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Manolis Tsipos (Athens & Amsterdam)

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Occupation:
performance maker, performer, writer, DasArts attendant

Bio
He was born in 1979. He is currently a participant of DasArts-Master of Theatre, in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He is co-founder of the theatre collective "Nova Melancholía", based in Athens, Greece. He is a performance maker, performer and writer.

1. Can you tell us a little about your work, your history and your performative concerns.
I am a performance maker, a performer and a writer. I come from Greece, but I am currently based in Amsterdam, where I am a DasArts participant (Master of Theatre, Amsterdam School of the Arts). My work is gradually moving towards researching the function of choreography and of dance in a performance, both physically and conceptually.

I have co-founded an Athens based collective, Nova Melancholia, which is a group that follows methods of physical and devised theatre and also methods of visual arts performance. My work with Nova Melancholia has been so far mainly site-specific and it tends to conceptualise the performer’s body as a living and moving sculpture on stage. Furthermore, the group prefers to stage non-theatrical texts, creating spectacles that combine both contemporary dramaturgy and unconventional playwriting.

I have also co-founded the Athens based Institute for Live Arts Research, which is an initiative about bridging the gap between the theoretic discourse on the contemporary performing arts and the performance making and all contemporary artistic practices.

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Eleanor BauerA Dance For The Newest Age (the triangle piece)02.10-12.2011Kaaitheater20 square SaincteletteBrusselsThe audience sits on three sides of an equilateral triangle. In the middle, six dancers perform through a system of shifting tripartite symmetries. Inhabiting three-fold paradigms such as solid-liquid-gas, past-present-future, nature-society-spirituality, head-heart-hand, idea-material-form, or sensation-imagination-expression, the emergent relationships negotiate balance, tuning, order and entropy.READ MORE-->
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Long before e-mail and the Internet permeated society, Roy Ascott, a pioneering British artist and theorist, coined the term “telematic art” to describe the use of online computer networks as an artistic medium. In Telematic Embrace Edward A. Shanken gathers, for the first time, an impressive compilation of more than three decades of Ascott’s philosophies on aesthetics, interactivity, and the sense of self and community in the telematic world of cyberspace. This book explores Ascott’s ideas on how networked communication has shaped behavior and consciousness within and beyond the realm of what is conventionally defined as art.

 

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Mundo Perfeito means: “perfect world”. This company is based on a kitchen in a small apartment in Amadora, a city in the suburbs of Lisbon. The company’s name translates the irony of a critic way of regarding the present and the idealism of an optimistic behaviour towards the future. It is also a name that makes people smile, for whatever reason.

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Organized around the artistic work of Tiago Rodrigues, this structure is also directed by Magda Bizarro and has produced 10 performances since 2003. Mundo Perfeito is recognised by the quality of its work and a permanent drive towards innovation. They stand out for an intense work with authors and new dramaturgy.

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My Cyber Identity

I have two different names:

Liliana Goldman (maiden name)

Liliana Carrizo (married name)

 

According to a U.S. census information website (http://www.census-online.us/search/GOLDMAN,LILIANA) there are 5 of us “Liliana Goldman”s who exist (at least in this part of the world). One of my alter-cyber-identities is a pug, who happens to like fine jewelry: http://www.facebook.com/people/Liliana-Goldman/100000632676599. Another is a girl on myspace who has one friend. His name is Tom Anderson. When I take a midde name, M., I become an electric engineer in Maryland, and when I take the last name “Cohen” I become a building owner in Brooklyn who was sued by a construction worker. The case went to the New York Supreme Court and is still pending. As Mrs. Cohen I also have an unclaimed stimulus check which I would love to get a hold of.

 

A LOT of stuff popped up about some non-profit work I did in Mongolia (actually me), so much so that “mongolia” is suggested as an additional search term when my name is typed into google, which I thought was a little strange:

http://ourworld.worldlearning.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5881

http://ourworld.worldlearning.org/site/News2?abbr=gen_&page=NewsArticle&id=6703 

www.nafsa.org/_/File/_/IE_MayJun07_ActiveEngagement.pdf

http://www.asuult.net/nemesis/mongolian_judiciary/newsgoldman.htm

http://www.charity-charities.org/Colorado-charities/Boulder_8.html

http://www.pri.org/theworld/?q=node/3602

http://ourworld.worldlearning.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5159

http://chestnuthilllocal.com/issues/2009.04.23/locallife3.html

http://www.musicinthemoment.com/communitycal/view_entry.php?id=46&friendly=1
http://www.travelofftheradar.com/2008/01/reindeer-herding-in-northern-mongolia/

