of them were so inspired by this collaboration that they decided to work out »the fault lines« into a performance. What starts as intense physical interaction moves almost unnoticeably into a fascinating and uncanny video installation.

WILLIAM FORSYTHE & KENDALL THOMAS HUMAN WRITES

 FOTO Dominik Mentzos

FOTO Dominik Mentzos

In 1948, the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted the »Universal Declaration of Human Rights«. Over 50 years later, in a joint project with Professor Kendall Thomas, The Forsythe Company focuses on the act of inscribing basic rules for both the individual and society. »Human Writes« is a performative installation that reflects the history of human rights and the continuing obstacles to their full implementation. (Immanuel Schipper)

HÉLA FATTOUMI & ÉRIC LAMOUREUX MANTA

 FOTO Laurent Philippe

FOTO Laurent Philippe
In »Manta«, Héla Fattoumi and Éric Lamoureux dare to take on a controversial subject: the Islamic veil. They use clear images to grasp the struggle to regain physical autonomy: silent screams under the veil, an arm raised through the cloth. For Fattoumi and Lamoureux, the hijab represents a limitation of freedom that stifles women’s individuality. The body is, after all, a means of expression and communication for everybody – not just for dancers. »Manta« tests the limits that are set for artistic approaches to a religious symbol.

Highlights: Tanz Im August Aug 19 – Sept 3, 2010 (Berlin)

Tanz Im August 2010

From the Organizers:

During the 22nd edition of Tanz im August, we would like to draw your attention to a topic that has become increasingly important – not only in politics and the media, but also in contemporary dance: the ethics of human existence. More often, choreographies include appeals that we should deal with people and resources responsibly. Thus dance is given the function of social criticism. We are also focusing on dance history and young choreographers’ works. In all, we have invited 38 productions from 19 countries. There are also workshops, installations, films, lectures, discussions and the sommer.bar program.

ulrike becker, pirkko husemann, matthias lilienthal,
andré thériault, marion ziemann

LES BALLETS C DE LA B / ALAIN PLATEL & FRANK VAN LAECKE
GARDENIA

http://www.tanzimaugust.de/2010/Bilder/kuenstler/lesballets.jpg
FOTO Luk Monsaert

Gardenia is a theatrical performance about hope and cherished or lost illusions. In the new piece by Alain Platel and Frank Van Laecke, the actress Vanessa Van Durme, born as a male, and six men who spend a part of their lives as women, as well as a young man and a ›real‹ woman, tell of their existence between the genders.

MEG STUART & PHILIPP GEHMACHER & VLADIMIR MILLER
THE FAULT LINES

 FOTO Nina Gundlach
FOTO Nina Gundlach

Two bodies that manipulate and repair each other. They overlap, if you look in the right direction, fascinated by each other‘s vulnerability. The fault lines are the place we return to, where we are distinct by the lines that separate our bodies on impact. The promise is that we just have to trace them. After all a picture does not hurt.
After their collaboration on »MAYBE FOREVER« the Belgian-American choreographer Meg Stuart and her Austrian colleague Philipp Gehmacher 2008 collaborated on a research project in Salzburg. For this occasion they joined forces with Berlin-based video designer Vladimir Miller. All three of them were so inspired by this collaboration that they decided to work out »the fault lines« into a performance. What starts as intense physical interaction moves almost unnoticeably into a fascinating and uncanny video installation.

WILLIAM FORSYTHE & KENDALL THOMAS
HUMAN WRITES

 FOTO Dominik Mentzos
FOTO Dominik Mentzos

In 1948, the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted the »Universal Declaration of Human Rights«. Over 50 years later, in a joint project with Professor Kendall Thomas, The Forsythe Company focuses on the act of inscribing basic rules for both the individual and society. »Human Writes« is a performative installation that reflects the history of human rights and the continuing obstacles to their full implementation. (Immanuel Schipper)

HÉLA FATTOUMI & ÉRIC LAMOUREUX
MANTA

 FOTO Laurent Philippe
FOTO Laurent Philippe

In »Manta«, Héla Fattoumi and Éric Lamoureux dare to take on a controversial subject: the Islamic veil. They use clear images to grasp the struggle to regain physical autonomy: silent screams under the veil, an arm raised through the cloth. For Fattoumi and Lamoureux, the hijab represents a limitation of freedom that stifles women’s individuality. The body is, after all, a means of expression and communication for everybody – not just for dancers. »Manta« tests the limits that are set for artistic approaches to a religious symbol.

Follow Up: Video of Gisèle Vienne’s “This is how you will disappear” on Arte

New Video of Gisèle Vienne’s “This is how you will disappear” on Arte.

