On DanceTabs - Saturday night's performance of SFDanceworks:
http://dancetabs.com/2018/06/sfdanceworks-season-three-snap-homing-the-old-child-jardi-tancat-san-francisco/
Dance Commentary and Reviews by Heather Desaulniers, freelance dance critic, former dancer and choreographer, PhD in dance history.
Monday, June 11, 2018
Monday, June 04, 2018
Oakland Ballet
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Scene & Heard
Odell Johnson Theater,
Oakland
June 2nd,
2018
The phrase ‘story
ballet’ tends to evoke largess; grand productions where an elaborate plot
unfolds over the course of an entire evening. But just as stories come in many forms,
so too is the relationship between story and ballet diverse. Of course, there
are many examples of the epic two/three-act ballet, but shorter movement essays,
poems and novels are just as prolific in the canon. And I often find shorter
dances to be more successful in communicating their narrative; the brevity
breeding a clarity and succinctness that gets somewhat lost in larger works.
Oakland Ballet Company
marked the transition from May to June with Scene
& Heard, a selection of work dedicated to the breadth and range of
story in ballet. For this program, Artistic Director Graham Lustig charged six
choreographers with the task of creating short narrative ballets. The resulting
commissions (three from within the OBC family and three from local
choreographers) made for a terrific afternoon of choreography, danced by a
company that is looking impressively strong.
Kicking things off was Itchy Bot Bot (A Family Portrait),
choreographed by Danielle Rowe, SFDanceworks’ new Associate Artistic Director.
Here was a work about the space between perception and reality, told through
familial dynamics. With arms hanging forward and feet stamping abstractly through
her pointe shoes, Ramona Kelley’s daughter character was at first sullen and
pouty. In contrast, on the other side of the stage, Emily Kerr and Richard Link
beamed from ear to ear, proud parents of their graduate son Landes Dixon. Darwin
Black, as the photographer character, wandered throughout the scene, snapping
pictures of the happy family (the daughter’s moody quality gradually softening
to play the part of the dutiful child). But what lay beneath these frozen
images? Itchy Bot Bot (A Family Portrait)’s
choreography suggested much was percolating right under the surface. In a
series of solos and duets for all five, unexpected positions permeated the
space, like piqué turns with the leg out in 2nd position. As did an
abundance of flexed feet, abruptly breaking the line of the leg in
unanticipated ways. What was illusion? What was façade? When might the pretense
shatter? Rowe posited the questions, but cleverly left them unanswered.
Walk through any art gallery and listen as folks chat about what they ‘see’ in a certain painting. Chances are the opinions and perspectives range significantly. The same is true for dance that mines a specific visual art work – it is apt to generate a multitude of interpretations, including those that differ from the original intent. After reading the notes for Michael Lowe’s Kimono Wednesdays,
“…inspired
by the work of French impressionist painter Claude Monet, in particular his
1876 painting title “La Japonaise”.
The image depicted in this painting is of his wife Camille donning a blonde wig
and red kimono holding a Japanese hand fan emblazoned with the colors of the
French flag…”
I had a pretty clear
sense of what the ballet was about, but I still had some differing
observations. That’s not a criticism at all, it’s the result of dance and
visual art conversing together in a creative container.
Samantha Bell and Coral
Martin opened Kimono Wednesdays, both
holding gilded picture frames. In the program they were listed as ‘agitators
disguised as portraits’, but I saw something else. As they extended their arms
and legs through the empty squares, they blurred the boundary between art and
life. It was like they were entering Monet’s painting and in turn, leading us
inside as well to experience its internal themes. Lowe unpacked these themes through
three striking pas de deux. Vincent Chavez (presumably as Claude Monet)
partnered Sharon Kung as the Japanese Spirit, Kelley as the French Spirit and
Kerr as Camille Monet. But to me, the three women read as three distinct aspects
of Camille’s persona. Kung contributing playfulness, Kelley adding speed and
allure and Kerr, a skillful, mature game of flirtation.
With arms sculpting the
space and the most amazing penchée, Martin invited the audience into the world
of Giggling Flame and Roaring Waves,
choreographed by Antoine Hunter. A narratively-rich work comprised of four
brief episodes, the notes say that the piece “…explores the journey to
Deafhood…”. With Giggling Flame and
Roaring Waves, Hunter, who is deaf, has crafted a powerful statement that
disrupts assumptions with every chapter. But the narrative isn’t the only thing
that makes the dance special. The movement itself, a new kind of fusion between
ballet and jazz, impressed with its innovation and specificity of position.