 

There’s some info about jazz performances I did at Williams College in undergrad and at UIUC:

http://www.williams.edu/admin/news/releases/148/

 

As “Lili” Goldman I have many more alter egos:

I’m a cute baby https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dOoICs9QvUA

Someone who’s really into sports cars http://www.facebook.com/people/Lili-Goldman/1637004446

And a travel author and watercolor painter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6tfjwtjvlwI who co-wrote a book called The Science of Disorder: Understanding the Complexity, Uncertainty, and Pollution of Our World.

I’m also a high schooler who’s a singer and ballet dancer http://www.youthinarts.org/td_members.html#lgoldman, and I was thanked by a friend in his dissertation at Duke: http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/10161/2382/D_Jarrin_Alvaro_a_201005.pdf?sequence=1. Additionally, you can count me among the members of the Florida State Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and I’m listed as a contact for finding wedding dresses in Shanghai.

 

As “Liliana Carrizo” I am definitely Latina. I’m a medical doctor in Mumbai, India, originally from Cordoba, Argentina http://in.linkedin.com/pub/liliana-carrizo/4/b55/975. I'm also some random lady in Barcelona, and a clothing designer in Buenos Aires:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/LILIANA-CARRIZO-MODA-Y-ACCESORIOS/335648185733, http://www.lilianacarrizomoda.com.ar/

 

I’m also a co-author of an article called “Apoptosis induction is associated with decreased NHE1 expression in neonatal unilateral ureteric obstruction” in the British Journal of Urology

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1464-410X.2007.06840.x/abstract, and a 39 year-old lady from Argentina on some dating websites who wishes to “make friends” with a guy between the ages of 34-45: http://badoo.com/01122540288/

 

I’m a FLAS fellow (actually me): https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/17425/CGS.newsletter.fall2010.final.pdf?sequence=2

 

And someone who wrote her Master’s thesis on Mongolian music (also me):

https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/18405/Carrizo_Liliana.pdf?sequence=1

 

And finally, when I am Liliana Goldman Carrizo, all that pops up is my profile on dance-tech.net!

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Volunteer for TV Dinners Festival!

Chisenhale Dance Space is looking for volunteers to help with our TV Dinners Festival. TV Dinners is a 4-day festival celebrating dance, film and food and was hugely successful last year. Each day of TV Dinners is a different event.

The festival schedule is as follows:

Wednesday March 16th- Dance Film Pub Quiz night 7-11:30pm

Thursday March 17th- New Dance Film Screening and Movie 7-11:30pm

Friday March 18th -Commissioned Performances from Jenny Edbrooke and Boogaloo Stu 7-11:30pm

Saturday March 19th- Family Film screening and film-based dance classes for children 10-3pm

 

We need 4 volunteers each day to help us with the running of this festival at Chisenhale Dance Space, which the Guardian calls the "secret way forward."

 

Please email jess@chisenhaledancespace.co.uk with your details, why you would like to help out and if you have a preference for days you might want to volunteer.

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12249486682?profile=originalEclectic weekend dance performances at the Dance Complex in Cambridge, MA, portrayed the diversity of talent and culture that is embedded in lifestyle, here, during the 21st Century.  The Dance Complex itself, formed in 1991, in order to secure the historic Odd Fellows Hall as a means to “promote, advance, sponsor, facilitate, and nurture creative and artistic work,” is a creation born of democratic, intellectual, and aesthetic ideals.  A physical locality coupled with a visionary mindset where “securing a community of artists is a higher priority than establishing an organizational bureaucracy,” the Dance Complex is the perfect venue for producer Honey Blonder to promote mixed genres of hip hop, ballet, modern, jazz, disco, street funk, belly dancing, step, gymnastics, and an all-male cast of full contact, jazz-funk dancers dressed in Santa Claus hats. 