In Performance: Gisèle Vienne – This is how you will disappear

Gisèle Vienne – This is how you will disappear:

Everything starts in a forest. Extremely natural, inhabited by a buzzard in feathers and bones, this wooded landscape is staged like the reflection of the interior experiences of the characters who cross it. Depending on the light, mist and sound atmosphere, the metamorphosis capacity of the place is astonishing, following the example of the feelings driving the spectators, which go from harmony to danger, from the experience of beauty to anxiety in front of nature. It is through the spectacle of the forest that each individual dialogues with his private impressions, sometimes the most secret, like an entry into oneself, both individual and collective. But the forest is alive, full of tales, images, fantasies, forest myths as familiar as they are disturbing. Three figures soon spring up, including two archetypal beauties of today, post-adolescent idols: the young athlete, the perfection of appearances, and the rock star, the suicidal aura of ruin. Between the two of them: the trainer, the value of authority, of the taming of the body, suddenly confronted by primitive impulses and chaos. Every thing here is contained in contradiction, in the disturbing virtue of opposites and works on this tension that the show makes the spectators feel emotionally, physically and aesthe?tically. Changing visions of nature, passing in a breath, in a ray of light or a trace of smoke, from well-being to fear. Situations varying from one extreme to the other, from serenity to the most brutal murder. As an expert in perturbation, Gisèle Vienne composes images of a world in constant motion, from the imperceptible evolution to the most destructive chaos. It is over the forest that we see this, in the wood that we hear everything. Rarely has tree foliage been so revelatory as in this nature-driven theatre. ADB

In Performance: Gisèle Vienne – This is how you will disappear

Gisèle Vienne – This is how you will disappear:

[singlepic id=301 w=590 h= float=]

Everything starts in a forest. Extremely natural, inhabited by a buzzard in feathers and bones, this wooded landscape is staged like the reflection of the interior experiences of the characters who cross it. Depending on the light, mist and sound atmosphere, the metamorphosis capacity of the place is astonishing, following the example of the feelings driving the spectators, which go from harmony to danger, from the experience of beauty to anxiety in front of nature. It is through the spectacle of the forest that each individual dialogues with his private impressions, sometimes the most secret, like an entry into oneself, both individual and collective. But the forest is alive, full of tales, images, fantasies, forest myths as familiar as they are disturbing. Three figures soon spring up, including two archetypal beauties of today, post-adolescent idols: the young athlete, the perfection of appearances, and the rock star, the suicidal aura of ruin. Between the two of them: the trainer, the value of authority, of the taming of the body, suddenly confronted by primitive impulses and chaos. Every thing here is contained in contradiction, in the disturbing virtue of opposites and works on this tension that the show makes the spectators feel emotionally, physically and aesthe?tically. Changing visions of nature, passing in a breath, in a ray of light or a trace of smoke, from well-being to fear. Situations varying from one extreme to the other, from serenity to the most brutal murder. As an expert in perturbation, Gisèle Vienne composes images of a world in constant motion, from the imperceptible evolution to the most destructive chaos. It is over the forest that we see this, in the wood that we hear everything. Rarely has tree foliage been so revelatory as in this nature-driven theatre. ADB

IMAGES:

[nggallery id=70]

ABOUT THE ARTISTS:

After studying philosophy, Gisèle Vienne went to the École supérieure nationale des Arts de la Marionnette in Charleville-Mézières. She had two decisive encounters there: Étienne Bideau-Rey, with whom she co-signed, in the framework of the D.A.C.M. group, her first shows (Splendid’s by Jean Genet in 2000,ShowRoomDummies in 2001, Stereotypy in 2003 andTranenVeinzen in 2004), and the actor Jonathan Capdevielle who has been in all her shows ever since. Starting in 2004, she signed her stagings and choreographies alone. Disturbing plastic and stage objects, playing with fantasy as well as reality, deepening their furrow in our most shameful contradictions. Impulses of life, death and sex cross, in a very personal ritual, the universe of this artist who cleverly joins bodies, images, music and words. For a disconcerting but saving experience that, through the artistic transfiguration process, updates a certain truth of self and our civilisation. Gisèle Vienne presented I Apologize and A Beautiful Blonde Little Girl in 2005 andJerk in 2008 at the Festival d’Avignon.

