All Posts (14)

Sort by

Hello dance-techers,


I wish you all a happy and peaceful holidays in this wonderful and troubled planet!

We are all in this together and learning new ways!


 

Thank you for your art and generosity!


I would like to take advantage of this message to thank you in advance for reading this message and for contemplating helping to support our projects.

We have put in place an automated monthly donation system integrated with the sign-up and sign-in functions  for the dance-tech.net.
 
ACCESS REMAINS FREE.

You will be now reminded  that dance-tech.tv and its network is  supported by generosity of its users!
12249510060?profile=original
With your generous contribution you will be supporting the following projects:

Donation is VOLUNTARY!

..we remain FREE and open to everybody!
This is an important change because is an step that will guarantee that we can keep dance-tech.net and .TV FREE and be able to cover the costs of labor, the technological platforms and the production.
We have always been a donation based network but now we have reached a critical mass to really leverage the potential of sustainable collective generosity of our international community.
The systems are in place to automate the process and make it seamless within the platform.
DONATE WHAT YOU CAN!
JUST LOG IN AND FILL TEH FORM!

IMPORTANT:
You will have access to the site and community even if you decide that you can donate only $0.00  at this time.
So,
No problem!
but please consider how much can you donate!
Any amount helps!


Not a member?

If you  enjoy and find value on dance-tech.net and .tv projects, but you are not a dance-tech.net member, you may also DONATE a fix amount of $3.00 a month or make a one time donation using the PayPal links in the right sidebar of  this site.




We welcome other contributions such as: premium video  from performances  and events, space  and labor bartering, residencies, discounts for members, etc.
 
Share, participate in the conversations, collaborate and enjoy!
Let's develop together infrastructures of
GENEROSITY
Thank you!
Marlon

If you have any questions email:
marlon@dance-tech.net
 
This is the form that will appear  to remind you  about dance-tech.net donation system:
12249524098?profile=original
Detailed information on costs:

dance-tech.net and dance-tech.tv are independent projects managed by Marlon  Barrios Solano and are under the umbrella of dance-tech interactive llc productions, a New York City based company.

 All the income from donations is geared to support the following expenses:

Digital platforms:
Social networking platform for dance-tech.net and dance-tech.tv (maintenance an d development)
Domain names and hosting
LiveStream
UStream
Vimeo
Blip.tv

Virtual office:
Skype
Flickr
Bidsketch
Dropbox
You send it
Freshbooks
Apps for Ipad and mobility
Pre paid Simcards

Labor
24 hours per week for production of video content, management, content maintenance, research, posting, curation and administration.

Digital hardware
___________________________

Becoming a dance-tech enabler for 2012?

Organizations such as theaters, companies and groups  may become DANCE TECH enablers or supporters  donating $300.00 or more during a calendar year.

What are Dance tech  ENABLERS?
Read more…

Reflections...

12249520659?profile=original

In 1994, I looked out at the sparse Dance on Camera Festival audience at Anthology Film Archives and asked anyone whether they had any suggestions for building the festival. Margaret Williams, the brilliant British director of OUTSIDE IN, came out of the dark from the back of the house, to shake my hand but within that handshake was the affirmation that DOCF indeed needed help.

It was my first year to take on the volunteer job of running the festival, then in its 21st edition. Susan Braun, the founder of DFA, was still stalwartly taking the tickets at the door, but she was beginning to show her 70 plus years. At that time, DOCF only got a listing in the NY Times, never a review, nor a photo. It was known as the dance world's best kept secret. 

Help came in the very next year when I moved the Festival uptown to The Lighthouse, a corporate but elegant rental space down the street from Bloomingdales. Much to our amazement, Joanna Ney, then the Special Events producer for the Film Society of Lincoln Center (FSLC), came to the festival and invited us to bring the festival over to Lincoln Center. Susan Braun died soon after that. Victor Lipari, DFA's executive director at the time, working part-time and, unbeknownst to us - dying, secured the first contract. Pale and wan, he came to the Walter Reade for the first screening there to cheer us on, but he passed soon after as well.

Rescued after the two decades of self-producing, DFA's Festival began to hit its stride. The innovations of the Internet, also new at that time, turned around all the efforts of arts administrators. Dance film festivals were popping up all over Europe, Australia and Canada for the first time. Unthinkable how much work Susan Braun had to do to keep DFA going without computers, without e-mail!