Rainbow Tribe, Kelley Donovan, B Side, Contemporarily Out of Order,

Disco Brats, Derrick Davis, Brookline Academy of Dance, Deepa Srinath, Bright Pearl Dance Company, Johara and Jim Banta, and Legacy Dance Company, marked the line-up for two evenings chock-full of synchronized, soulful, innovative and interesting choreographies. Some of the most memorable contrasts included:

Men dancing in sneakers, while executing 180 degree dips and flawless turns (Rainbow Tribe); perfect spirals, arabesque layouts and Graham contractions (Brookline Academy); Egyptian costuming and shimmies (Johara and Jim Banta); the effortlessly flowing hands, “petite winged arms,” and repetitive circles (conducted with bowl on the side of her angled head) by (Bright Pearl Dance Troupe); spectacular sparkling outfits, hot pants, and disco white boots (with taps), and full body lifts (Legacy Dance);  the all-maleness of Bside; and amazing modern physical feats by Samantha Wilson and Laurel Reveley (Kelley Donovan and Dancers). 

 

These were, of course, in accordance with inherent nature of all tensions associated with the art of dance and of the Christmas holidays, punctuated by a stilling, maybe even disquieting performance by singer Steffani Bennet of “winter Song, written by Sara Bareilles and Ingrid Michaelson, and “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” written by Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane. Her beautiful yet haunting voice reminded me of our human frailties and imbalances, in the face of a holiday marked by rejuvenation, reconciliation, and renewal of spirit. 

 

Similarly, the opening 30 minutes was characterized by Alissa Johnson, a frozen white ballerina (stockings, leotard, skirt), accented by silver bands on her thin arms, a silver Tiara, and lone silver ball held lethargically in both hands, while she sat motionless on a box, her feet not properly crossed in the “fifth position” perfect mode. No breath or heart rhythms could be detected. Shadows cast from one bright light behind her right shoulder only intensified the ambiguousness of her being – at once childlike and innocent – evoking the holiness, peace and spirit of the season – while simultaneously detached and disassociated from any body or (seemingly) any emotion. 

 

Quieted in that moment, I couldn’t help feel the tightening in my temples, the crinkling of my brow, and the slow squeezing of warm tears out of my eyes’ corners, as memories of those loved and lost blurred my vision of that unmovable, meditative figure that resolved into the contemplations of my mind.  In acknowledgment of the emotional, spiritual, and aesthetic pleasures of the season and the night to come, I thanked God for the opportunity to celebrate a personal and collective humanness with an audience from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and 12 Dancers Dancing.  Hats off to Honey Blonder for a job very well done.

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Last Dance of "Mama" Fatou N'Diaye

12249484299?profile=originalSaturday evening, January 8, 2011, marked the final performance of “Mama” Fatou N’Diaye and the company she founded in 1981, “Silimbo D’Adeane,” at least with her as its full-time artistic director in the City of Cambridge.  As master dancer, choreographer, and cultural arts educator for over 30 years in African and the U.S., she returns to her roots in Senegal this week to continue her work in a warmer climate.

Having begun her professional career at age 17 in her native Adeane, Senegal, Fatou N’Diaye rose quickly to stardom, performing in the Daniel Sorano National Theatre of Dakar, “National Ballet of Senegal,” traveling with the president of Senegal on official visits to countries – including China, later in popular television productions, with special appearance in “L’lle de Diama,” (Michael Douglas), and as a featured role in WGBH-TV Basic Black (documentary on dance’s healing power in cultures around the world). (http://www.silimbo.com).

Moving to the U.S. in 1991, she toured most major cities with “Silimbo,” then organized

La Adiyana Bamtamba Courocoto, West African Dance and Drum Conference, 1996.  She received grants from the NEA and D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities, supporting her art in the Washington locale.  Mama Fatou has taught in Boston, Cambridge public schools, at Harvard University, the French Library, and countless community and arts centers throughout Massachusetts and the entire country. 

Her mission, as mentor and dance historian, is to bring all levels of dancers to the stage, helping to spread the culture and craft of her Senegalese dance, drumming, and songs pan-nationally, through workshops, conferences, weekly classes and company rehearsals, so that the folklore and traditions of Senegal, in their original forms, can be shared. 

Passionate to the core, she instills the love of her rich heritage, enabling each of us through understanding of Senegal’s rituals, ceremonies, and daily living events. Learning through her is easy because she tells the story behind the dance, ensuring that we understand the meaning behind the movements, the drumming, and songs sung in her native language.