An American poet, writer and art critic, published in France at P.O.L. (God Jr., Wrong, The Sluts), Dennis Cooper is the author of texts that play on the muddling between fiction and reality and somewhat destabilise the reader. Faced with the difference between what is possible in a fantasy life and what is possible in a clearly real life, he found himself questioning his own perturbation. An approach that meets the one that Gisèle Vienne proposes to the spectator. Their collaboration has already given rise to the shows I Apologize, A Beautiful Blonde Little Girl, Kindertotenlieder and Jerk.

An American composer, guitarist and record producer, Stephen O’Malley has come out with over 50 albums and given hundreds of concerts around the world. He is a sound worker who constantly experiments, coming from metal, influenced by jazz, electronic music and various types of experimental music. He does not hesitate to go far, as much towards minimalism as towards sound explosion, but always with enormous sensitivity. This is how you will disappear is his third work with Gisèle Vienne, after Kindertotenlieder, created with Peter Rehberg, and Eternal Idol.

Composer and co-director of the Austrian label Editions Mego, which revolutionised, in the 1990s, electronic music composed by computer, Peter Rehberg is an old hand at collaborations of all kinds. A friend of other sound buffs (notably Christian Fennesz, Kevin Drumm, Jim O’Rourke, Mika Vainio and Stephen O’Malley with whom he founded the group KTL), he also works for artists officiating in the world of dance like Meg Stuart and Chris Haring. For the last decade, he has been working regularly with Gisèle Vienne with whom he co-signed music for six shows, including the first, ShowRoomDummies.

ADB, April 2010


VIDEO:

Gisèle Vienne talks about “This is how you will disappear”. (in French)

TOURING:

July 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14 & 15, 2010 / Festival d’Avignon (FR)
August 25 & 26, 2010 / Noorderzon Performing Arts Festival– Groningen (NL)
September 25, 26 & 27, 2010 / Steirischer Herbst-Graz – Graz (AT)
October 30, 31 & November 1, 2 & 3 2010 / Festival Tokyo (JP)

November 6 & 7 2010 / Kyoto Experimental Festival – Kyoto (JP)
February 18 & 19, 2011
/ BIT Teatergarasjen-Bergen – Bergen (NO)
February 24, 2011 / The National Theatre – Oslo (NO)
March 2011 / Kampnagel – Hamburg (DE)

March 16, 17 & 18, 2011 / Festival Antipodes, Le Quartz, Scène nationale de Brest (FR)
March 31 & April 1st, 2011 / La Comédie de Caen (FR)
April 6 & 7, 2011 /
Scène Nationale de Poitiers (FR)
April 20, 21 & 22, 2011 / Les Spectacles Vivants, Centre Pompidou – Paris (FR)
May 2011 / Göteborg Dans & Teater Festival – Göteborg (SE)
May 27 & 28, 2011 /
Festival a/d Werf – Utrecht (NL)

CREDITS:

conception, direction, choregraphy and scenography
Gisèle Vienne
music supervisor Stephen O’Malley
musical creation
Stephen O’Malley, Peter Rehberg, KTL, Ensemble Pearl

interpretation and live broadcasting
Stephen O’Malley, Peter Rehberg
text Dennis Cooper
translation Laurence Viallet
light Patrick Riou
video Shiro Takatani
fog sculpture Fujiko Nakaya

créé en collaboration avec et interprété par
Jonathan Capdevielle, Margrét Sara Gudjónsdóttir, Jonathan Schatz

coproduction Festival d’Avignon, Le Quartz Scène nationale de Brest, Festival/Tokyo, Steep Slope Studio-Yokohama, Kyoto Experiment Festival avec le soutien de Saison Foundation & EU Japan Fest, Comédie de Caen Centre dramatique national de Normandie, Centre dramatique national Orléans/Loiret/Centre, Steirischer Herbst (Graz), BIT Teatergarasjen (Bergen), Kampnagel (Hambourg), Centre chorégraphique national de Franche-Comté- Belfort et Centre chorégraphique national de Grenoble dans le cadre d’un accueil studio avec le soutien de la Japan Foundation through the Performing Arts JAPAN program, Étant donnés-fonds franco-américain pour les Arts vivants-program FACE, du Service culturel de l’Ambassade de France à Tokyo, de CulturesFrance et de la Ville de Grenoble dans le cadre de leur convention, résidence-association ArtZoyd, Le Phenix Scène nationale Valenciennes, Le Festival d’Avignon reçoit le soutien de l’Adami pour la production.

Featured: Dean Moss / Gametophyte Inc. (Brooklyn, USA)

ABOUT:

GAMETOPHYTE INC.
Gametophyte (ga•me´to•phyt´) the company name is from the greek meaning to marry and to grow. The word refers to the sexual generation of small pioneering plants found world wide that produce in true form neither flowers, fruits nor seeds. A plant commonly called “moss”.