That first year at the Walter Reade Theatre, DOCF 1996 had only one program that repeated once Saturday and Sunday afternoons. The FSLC was definitely unsure that DOCF was a wise investment. Ten years later, we were begging the Film Society to limit the festival to 3 weekends! This year, we have brought the festival down to 20 programs over 5 days in three venues - Walter Reade Theatre, Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, and the Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery in the Walter Reade Theatre.

And already 40 theatres have signed up for the 2012 simulcast of Bob Hercules: JOFFREY: MAVERICKS OF AMERICAN DANCE on January 28, courtesy of Emerging Pictures. Quite a bounce from the 200 seats in Anthology DOCF played to in 1994!

Thank you Joanna! and the FSLC for the steadfast, ever growing support of Dance on Camera Festival. Thank you Susan for your pioneer spirit! Thank you dance filmmakers for making the art we love to celebrate! And thank you Jon Reiss for forging the connection to Emerging Pictures.

It was my first year to take on the volunteer job of running the festival, then in its 21st edition. Susan Braun, the founder of DFA, was still stalwartly taking the tickets at the door, but she was beginning to show her 70 plus years. At that time, DOCF only get a listing in the NY Times, never a review, nor a photo. It was known as the dance world's best kept secret. 

Help came in the very next year when I moved the Festival uptown to The Lighthouse, a corporate but elegant rental space down the street from Bloomingdales. Much to our amazement, Joanna Ney, then the Special Events producer for the Film Society of Lincoln Center (FSLC), came to the festival and invited us to bring the festival over to Lincoln Center. Susan Braun died soon after that. Victor Lipari, DFA's executive director at the time, working part-time and, unbeknownst to us - dying, secured the first contract. Pale and wan, he came to the Walter Reade for the first screening there to cheer us on, but he passed soon after as well.

Rescued after the two decades of self-producing, DFA's Festival began to hit its stride. The innovations of the Internet, also new at that time, turned around all the efforts of arts administrators. Dance film festivals were popping up all over Europe, Australia and Canada for the first time. Unthinkable how much work Susan Braun had to do to keep DFA going without computers, without e-mail!

That first year at the Walter Reade Theatre, DOCF 1996 had only one program that repeated once Saturday and Sunday afternoons. The FSLC was definitely unsure that DOCF was a wise investment. Ten years later, we were begging the Film Society to limit the festival to 3 weekends! This year, we have brought the festival down to 20 programs over 5 days in three venues - Walter Reade Theatre, Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center, and the Frieda and Roy Furman Gallery in the Walter Reade Theatre.

And already 40 theatres have signed up for the 2012 simulcast of Bob Hercules: JOFFREY: MAVERICKS OF AMERICAN DANCE on January 28, courtesy of Emerging Pictures. Quite a bounce from the 200 seats in Anthology DOCF played to in 1994!

Thank you Joanna! and the FSLC for the steadfast, ever growing support of Dance on Camera Festival. Thank you Susan for your pioneer spirit! Thank you dance filmmakers for making the art we love to celebrate! And thank you Jon Reiss for forging the connection to Emerging Pictures.

Photo from Adriano Cirulli's FALLING to be shown Dance on Camera Festival 2012, Jan 27-31.

Read more…

the blank.

I recently found an old program from my 2008 piece, "the blank." It's interesting to look back and realize how many of the concepts that I had at the earliest stages of my creative and academic development still resonate with my work today. I will upload a short video of highlights from "the blank." later today. For now, I thought I'd share the program text. 

the blank. 

Choreographed by Ashley Ferro-Murray

April 4-5, 2008

Cornell University

Program notes:

Dance process systemically engages the mind and body in kinesthetic performance. Whether this activity occurs in a traditional proscenium performance arena or at a site-specific movement venue, Western concert dance has for centuries existed as and in conjunction with a socially specific space. Today we live in an environment where technological devices affect our every thought and move, so it is not surprising that dance innovators have tended to experiment with the interface of new technologies, space, and movement. These technologies range from photography, television, and film to iPhones and Wii video gaming devices. As a choreographer and dancer, I work to fuse technological culture and human interaction with my choreography from a critical and explorative background. I weave the content of my movement and choreography with live interactive performance technologies.