From a personal perspective, as one of her students and company members of  “Silimbo,” I must point out that Mama Fatou is much larger than any of her accomplishments.  With her wide, inviting smile, penetrating eyes – perceptive, wise, and compassionate, her polished skin – inviting and warm, and deep, honey-toned voice, we are reassured from the moment Mama steps into the dance studio. 

Her appearance is one of respect and awe, always composed, professional, direct, intuitive and able to pull diverse ages and backgrounds together.  Like mother earth, her wholesome, centered-ness, like the Feng Shui “nourishment,” provides solidarity and a foundation for all living elements and beings, of which there can be no harmony or life in its absence (http://www.fengshuicrazy.com). 

Or like the proton – positively charged, subatomic particle – which resides in the nucleus of the atom – the basic unit of all matter, she is stable, indivisible, “uncuttable” – attracting and bounding the other particles through an unseen electromagnetic force (http://www.wikipedia.org).

Fatou N’Diaye-Davis speaks the universal language and art form called “Love.”  She embraces arts for humanity, fellowship, inclusion, and wields an undying resolve to spread the word of dance from the Diaspora to people everywhere.  Her enchantment with life, people, and performing arts is contagious, bounding free from any barriers that the unenlightened should attempt to orchestrate. 

Her leaving is all but unbelievable, and its reality has surely not resounded at the deepest level.  I cannot speak of life and dancing without her without exuding an enormity of gratitude and emotion.  All’s I can really do is wait in joyful contemplation of our next meeting.

 

With MUCH LOVE and GRATITUDE to Mama Fatou N’Diaye-Davis.

Please visit her here: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000745554956

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Tina-Ruisinger-av_compresse.jpg© Tina Ruisinger

Meg Stuart (born in New Orleans) is an American Choreographer and Dancer based in Brussels, Belgium. She is one of the key figures in the European and International contemporary dance world. From 1983 to 1986 Stuart studied at the New York University where she received a BFA in dance with a main focus on release technique and contact improvisation. From 1986 to 1992 she was a member of the Randy Warshaw Dance Company. In 1991, Stuart presented her first full evening length choreography Disfigure Study at the Klapstuk Festival in Leuven, Belgium. Within the following two years, the production was shown 42 times in 17 cities (Berlin, Paris, London, Madrid, Lissabon, New York, among others). The Klapstuk Festival offered Stuart a residency in Leuven.

In 1994 she moved to Europe completely and founded her own company Damaged Goods. in Brussels the same year. From 1997 Stuart/Damaged Goods was an artist-in-residence at the Kaaitheater Brussels. Between 2001 and 2004 she had a residency at the Schauspielhaus Zürich invited by Christoph Marthaler. Since 2002 Volksbühne Berlin and Damaged Goods are collaborating. <from Wikipedia>

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© Chris Van der Burght

Works
Disfigure Study, 1991
No Longer Readymade, 1993
Swallow my yellow smile, 1994
No One is Watching, 1995
Inside Skin #1 They live in Our Breath, 1996
Splayed Mind Out, 1997
Remote, 1997
appetite, 1999
Comeback, 1999
Snapshots, 1999
Highway 101, 2000/2001
Alibi, 2001
Henry IV, 2002
Visitors Only, 2003
Das goldene Zeitalter, 2003
Forgeries, Love and other Matters, 2004
Der Marterphahl, 2005
REPLACEMENT, 2006
It's not funny!, 2006
Blessed, 2007
Maybe Forever, 2007
All Together Now, 2008
Die Massnahme/Mauser, 2008
Do Animals Cry, 2009

Video
Meg Stuart videos on Contemporary Performance Network -->

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Who am I anyway?

Am I my resumé?

Am I even that person that goes by the name I call myself?

And how did FA get to be such a long, long way to run?

 

Weighty questions, not answerable by a Google search.

(Well maybe FA. That's Oscar Hammer-Styne trying to be clever.)

 

At the outset I would have said that I have been pretty much myself on-line. But my facebook page is rarely frequented by me, and when I do post, I generally try to be pithy. Pithy is not really me. I go on at length in person, and at even greater (endless) length in my own head. Sleep doesn't slow me down much, it just unleashed those demons of the id that want to rant and rave.

 

In the end, I decided that Googling "Ken Beck" did not shift my self concept very far. I was impressed by two of the "Ken Becks" that ain't me - the Boston Artist and the California writer - but this is not a mediated presence for ME.