A hybrid production, performance and consulting company, founded in 2002 by Dean Moss, Gametophyte Inc. is the support structure through which he organizes his various creative endeavors. It supports performances, video projects, multidisciplinary collaborations, and composition workshops. It also seeks to share, in a holistic manner, creative experience with artists, art professionals and the public, internationally. Gametophyte Inc. is based in Brooklyn.

Board of Directors: Dean Moss, President; Marya Warshaw, Secretary; Charlotte Mendelaar, Treasurer.

As an artist working in both dance and video, I use the irrational logic of the body to articulate personal, cultural, and socioeconomic, forces that impact our perception of self and environment. Physically demanding, dense and visual, the resulting works reflect not only a desire to participate rigorously in the world of ideas, but also an interest in twinning a variety of forms and metaphors into visceral immersive performance experience.

In recent years I have developed a practice of conceiving multidisciplinary, and often transcultural collaborative projects. These works include: “figures on a field” (2005, with painter, Laylah Ali), “States & Resemblance” (2007, with actor/photographer, Ryutaro Mishima and Indonesian traditional dance artist Restu Kusumaningrum), “Kisaeng becomes you” (2008-09, with traditional Korean dance choreographer Yoon Jin Kim) and “Nameless forest” (2011, with sculptor, Sungmyung Chun). This collaborative process also extends into teaching. In 2002, I conceived a choreographers composition workshop focused on separating the dance artist from the dance work, now called “Performance Praxis”, it has been co-directed and is co-facilitated with choreographer and Critical Correspondence editor, Levi Gonzalez.

Another central element of my practice is to examine the role and experience of the audience. In “figures on a field”, this was manifested through a docent lead group tour of the work during the performance, which allowed it to shift subtly between its’ personal, political and aesthetic meanings; in “Kisaeng becomes you”, audience members were invited to embody and speak the poems of the Kisaeng – artist/courtesans of Korea’s Joseon Dynasty – making visceral the experience of the “other”, and in the current work, “Nameless forest”, performance artists immersive relationship to community will be investigated. The pattern of my practice seems to run parallel to my life as a curator, a traveller, and as an artist now looking to deepen both the articulation and impact of his work.


Read More –>

Featured: Dean Moss / Gametophyte Inc. (Brooklyn, USA)

ABOUT:

GAMETOPHYTE INC.
Gametophyte (ga•me´to•phyt´) the company name is from the greek meaning to marry and to grow. The word refers to the sexual generation of small pioneering plants found world wide that produce in true form neither flowers, fruits nor seeds. A plant commonly called “moss”.

A hybrid production, performance and consulting company, founded in 2002 by Dean Moss, Gametophyte Inc. is the support structure through which he organizes his various creative endeavors. It supports performances, video projects, multidisciplinary collaborations, and composition workshops. It also seeks to share, in a holistic manner, creative experience with artists, art professionals and the public, internationally. Gametophyte Inc. is based in Brooklyn.

Board of Directors: Dean Moss, President; Marya Warshaw, Secretary; Charlotte Mendelaar, Treasurer.

As an artist working in both dance and video, I use the irrational logic of the body to articulate personal, cultural, and socioeconomic, forces that impact our perception of self and environment. Physically demanding, dense and visual, the resulting works reflect not only a desire to participate rigorously in the world of ideas, but also an interest in twinning a variety of forms and metaphors into visceral immersive performance experience.

In recent years I have developed a practice of conceiving multidisciplinary, and often transcultural collaborative projects. These works include: “figures on a field” (2005, with painter, Laylah Ali), “States & Resemblance” (2007, with actor/photographer, Ryutaro Mishima and Indonesian traditional dance artist Restu Kusumaningrum), “Kisaeng becomes you” (2008-09, with traditional Korean dance choreographer Yoon Jin Kim) and “Nameless forest” (2011, with sculptor, Sungmyung Chun). This collaborative process also extends into teaching. In 2002, I conceived a choreographers composition workshop focused on separating the dance artist from the dance work, now called “Performance Praxis”, it has been co-directed and is co-facilitated with choreographer and Critical Correspondence editor, Levi Gonzalez.

Another central element of my practice is to examine the role and experience of the audience. In “figures on a field”, this was manifested through a docent lead group tour of the work during the performance, which allowed it to shift subtly between its’ personal, political and aesthetic meanings; in “Kisaeng becomes you”, audience members were invited to embody and speak the poems of the Kisaeng – artist/courtesans of Korea’s Joseon Dynasty – making visceral the experience of the “other”, and in the current work, “Nameless forest”, performance artists immersive relationship to community will be investigated. The pattern of my practice seems to run parallel to my life as a curator, a traveller, and as an artist now looking to deepen both the articulation and impact of his work.