Interactive technologies are relatively contemporary choreographic devices that artists including Merce Cunningham, Troika Ranch, and Jonah Bokaer, among many others, explore through dance. It is important to recognize that aside from these technologies the dancing body is a technology in itself. Dance process is grounded in the mechanics of a body, so it is only in relation to corporeal techniques that a dancer can adequately exist with or in relation to digital technologies. From these considerations come one of the most interesting aspects of contemporary technologies in dance; how choreographers, dancers and audiences alike facilitate relationships between contemporary technologies and those of the moving body in space and time. This technique attends to the mechanics of the moving body and situates dance as a corporal process revealing its mechanical equivalence to a system like digital technology. It is therefore important to discuss contemporary technology in dance not as an innovative addition of technology to dance, but as a complicated synthesis of two technological systems. My choreographic commentary on new age technologies is realized only after my consideration of age-old techniques grounded in the movement of the body itself.

It is important to situate a discussion of Western contemporary dance in terms of the rich histories that galvanized the technological process that is dance in-itself, the conception of which I will reference as 17th century court ballet. As the initial codification and performance of Western classical dance continues to inform, and sometimes dominate, contemporary dance practice, we could chart a procreation of these historical develops in spatial and interpersonal politics. Though it is not my intention to do so, the presence of balletic technological and ideological roots in contemporary choreographic practice would in many cases remain evident. At a very basic level, the moving body as a technology still works in conjunction with representational and interpersonal power politics in a voyeuristic atmosphere.

As a choreographer, I find these politics relevant from a creative conception to a performance practice. Within each composition I work to mold the specificity and implications of corporeal placement, the technical perspectival relationsips between different aesthetic elements (for example the visual competition between a simultaneously moving digital projected body and physical dancing bodies) and a multitude of compositional facets. Even my often experimental choreographic mechanics still relate to perspectival allegories, movement and scenic situation. I actualize these principles in the relationships between my dancers and me, the dancers themselves, and finally between the dancers and their audience. As I work from an informed historical position and acknowledge political implications that are pedagogically insinuated through and installed in movement vocabularies, I use a balletic system like partnering or ballet movement to consider the political and gendered situation within which it was conceived and to deconstruct their technical elements.

To heighten my sensitivity to politics and social signification I also work to explore today's social politics in conjunction with contemporary movement vocabularies by coalescing both physical and digital technologies in the movement of the dancing body. Like in my historical consideration, one contemporary implication to which I pay particular attention is gender signification within human interaction and staged relationships. I'm working with an all female cast of dancers to consider their relationships to each other within and/or outside of the historically male dominated proscenium dance arena. I work to acknowledge and deconstruct the objectification of the female dancer by disrupting classical tradition and re-presenting them with pedestrian influence or in movement combinations perpetuated by physical force and explorations of physical limitations. My exploration of the somewhat antiquated concept of the audience gaze is one specific example of this approach. My use of multiple movement surfaces in space to restate the gaze of the audience in relation to my dancers' movement and presence on stage explores through my choreography historically charged systems such as the gaze.

Despite the somewhat deconstructive nature of my methods, my contemporary reformulation of historical, social and theoretical implications is not a complete abstraction of movement and performance systems. Dancers are living bodies that exist in society, so political and personal implications inevitabley exist behind the execution of each movement. Like in the course of Louis XIV, my presentation of movement technique references power, communication and looking in relation to living bodies. What does it mean to use a classically influenced movement vocabulary in our modern day society? In reference to every day society, today's technologically stimulated culture, similar technological devices encourage physical movement synthesis by enabling live physical-digital interaction in every day performance (or life). These devices complicate basic performance structures and introduce contemporary considerations to historical references.

Read more…

Misnomer Dance Live Webcast

This Friday, we'll be streaming Misnomer Dance's new work, Time Lapse, live from the Joyce Soho. We hope you'll join us for a great night, a lively chat, and fantastic art.

20111215-dek7pk74k12t25jxhikuxqsgpr.jpg

We're also accepting submissions for video works to show during intermission and before the show. If you have work you'd like to screen, get in touch. Leave a comment or shoot me an email! We're featured on the livestream.com homepage so it'll surely be a great event. 

 

It starts at 7:30 PM EST / 12:30 am GMT.

 

 

Related press :

The New Yorker

Technology in the Arts Blog

Livestream homepage

 

Read more…

12249522067?profile=original

Deborah Hay, Solo, 1966. 

Documentation from performance from "9 Evenings: Theatre and Engineering" 

The 69th Regiment Armory, New York, October 13–22, 1966.