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My one whimsical, deliberate departure from literal interpretation of self is a significant one: I am jcraster on youtube. Craster was Lermontov's composer in "The Red Shoes," (Which Anton Walbrook pronounces 'shooss'). Walbrook's Lermontov gets all the great lines relating to Craster: "let's see what you can do in the way of a little REwriting." But Craster (Marius Goring) does get to say "you see this STICK! Follow it!!" He also gets the girl, if only for a short time. For me, taking up this identity is a way of acknowledging the hack work aspect of dance musicianship (or by extension, my career in general) which goes with the territory of collaborative work. Craster is my alter ego when I make work which is not up to par. The quality went out before the name when on.

 

Why did I take up that identity for youtube? I have not posted anything of questionable quality: my wedding video, a techno stunt in which I do about three significant things at once, and lately, three recordings of Edison records from my collection. Perhaps it frees me to be more mediated as a potentiality.

 

Who am I? I can't answer in a short form. Give me lebensraum: symphony or novel, body of work, a life. As a mediated presence, I get to inhabit some other plane: to be an actor.

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Jeff Zahos - Online Identity

ASSIGNMENT #1

“Who Are You?” #1: Construct your Internet identity using search engines,
video, and social networking sites.  Present to class via web or presentation software.

 

Jeff Zahos - An Internet Identity

 

First big question - "what other people come up when I search my name?"

Answer: Mostly me

 

  • The first several results on Google searching "Jeff Zahos" go a long way to creating my online identity.  The first 4 results are pages from my personal/professional website "www.jeffzahos.com".  The page headings indicate that I am interested in "recording techniques", "music" and "sound design".  Pretty accurate, but that's because I made the pages.  Punching around the site is a bit confusing - Tags, categories and pages all kind of get mixed up - maybe this reveals something about my personality...  Haven't really created a well-designed, maintained site with a clear focus.  Maybe this is intentional, maybe not...  Only I and my "analog" friends know that the musician/recording engineer focus of my internet presence is not so up-to-date to my current station/interests/direction of life - There is a lag between my internet identity and my analog world identity.  (Maybe if I kept a blog religiously, it would be closer).  I have not been much of one for online social sharing - real-time modes of sharing suit me much more - I enjoy the in-the-same-space experience.
  • My public Facebook page reveals quite a bit about me too.  (http://www.facebook.com/jeff.zahos)You get the sense that I am a drummer - my profile photo is me slamming away on some drums.  I'm a fan of the Foo Fighters and Ryan adams and enjoy hockey in addition to audio and music.  MySpace reveals less, but even the photos indicate an involvement or interest in music...
  • My first post on dance-tech.net is referred to (and displayed) on dancebloggers.com "A Dance blog made out of all dance blogs!  Additionally, there is a link to my name on dance-tech.net in reference to our class last year.
  • Jeff's minimal Twitter activity (the only entry on his profile is "Hello World.") maybe says something about his tendency to start things and not finish them...  Although those who know me know that I am tending away from technology-based social communication, and that I am definitely not in to texting.
  • Other things revealed on the first page of results: Apparently I've been a member of I-Pan, a steel band at the University of Illinois, I am an influence of the band "The Dakota", and I once built a vibraphone damping pedal and mechanism and resonators.  Actually, there is ample evidence of the bands I've played in - show announcements all over from I-Pan, Backyard Shark, and starting to see more from Faster Forward. 
  • You also find quite a bit of evidence of my involvement with the Audio Engineering Society - old newsletters I'd authored, a .pdf of a report on a project to build an infrasonic detector that I was involved in, Engineering Open House programs, etc.
  • I am the subject of a podcast from the Champaign Central Bands website.  I was interviewed about my work as a freelance audio engineer.
  • Later, you find an early attempt at a wordpress blog that reveals an even broader definition of myself: "Hi! My name is Jeff Zahos. Here you will find information on my work as a musician, electronics technician, audio recordist, instrument technician and music educator. Notice the different pages on the menu bar and feel free to browse to learn more about me."  Again, those who know the analog me know the exploring and honing that I've been undergoing, not reflected online.
  • I also won some ESPN anchor bobbleheads back in 2001...
  • One of my favorite links is a link to www.recordingjones.com (my old recording business) on http://sandpaper.twowik.com - the tag is "Making a shark using sandpaper"
  • I find how many "linked" video sites have my name listed - mostly from a video used in a live performance that I was involved in - actually a kind of "mediated score" from a Cornelius Cardew piece which I performed as part of Colab, a class I was involved with last semester (FA10)
  • Also the premiere of a very strange musical/theatrical piece I played in at Truman State University.
  • It is also very interesting to look just at images - whether on Google image search or flickr pages that return my name - Backyard Shark.