These performance and video works have been presented and exhibited at The Whitney Museum of American Art; P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center; Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art; The Brooklyn Museum of Art; Gallery Factory in Seoul Korea; Ksirarnawa Art Center, Denpasar, Indonesia; New Visions Art Festival, Hong Kong; The FNB Vita Dance Festival in Johannesburg South Africa; Seoul International Dance Festival, Smack Mellon Studios; The Brooklyn Arts Exchange; The Danspace Project, Dance Theater Workshop and The Kitchen.

They are the recipient of grants, residencies and awards including: The Multi-Arts Production Fund, Asian Cultural Council Fellowships, Arts International, Jerome Foundation, Greenwall Foundation, The National Endowment for the Arts, The New York State Council on the Arts, Urban Artists Initiative, New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowships, Bali Purnati Center for the Arts, Brooklyn Arts Exchange Baxten Award, the Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography, Arizona State University and The Foundation for Contemporary Arts. I received a New York Dance and Performance BESSIE Award for the 1999 work, “Spooky action at a distance”.

I have enjoyed a ten-year relationship with The Kitchen, serving as the Curator of Dance and Performance from 1999-2004, then as a Curatorial Advisor through 2009. During that time I conceived and organized programs such as “Talking Dance“ hosted by Dancenoise and featuring performances by Bill T. Jones, Ann Carlson, Foofwa d’Imobilité and works by Yvonne Rainer, David Gordon and Elevator Repair Service. Additionally I had the honor of showcasing rigorously innovative artists very early in their careers including: Miranda July, Sarah Michelson, Xavier LeRoy, Miguel Gutierrez, Yasmeen Godder, and Akram Khan. I spent a year as Guest Professor at the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music from 2003-2004. From 2007 to 2009 I was a Visiting Lecturer in the Department of Visual and Environmental Studies at Harvard University, which was acknowledged with a Certificate of Distinction in Teaching from the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning. Spring semester 2011, I begin teaching in the Department of Theater Studies at Yale University. (from the artist’s website)

WORKS:

2011
The Kitchen, NYC: performance: Nameless forest

2010
Soho Rep, NYC: collaboration: LEAR (Young Jean Lee, director)

2009
Dance Theater Workshop, NYC: performance: Kisaeng becomes you

2008
University of Toronto, Canada: performance: Untitled
Seoul International Dance Festival, Korea: performance: Kisaeng becomes you
New Vision Art Festival, Hong Kong, China: performance: Kisaeng becomes you

2007
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis MN: video/collaboration: Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven
(Young Jean Lee, director)
Chez Bushwick, Brooklyn NY: performance: States and Resemblance
Factory, Seoul, Korea: solo video exhibition: Spooky action at a distance
Bard College, Annendale-on-Hudson, NY: performance: States and Resemblance

2006
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art: performance: figures on a field
Ksirarnawa Art Center, Denpasar Indonesia: collaboration: Hello (Cok Sawitri, co-director)
Here Art Center, NYC: video/collaboration: Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven (Young Jean Lee, director)
Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA: video/collaboration: Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven
(Young Jean Lee, director)

2005
The Kitchen, NYC: performance: figures on a field
Galapagos Art Space: exhibition video from Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven
Noguchi Museum/Topaz Arts: group exhibition

2003
Performance Space 122: performance: Shuffle (Yasuko Yokoshi, director)

2002
The Danspace Project, NYC: performance: supplement
FNB Vita Dance Festival, Johannesburg, SA: performance american deluxe
Goliath Visual Space: group exhibition

2001
Smack Mellon Studios, Brooklyn: performance: american deluxe
P. S. 1, Queens: performance: american deluxe

2000
The Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC: performance: american deluxe & Spooky action at a distance
Paris University/The Sorbonne: exhibition: Spooky action at a distance
Duke University, Durham: performance: Spooky action at a distance
Performance Space122 video exhibition

1999
The Kitchen, NYC: performance: Spooky action at a distance

1997
Brooklyn Museum of Art: exhibition: Navel, my navel
The Danspace Project, NYC: performance and screening: Navel, my navel
Festival a/d Werf, Utrecht, The Netherlands: video/collaboration: Tendencies and Strategies
(Yasuko Yokoshi, director)

1995
Dance Theater Workshop, NYC: performance: Commodites Identities and Sychronized Swimming

1994
Danse Visions Festival International de Cin´e-Video-Danse, Nantes France: exhibition: Adventures in Assimilation
Anthology Film Archives, NYC: video installation

1993
The Danspace Project, NYC: performance: Aventures in Assimilation: landscape & tapestry

1992
The Danspace Project, NYC: performance: Dirt
New York Expo of Short Film & Video,NYC: exhibition: Adventures in Assimilation

VIDEO:

Kisaeng becomes you

Find more videos like this on Contemporary Performance Network
Single channel video document thanking guests from Kby’s 2008 Seoul and Hong Kong performances.