Robert Smithson:
An Esthetics of Disappointment
ON THE OCCASION OF THE ART AND TECHNOLOGY SHOW AT THE ARMORY 

October 13–22, 1966

Share

Rearview

In the wing mirror of the passenger side of a vehicle, objects are closer than they appear.

The texts re-published in the Rearview series are those that we wish to draw attention to perhaps because they reveal certain "blind spots" in contemporary art criticism. Each month, these "found" reviews (indeed, quasi-artifacts) will be prefaced by one of our writers.
 

After stumbling across Robert Smithson's vituperative response to the 1966 Armory Show, I had to wonder what exactly it was that he saw. "Bovine formalism, tired painting, eccentric concentrics or numb structures"? His focus on the "funeral of technology" made me imagine that he'd seen a really bad Tinguely (which wouldn't have surprised me) or maybe a bad Nam June Paik (which would). As it turns out, his ire was directed at a side-dish show at the Armory organized by Billy Klüver (an engineer) along with 10 artists, including Robert Rauschenberg, John Cage, Öyvind Fahlström, and Yvonne Rainer. Under the witty acronym E.A.T., the performances nonetheless pioneered the way for the now-common practice of artists collaborating with practitioners from different fields. For the most part, the result of bringing 30 engineers together with 10 artists yielded performance kitsch at its worst (John Cage's recordings of brain waves being the exception). You can watch a condensed (20-minute) version of the "Nine Evenings" here.

—April Lamm 


An Esthetics of Disappointment ON THE OCCASION OF THE ART AND TECHNOLOGY SHOW AT THE ARMORY

Many are disappointed at the nullity of art. Many try to pump life or space into the confusion that surrounds art. An incurable optimism like a mad dog rushes into the vacuum that the art suggests. A dread of voids and blanks brings on a horrible anticipation. Everybody wonders what art is, because they're never seems to be any around. Many feel coldly repulsed by concrete unrealities, and demand some kind of proof or at least a few facts. Facts seem to ease the disappointment. But quickly those facts are exhausted and fall to the bottom of the mind. This mental relapse is incessant and tends to make our esthetic view stale. Nothing is more faded than esthetics. As a result, painting, sculpture, and architecture are finished, but the art habit continues. The more transparent and vain the esthetic, the less chance there is for reverting back to purity. Purity is a desperate nostalgia, that exfoliates like a hideous need. Purity also suggests a need for the absolute with all its perpetual traps. Yet, we are overburdened with countless absolutes, and driven to inefficient habits. These futile and stupefying habits are thought to have meaning. Futility, one of the more durable things of this world is nearer to the artistic experience than excitement. Yet, the life-forcer is always around trying to incite a fake madness. The mind is important, but only when it is empty. The greater the emptiness the grander the art.

Esthetics have devolved into rare types of stupidity. Each kind of stupidity may be broken down into categories such as bovine formalism, tired painting, eccentric concentrics or numb structures. All these categories and many others all petrify into a vast banality called the art world which is no world. A nice negativism seems to be spawning. A sweet nihilism is everywhere. Immobility and inertia are what many of the most gifted artists prefer. Vacant at the center, dull at the edge, a few artists are on the true path of stultification. Muddleheaded logic is taking the place of clearheaded illogic, much to nobody's surprise.

Art's latest derangement at the 25th Armory seemed like The Funeral of Technology. Everything electrical and mechanical was buried under various esthetic mutations. The energy of technology was smothered and dimmed. Noise and static opened up the negative dimensions. The audience steeped in agitated stagnation, conditioned by simulated action, and generally turned on, were turned off. This at least was a victory for art.

—Robert Smithson

 

Originally published in The Writings of Robert Smithson, edited by Nancy Holt, New York, New York University Press, 1979.

Text © Estate of Robert Smithson/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY



See more images

Read more:
recent reviews
reviews from New York 

Click here to receive Art-Agenda announcements on select international exhibitions of contemporary art. 

 

Read more…

 

 

The myth of the artist, who falls in love with the creature of his own creation, goes back to Ovid’s Metamorphoses.

In the 55 short verses (X 243-297) there emerges the mini-drama of Pygmalion and Galathea (here, untitled), which, as a poem, epic, novel, drama, musical or film has meanwhile undergone countless adaptations and variations.

Obsession, male fantasies, crazed demiurges? Pygmalion’s transgression of hybrid borders have fascinated the human imagination since time immemorial, courting body and soul in an erotic interplay.