Second big question:

"Does my internet identity 'match' my 'real' identity?"

  • Maybe it's because I've been interested in my internet identity for a long time, but I really didn't find so many surprises on my search.  I feel like it does give a pretty accurate (if not incomplete) picture of my life path, at least for the last 10 years or so.  It is quite scattered, however.  ...but maybe this says something about my identity...

Thoughts:

  • I think one of the most interesting things about this exercise is that an internet search instantly reveals so much contextual information about my identity - the people, activities, places, activities, etc. - much more quickly than knowing me, and learning these things over time, by common experience or by discussion.
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HEY WAKE UP!!!

So, to keep things easy, I'm posting the "journal enteries" on Youtube... I tried to experiment with the time feature of my computer's camera to give an idea on what I did this weekend... go to the website...

https://www.youtube.com/user/rdagit

 

And Yes, Tech is sometimes that boring, but I thought it was funny, as I didn't realize I twirrled my thumbs. LOL... Anywhoo, enjoy...

 

On other Note; Go to African Company Present Richard III if you get the chance, it should be good. Yes, I know that whomever did the schedule messed up a little bit due to the fact the dance is also having dress and opening at the same time, but I say that it's worth seeing both.

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Tonight 6-8:30pm Dance on Camera at Big Screen Project

See Dance on Camera shorts tonight at The Big Screen Project (BSP) and meet over 45 artists coming to celebrate the screening of their work. BSP “A Real Space Where People, Media, and Culture Connect” is an innovative venue for video, film, live and interactive content that sets a new standard for the urban, cinematic experience. Its 30 x 16.5 ft. HD format LED screen is on a wall outside in a  public plaza adjacent to the Eventi, a new 54-story multi-use building on Sixth Avenue between 29th and 30th Street in New York City. BSP is viewable from 29th and 30th streets (close to 6th Avenue), the atrium, FoodParc, and Bar Basque, a striking restaurant designed by BLADE RUNNER’s Syd Mead. Headsets upon request. Visit : The Big Screen Project Schedule.

Dance Films Association’s 39th annual, internationally touring festival is co-produced by The Film Society of Lincoln Center, which provides its Walter Reade Theatre in Lincoln Center Plaza between January 28 and February 1st for 10 repeating programs, 4 shows daily, along with receptions, panels, talks, and an photography exhibit by James Starkman celebrating parkour. To buy tickets visit: filmlinc.com

Exhibit & Symposium in Walter Reade Theatre, Frieda & Roy Furman Gallery - FREE
For program details visit: Exhibit & Symposium Schedule.

11am, Friday January 28
Practice mash-up: dance/film/art (or how to work with rigor and risk)

noon, Friday, January 28
Distribution models for dance films

noon, Saturday, January 29
Screening opportunities for dance films

noon, Sunday, January 30
Felix presentation by Gabriela Estrada.

1-6pm, daily, until February 1 at Baryshnikov Arts Center at 37 Arts experience the master illusionist Billy Cowie's 3-D video installation. MEN IN THE WALL, a four-screen stereoscopic screen dance. 3D glasses allow the viewer to enter this multi-cultural world of four men, whose shared framed lives reveal a public quartet of private differences. Also shown are GHOSTS IN THE MACHINE and TANGO DE SOLEDAD. Award-winning Scottish video artist/composer Billy Cowie creates a delightfully amusing montage that beguiles as it inspires.

DFA’s annual Dance On Camera Festival celebrates the immediacy, energy, and mystery of dance as combined with the intimacy of film. Considered the “mother” of dance film festivals, DFA’s Festival presents a broad range of independent dance films, whether they be documentaries, shorts, narratives, or  animation. The year round touring program has been a revenue source for dance filmmakers since 2000.