The first group sequence
brought a number of themes to the table – isolation as dancers were left out of
groups; learning as gestures were repeated and honed; even some camaraderie as
hands were extended in belonging (that feeling would certainly intensify as the
dance went on). A slow, deliberate series of cluster shapes made up Giggling Flame and Roaring Waves’ second
segment, the cast working together to create the picturesque landscapes. I was
particularly intrigued by how the facing of the clusters changed a little bit
each time, like the ensemble was mirroring a clock on the surface of the stage.
Perhaps a comment about how a community grows stronger and stronger as they log
more time together. Part three brought a short solo movement improv, steps and
phrases emerging from text prompts. And the final sequence saw the entire
ensemble return to the stage – a community of individuals engaging and
celebrating together in full-throttle physicality.
Chavez and Kelley’s La Llorona had a solid start, another
work steeped in family dynamics. In this story, spontaneity was juxtaposed
against inflexibility, and as the ballet unfolded, questions of rigidity and
cost were asked. What relationships and experiences are lost by an inability to
bend and adjust? According to the synopsis provided, La Llorona’s story takes a dark and tragic turn in its second half.
This is the point where the narrative thread got a little fuzzy onstage - if I
hadn’t read the program, I likely wouldn’t have known what was happening. A
number of events and dramatic moments need to play out (and they did), it just all
happened too fast. I’m usually a huge advocate for editing and shortening
works, but I think this is the one ballet on the bill that needed to be a bit
longer in order to really capture and communicate the whole story through
movement.
![]() |
Ramona Kelley, Christopher Dunn and Samantha Bell in Bat Abbit's The Sound of Snow Photo John Hefti |
Lustig’s Heartbreak Hotel closed the Scene & Heard program, a suite of
dance vignettes set to Elvis Presley-era music. Within this retro frame, Heartbreak Hotel took a humorous romp
into twenty-first century dating culture. There was speed dating, a duet about
infatuation and new love, a pas de trois where a past relationship bled into a
current one, and a nod to the excessively eager date, who had been paired with
someone clearly not interested. It was a super fun finale to the afternoon. But
it was missing one important thing. All of Heartbreak
Hotel’s couples were male/female. Without changing any of the choreography
or staging, it would have been easy to make some of the pairs female/female or
male/male.
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
"Bare Bones"
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Bare Bones
Western Sky Studio, Berkeley
Western Sky Studio, Berkeley
May 26th,
2018
On Saturday evening, Bay
Area dance enthusiasts gathered at Western Sky Studio in Berkeley for the 10th
edition of Paufve Dance’s Bare Bones,
a long running series that invites dancemakers to share current in-progress
percolations. Bare Bones is such a
smart and accurate name for the event, deeply woven into every fiber. Bare Bones celebrates work that is still
in the making. It honors the process of building an artistic whole, one
choreographic bone at a time. It is very much about baring and exposing art to
audiences. That vulnerable and brave act of putting work out there, especially
when it isn’t in its final state yet. And Bare
Bones happens in a bare open studio environment, yes with some lights, but
sans any theatrical excess. Following some pre-performance revelry, three movement
offerings unfolded in this creative container, from Randee Paufve/Paufve Dance,
Nina Haft & Company and TESTMASH.
Before each piece, the
artists generously took the time to give context to what we were about to see,
which I find to be extra helpful in the case of works-in-progress. Randee
Paufve shared thoughts and background on Where
Are You Going, Where Did You Go?, a series of dances intended for four
distinct US locations (one north, one south, one east, one west), over the next
two years or so. She shared that the different solos all dealt with thresholds,
those very personal and those more symbolic. And that in a departure from her
recent work, that these solos would have a measure of lone-ness, performed not
for an audience, but filmed by Erin Malley. We were fortunate to witness
sections from each dance.
Paufve stood center and
began a series of movements that deeply connected the breath and the body. The
upper body soared high with the inhalation, and rebounded forward with the
exhale. This motif repeated again and again, each recurrence gaining both
momentum and intensity. Performer Lili Weckler joined the scene, unwrapping the
waistband of Paufve’s costume and singing with hauntingly pure tones. As more
and more of the waistband was unraveled, Paufve’s physicality seemed to expand,
free from constraint. Smaller motions became larger and the action moved all
over the space. Arms rippled in large T shapes out and away from the core,
suspending on the inhale and releasing on the exhale. Single foot balances
hovered in relevé as the breath went in and returned to the floor as the breath
discharged. Nothing looked placed or contrived. Instead, Paufve created
movement by riding the wave of her own breath. And with every choreographic
idea, she managed to find that elusive ‘in between’ space that separates the
inhale and the exhale. Here was the moment of threshold; that transformative place
where air is flowing from one portal to another.