Nameless forest (in production)

Find more videos like this on Contemporary Performance Network

A slideshow of performers in location shots mixed with Mike Kamber’s photography and narrative, plus Chun’s sculptures, all set to music by Stephen Vitiello.

Link www.gametophyte.org


Highlights: ImPulsTanz Festival July 15 – August 15 (Vienna, Austria)

ImPulsTanz – Vienna International Dance Festival July 15 – August 15

Thousands of professional dancers, choreographers and teachers from all over the world, come together, work together, for five weeks, in one city – ImPulsTanz.

1984. In Austria‘s leading cultural city Vienna the cultural manager Karl Regenburger and the choreographer Ismael Ivo launch the Internationale Tanzwochen Wien in order to give contemporary dance a voice in Austria. With six teachers – amongst them the well-known Joe Alegado, Germaine Acogny and Walter Raines – and twenty workshops, the two organizers get the festival started. A new dance culture unfolds itself and spreads out. Four years later a performance element is added to the increasingly successful workshop festival. In 1988 the ImPulsTanz Vienna International Dance Festival is introduced for the first time, featuring works by Wim Vandekeybus, Marie Chouinard and Mark Tompkins. All names that are still closely connected with ImPulsTanz, which meanwhile has grown to Europe’s biggest contemporary festival.


Robyn Orlin / City Theatre & Dance Group Johannesburg (ZA) We must eat our suckers with the wrappers on…

Photo © John Hogg

MuseumsQuartier Halle E
20. Juli, 21:00
21. Juli, 21:00
22. Juli, 21:00

The title is straightforward enough. “We must it our suckers with the wrappers on” is a widespread idiom in the townships of Johannesburg. White South African choreographer Robyn Orlin chose this title for her play dealing with Aids, because the cynical metaphor will do away with hackneyed pathos and reveal the social taboo, the pandemia, the tragedy taking place in her mother-country.

Thick lipstick, bright plastic buckets, lots and lots of red lollipops, 77 light bulbs, street games, rhythmical group movements, everyday behaviour, zulu dances and jazzy a-capella songs combine to surrealistic images and bitterly ironic street stories. Her lively humour, Orlin’s trademark at other occasions, is almost completely missing, as the serious nature of the issue, in a country where one out of nine is HIV positive, seems to require.

Orlin is considered one of South Africa’s most provocative and controversial artists. The Art Institute of Chicago graduate creates political art combining interventionalist, image and dance theatre, with video projections counterbalancing reality and blurring the gap between audience and actors. Orlin has been creating performances and installations since 20 years, she was awarded several prizes (ao. the Lawrence Olivier Award). In 2007 she collaborated with William Christie for a production for he National Ballet de la Opéra de Paris.

DD Dorvillier & Human Future Dance Corps (USA) Choreography, a Prologue for the Apocalypse of Understanding, Get Ready!

photo © David Berge

© David Berge

MuseumsQuartier Halle G
August 08, 21:00
August 10, 21:00

Apocalypse now! Or perhaps soon. Or… Anyhow, for New York artist DD Dorvillier, the loss of understanding is worthy of a prologue. Together with four dancers (including Amanda Piña, the Chilean living in Austria) and musician Zeena Parkins, Dorvillier immerses into the abyss of fake


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Highlights: ImPulsTanz Festival July 15 – August 15 (Vienna, Austria)

ImPulsTanz – Vienna International Dance Festival
July 15 – August 15

Thousands of professional dancers, choreographers and teachers from all over the world, come together, work together, for five weeks, in one city – ImPulsTanz.

1984. In Austria‘s leading cultural city Vienna the cultural manager Karl Regenburger and the choreographer Ismael Ivo launch the Internationale Tanzwochen Wien in order to give contemporary dance a voice in Austria. With six teachers – amongst them the well-known Joe Alegado, Germaine Acogny and Walter Raines – and twenty workshops, the two organizers get the festival started. A new dance culture unfolds itself and spreads out. Four years later a performance element is added to the increasingly successful workshop festival. In 1988 the ImPulsTanz Vienna International Dance Festival is introduced for the first time, featuring works by Wim Vandekeybus, Marie Chouinard and Mark Tompkins. All names that are still closely connected with ImPulsTanz, which meanwhile has grown to Europe’s biggest contemporary festival.