Discounts for DFA member and Dance Affiliates Dance New Amsterdam, Movement Research, and Dance Theatre Workshop. Become a member of DFA now

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Habit by David Levine
Thurs, Feb 24 - Sun, Feb 27
Hunter Center - Mass MoCA
$10/$20 with gallery admission

Tickets and Information-->


Play is performed on a continuous loop. You can come anytime between noon and 5 PM on Thursday, February 24 or Sunday, February 27, or between 2 and 8 PM on Friday, February 25 & Saturday, February 26

The Berlin-based theater artist David Levine brings a new iteration of his installation Habit to MASS MoCA for a developmental residency.

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12249489472?profile=originalDance-techTVLIVE transmission channel of the forums to be held with leading academics in Chile. The talks cover topics such as: Dance and Philosophy, Dance and Public Policy, dance and education.

Wednesdays 26, Thursdays 27 and Fridays 28 at 18:00 hrs of Chile (GMT -4)

> This is the transmission link

 

This event will be in spanish only.

 


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open call for videodance works

Hello all,

For a screening program that will take place at the Intersection project of the Prague Quadrennial, we are looking for video dance works which deal profoundly with one or more of the following subjects: location, duration, mood.

 

Please note that the deadline is very near!

 

For registration please send a filled form via e-mail by February 8

 

form-VideoDanceProgram-PQ.doc


A DVD (PAL) together with a printed and signed form should be sent to:

Lior Avizoor, 5 Shmaaia street, TLV-Jaffa, 68024, Israel - by February 15


For further information don’t hesitate to contact me.

All the best,

 

Lior Avizoor

curator and choreographer

+972-54-4840986

lior.avizoor@gmail.com

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Between the Seas Festival

New York City, August 29th- September 4th  2011

 

Join us in celebrating contemporary Mediterranean culture!

 

MISSION:

Between the Seas Festival is organized for the very first time in New York City from August 29th to September 4th 2011 at the Wild Project theater space in the heart of the East Village. The festival seeks to engage performing artists and researchers from the Mediterranean and Mediterranean diaspora with the following goals:

-       Share with New York City audiences the vibrancy and diversity of contemporary cultural production from the Mediterranean, aspects of which often remain inaccessible and under-represented in North America

-       Encourage exchange and future artistic collaborations between NYC-based and Mediterranean-based artists

-       Contribute to the examination of Mediterranean identity/ies by encouraging discussion and exploration of the region’s commonalities and differences as manifested in arts, history, culture, geography and politics

-       Generate interest and debate over Mediterranean identity and culture, envisioning the region’s potential as a model of cross-cultural exchange beyond polarizing and homogenizing discourses.


The festival is produced by Les Manouches Theater Company with the collaboration of distinguished scholars, theater practitioners and festival managers from the US and Europe.  

 

We now invite submissions for artistic performances [music, dance, theater] and scholarly papers from emerging and established artists, researchers and academic practitioners. The deadline for submissions is March 30th 2011. Please see  www.betweentheseas.org for information and submission guidelines in each category.For information email lesmanouchestheatre@gmail.com

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My name in the universe

 

There are really only 3 people that come up with my name

Myself

A Beth Parthum who does paper making/artist and is twice my age

And an Elizabeth Parthum who is married to my... great uncle? She's related

O YEA.. and Irine Elizabeth Parthum who is a lawyer. That's only interesting cause I'm pretty sure my great uncle is a lawyer.

 

I was suprised to see much more of myself come up as Beth rather then Elizabeth.  I have had a hard time trying to decide which to go with professionally, but I think my mind is made up. 

 

First is the typical, Facebook (not me), Linkdin, and Dance-tech ;).  There is a lot on myself from the university of illinois shows I've worked on. Killer Joe, Crucible, History of American Film, things like that. Studio dance 2.  I did an interview with the Buzz for the Armory Free Theatre. (http://the217.com/articles/view/one_on_one_with_beth_parthum_production_manager_of_the_armory_free_theatre) The things from my undergraduate suprised me, but I'm glad it comes up with my name.  "Relay for Life...." (http://www.desales.edu/default.aspx?pageid=6687)was certainly unexpected even though I'm not sure why. I was part of it for 4 years and co-chaired the event for 2.  I think it gives me hope that I will be able to continue doing good in the world even if I'm in grad school for a short time.

 

I think this almost gave me a new appreciation for how the world can see a person. I'm an eclectic soul with good parts involved.  It's nice not to see legal issues associated with you online :) 

 

 

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