Solo #2 was all shifts
and changes - in direction, in facing, in dynamics - while solo #4 felt more
about actions - mixing, morphing and melting. In this final excerpt, Paufve
would create a particular shape, position or gesture. As it dissolved, the next
posture was being simultaneously created. It was like watching a human kaleidoscope.
And solo #3 was such a standout. Donning bright orange spandex, a sequined
choker and a blonde wig that was part The
Wrath of Khan, part Labyrinth,
Paufve commanded the space with catwalk struts, jazz isolations, exaggerated
pony pas de boureés, even some aerobics-inspired moves. It was humorous to be
sure, but didn’t feel like farce or a send up. Rather, the dance read more like
a nostalgic remembrance, a doorway (or threshold) to the past.
Nina Haft prefaced her
company’s excerpted duet, Crows, by
talking about nature, about spending time observing natural species and beings,
including humans. She also spoke about different phenomena, including the
choices we make throughout our journeys to either opt in or opt out. Part of a
larger work currently titled Precarious
Pod, Crows started in silence. Jennifer
Twilley Jerum and Jesse Wiener began cycling through legato full-bodied phrase
material, first expressed as floorwork. Immediately, I was pulled to how the
dancers were moving their heads. Like birds, there were slight twitches in the
head’s angle and attitude, the chin jutting out from the neck. At times, I could
even see the eyes jumping from one position to another, like their gaze was being
pulled by an outside stimulus. But more than just these subtle motions and
adjustments, the head was leading the overall movement. Leading the body as it
crawled and rolled forward in space, leading the back and spine as it spiraled.
Determining which direction to travel. This brought me back to the idea of the
opting in and opting out. Yes Crows’
choreographic use of the head felt very avian, but perhaps Haft was also making
a broader comment. Our head/brain is often the primary actor or sole decision
maker when it comes to opting in or opting out. What would happen if we adopted
a more holistic approach?
Jessi Barber and Julie
Crothers took the space to introduce TESTMASH, their new dance lab experiment.
They described conversations about choreographic editing and their curiosity
with this complex part of composition. How could editing be tackled
differently? What new parameters might be introduced into the equation? TESTMASH
is the result of these questions, a devised system of creative accumulation and
imposed time limits. The press materials described it best,
“Three
choreographers are tasked with creating a quick movement sketch with five
randomly assigned dancers. After 30 minutes, the choreographers rotate and have
15 minutes to expand, edit, and mess with whatever they find in the next room.
Three rotations later, each choreographer has contributed to, disrupted, and
edited every piece…”
I love this idea. It
combines elements of Susan Rethorst’s “Wrecking” with even further time
restrictions and more choreographic accretion. The afternoon of Bare Bones TESTMASH had engaged in this
process, with choreographic input from Crothers, Molly Rose-Williams and Ragbag
Performance Collective (Rose Huey, Nina Wu and Courtney Hope). Below are my
observations on what emerged.
The first trio was very
gestural. Lying on their stomachs with their chins resting in their palms, the dancers
moved through a sequence of gestures that focused on the hand/head connection.
The trio also had a task-based component where the performers would create a
shape or complete a step, and follow it with an emphatic, congratulatory ‘yes’.
Next was a duet that delved into the relationship between two bodies in space.
Using both small movements and large, the pair travelled together in unison.
There was consonance and harmony. Gestural games brought competition to the
table. And there were also confrontational moments where they pushed each other
over and screamed loudly at one another. Last was a quintet that explored
different points in space. Gathered in a cluster upstage left, the five
surveyed their surroundings, heads and eyes shifting from one focal point to
another. They walked forward on the diagonal, again concentrating on specific
points in space as they moved through an arabesque series. They even explored different
spatial points by sticking out their tongues and moving them through the air.
TESTMASH’s final step was joining all three dances, which led to some
unexpected and very funny moments. The
work was avant-garde, experimental and novel; the movement, familiar,
egalitarian and relatable. It certainly conjured both the intent and repertoire
of Judson.
I’m jazzed to see more
from this collective, though I think I’m more interested in witnessing
TESTMASH’s actual experiment. With three incubators happening simultaneously, I
don’t know how or if it’s even possible to have an audience present during that
creation process. But I would bet there’s some real magic to behold there.
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