Robyn Orlin / City Theatre & Dance Group Johannesburg (ZA)
We must eat our suckers with the wrappers on…

Photo © John Hogg
Photo © John Hogg

MuseumsQuartier Halle E
20. Juli, 21:00
21. Juli, 21:00
22. Juli, 21:00

The title is straightforward enough. “We must it our suckers with the wrappers on” is a widespread idiom in the townships of Johannesburg. White South African choreographer Robyn Orlin chose this title for her play dealing with Aids, because the cynical metaphor will do away with hackneyed pathos and reveal the social taboo, the pandemia, the tragedy taking place in her mother-country.

Thick lipstick, bright plastic buckets, lots and lots of red lollipops, 77 light bulbs, street games, rhythmical group movements, everyday behaviour, zulu dances and jazzy a-capella songs combine to surrealistic images and bitterly ironic street stories. Her lively humour, Orlin’s trademark at other occasions, is almost completely missing, as the serious nature of the issue, in a country where one out of nine is HIV positive, seems to require.

Orlin is considered one of South Africa’s most provocative and controversial artists. The Art Institute of Chicago graduate creates political art combining interventionalist, image and dance theatre, with video projections counterbalancing reality and blurring the gap between audience and actors. Orlin has been creating performances and installations since 20 years, she was awarded several prizes (ao. the Lawrence Olivier Award). In 2007 she collaborated with William Christie for a production for he National Ballet de la Opéra de Paris.

DD Dorvillier & Human Future Dance Corps (USA)
Choreography, a Prologue for the Apocalypse of Understanding, Get Ready!

photo © David Berge
photo © David Berge

MuseumsQuartier Halle G
August 08, 21:00
August 10, 21:00

Apocalypse now! Or perhaps soon. Or… Anyhow, for New York artist DD Dorvillier, the loss of understanding is worthy of a prologue. Together with four dancers (including Amanda Piña, the Chilean living in Austria) and musician Zeena Parkins, Dorvillier immerses into the abyss of fake sensations and misunderstandings, including political implications. There, she attempts to rearrange various hierarchies of perception by means of wit and unusual actions. DD Dorvillier – danceWEB coach at ImPulsTanz in 2008 – is among those choreographers from the New York dance scene who collaborate closely with European colleagues. A recent, successful project was “Pièce Sans Paroles” with Anne Juren.

Keith Hennessy (USA)
Crotch

Photo © Yi Chun Wu
Photo © Yi Chun Wu

Schauspielhaus
July 26, 21:00
July 29, 23:00

What does conceptual dance look like coming from the West Coast? It must be ironic, all over queer and critical. As he proves in his solo “Crotch (all the Joseph Beuys references in the world cannot heal the pain, confusion, regret, cruelty, betrayal or trauma…)”, Keith Hennessy from San Francisco fulfils these criteria. He is interested in references to references: it is not without reason that the famous mask from the much parodied US horror film “Scream” appears. Parody is the most salutary of the many possibilities to establish references, and so Hennessy parodies: for example the Beuysian Fat Corner, in a refreshingly disrespectful manner, i.e. by pasting it between his legs in the crotch.

PAR B.L.eux / Benoît Lachambre & Louise Lecavalier & Hahn Rowe & Laurent Goldring (CA/USA/FR)
Is You Me

© Andre Cornelier
© Andre Cornelier

MuseumsQuartier Halle G
July 23, 21:00
July 25, 21:00

They make for a very special pair: Louise Lecavalier and Benoît Lachambre. Initially, Lecavalier – the world-famous dance virtuoso from La La La Human Steps – wanted to collaborate on a group work with crossover choreographer Lachambre. In the end, the result was the solo piece “‘I’ Is Memory”. Now the time has come for the two of them to enter the stage together to dance the question “Is You Me” – as accomplices in matters of dancing enjoyment. The design of the stage area and the video projections are in the able hands of renowned fine artist Laurent Goldring, whose works about the body image have become classics. The music is provided by multi-instrumentalist and film musician Hahn Rowe, who has also repeatedly worked together with Meg Stuart.

In Print: Realtime E-dition July 12, 2010 Online Now (Australia)

Realtime E-dition July 12, 2010 Online Now.

RealTime is Australia’s critical guide to international contemporary arts. Its focus is on innovation in performance (live art, experimental theatre, dance, music, sound), photomedia, film, video, interactive media and hybrid arts.

The RealTime website offers a comprehensive view of Australian contemporary art with an international perspective, combining the current print edition of RealTime, online exclusives and updates; the RealTime archive (currently under development); new works on show in our studio; featured events (forums, festivals) and arts issues; and a portal that will guide you to the best sites in innovative contemporary art.

The print edition of RealTime has a run of 27,000 copies (48-56 A3 pages per edition) distributed bi-monthly and free to over 1000 points across Australia—cafes, arts centres, bookshops, theatres, galleries, university departments, regional and overseas arts centres, as well as to subscribers.

Now in its 14th year, RealTime provides access in print and online to quality writing about innovation in the arts. Most of the writing is by practising artists, artworkers and other arts specialists.

contact gonzo

Articles/interviewsThe 10th Indonesian Dance Festival
Five days, eight writers and 23 reviews of fascinating dance from a Goethe-Institut workshop led by Keith Gallasch

memoryflows Memory Flows: The Shapes of Water Gail Priest engages with a range of media and installation responses to water in CMAI’s Armory show
measure for measuree Measure for Measure: A Delicate Balance Keith Gallasch is engrossed by the revealing interplay of stage and screen in Benedict Andrews’ Company B production
now now now
superheroes
In the loop RealTime news and advance word
Rolex Arts Initiative Awards; NightTime Statewide: Everyday Hero, NSW; Stone/Castro’s Superheroes, Adelaide and Melbourne; Starfuckers, Wollongong; Luke George’s NOW NOW NOW, Melbourne; Persistence of Vision, FACT, Liverpool, UK; Amelia Jones lectures on Marina Abramovic at Artspace

Images: LEFT column top to bottom – contact Gonzo, Public Space, photo Phalla San; In Search of the Inland Sea, 2009, Norie Neumark, Maria Miranda, photo Adam Hollingworth; Robin McLeavy, Arky Michael, Measure for Measure, directed by Benedict Andrews, photo Heidrun Löhr; Kristy Ayre, Timothy Harvey, Luke George, NOW NOW NOW, photo Jeff Busby; Paolo Castro, Superheroes, photo RODEO

In Print: Realtime E-dition July 12, 2010 Online Now (Australia)

Realtime E-dition July 12, 2010 Online Now.

RealTime is Australia’s critical guide to international contemporary arts. Its focus is on innovation in performance (live art, experimental theatre, dance, music, sound), photomedia, film, video, interactive media and hybrid arts.

The RealTime website offers a comprehensive view of Australian contemporary art with an international perspective, combining the current print edition of RealTime, online exclusives and updates; the RealTime archive (currently under development); new works on show in our studio; featured events (forums, festivals) and arts issues; and a portal that will guide you to the best sites in innovative contemporary art.

The print edition of RealTime has a run of 27,000 copies (48-56 A3 pages per edition) distributed bi-monthly and free to over 1000 points across Australia—cafes, arts centres, bookshops, theatres, galleries, university departments, regional and overseas arts centres, as well as to subscribers.

Now in its 14th year, RealTime provides access in print and online to quality writing about innovation in the arts. Most of the writing is by practising artists, artworkers and other arts specialists.

contact gonzo

Articles/interviews
The 10th Indonesian Dance Festival

Five days, eight writers and 23 reviews of fascinating dance from a Goethe-Institut workshop led by Keith Gallasch

memoryflows Memory Flows: The Shapes of Water
Gail Priest engages with a range of media and installation responses to water in CMAI’s Armory show
measure for measuree Measure for Measure: A Delicate Balance
Keith Gallasch is engrossed by the revealing interplay of stage and screen in Benedict Andrews’ Company B production
now now now

superheroes

In the loop
RealTime news and advance word
Rolex Arts Initiative Awards; NightTime Statewide: Everyday Hero, NSW; Stone/Castro’s Superheroes, Adelaide and Melbourne; Starfuckers, Wollongong; Luke George’s NOW NOW NOW, Melbourne; Persistence of Vision, FACT, Liverpool, UK; Amelia Jones lectures on Marina Abramovic at Artspace

Images: LEFT column top to bottom – contact Gonzo, Public Space, photo Phalla San; In Search of the Inland Sea, 2009, Norie Neumark, Maria Miranda, photo Adam Hollingworth; Robin McLeavy, Arky Michael, Measure for Measure, directed by Benedict Andrews, photo Heidrun Löhr; Kristy Ayre, Timothy Harvey, Luke George, NOW NOW NOW, photo Jeff Busby; Paolo Castro, Superheroes, photo RODEO