The contemporary ideal of the body oscillates somewhere between the obsession with fitness and virtual future, between the cult of the body and complete disembodiment, or questions of mental and physical hindrances.

And yet, the body is always expression and medium of a self, far more than just a surface of pure externality. Power relations are defined through the body.

Hence, the question is how today artists perceive the body. In "corpus pygmalion" we also seek the specifically female standpoint in this interplay. "corpus pygmalion" takes place in a multi-dimensional image space in which the perspective on the observed subject undergoes perpetual transformation.

The body is the venue of confrontation; cultural conditions change the artistic process of transformation.

The artist finds himself, all of a sudden, in a relationship of antagonism with his work: what is cause, what is effect, what is creation, what is creature?

 

direction, Stage: Chris Ziegler

dance: Moya Michael, Unita Gaye Galiluyo

text: Michael Hewel

software: André Berhardt, Niko Völzow, Martin Bellardi, Chris Ziegler

music: Hugo Paquete

 

Chris Ziegler's page in dance-tech.net


premiere: ZKM Karlsruhe / Media Theater


sat. 17./su.18.dec. 2011 8PM 10€/7€

 

Dancer:

moya michael (brussel)


Moya Michael was born in Johannesburg South Africa where she trained in ballet under the direction of Dianne Sparks.
She went on to study to obtain a national diploma in Contemporary and African dance at the Tswhane University in Pretoria between 1994 and 1997. She was then awarded a full three year scholarship to study at P.A.R.T.S the School Of Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker ROSAS. There she met Akram Khan and after completing her studies moved to London and became founder member of his company.
Moya toured various of his works for a period of five years. She was nominated for a best dancer award at the “ITS” festival in 2003.

During her time in London she was commissioned to make her own work and so she created 'Hatch' which premiered at the South Bank in London in 2003.
That same year she was awarded the Standard bank Young Artist Award for dance at the National
Arts festival in Grahamstown South Africa. She was then invited back to Belgium by Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker and became a member of the ROSAS dance company where she stayed and still free lances with. In 2009 Moya was invited to create a duet for two dancers of the Attakallari dance Company for the India Bienniale in Bangalore.

 

That same year she was also invited to create a work on the graduate students at Arizona State University.  Moya has also been member of “Eastman” and part of the latest creation of Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui "Babel" (Words)
2010.
Her latest collaboration was with the Jin Xing dance Theatre in Shanghai China and she hopes for further collaborations too.
Moya lives and works in Brussels Belgium."

More here!

 

12249519086?profile=original

Read more…

STEIM Concept Stage

 

Autonomous art space meets science lab meets open mic night. Tuesday 13 Dec STEIM will be hosting an open evening for local artists working on the fringes of their disciplines to come perform their latest works and works in progress in front of a live audience in Amsterdam. Artists of all disciplines (music, theater, audiovisual, sound art, etc..) are invited to sign up!

Entry is free, though we ask you give a small donation to help pay for the costs of maintaining the space. Drinks and snacks will also be available at the bar.


If you'd like to perform, please send an email to openstage [at] steim [dot] nl with "Concept Stage: YOUR NAME" in the subject line no later than December 12 (the day before the event). In your email include a short description of what you'll be doing, your technical requirements, and a time preference for when you would like to play. By default we will have a projector (VGA) and PA system with multi-channel mixer set up in STEIM Studio 3, our 8m x 11m black-box theater space.

 

We will schedule performers on a first-come-first-serve basis as time allows.
Performances are limited to 15 minutes maximum. 

DETAILS //
Date: Tuesday 13 December, 2011
Time: 20:00 (doors open), 20:30 (open podium and concert)
Cost: By donation
Location: STEIM Studio 3, Utrechtsedwarsstraat 134, Amsterdam


Read more…

Presenting as a part of the collection"Choreography or ELSE": "Les Temps Tirailles" by Myriam Gourfink (2009)  

WATCH HERE

12249517460?profile=original

‘Les Temps Tiraillés’ means “time torn” (or pulled) and this premiere of Gourfink’s new work deconstructs conventional concepts of performance and time and emphasises the unique revitalising of dance at every staging. The work is ongoing when the audience arrives and it happens both live on stage and streamed onto screens elsewhere. It also continues Gourfink’s exploration of the complex relationship between music and choreography, entwining her imperceptible movement with the haunting, spectral score by Austrian composer, Georg Friedrich Haas that engages two violas, a bassoon and one movement of silence within a computer-generated electronic framework.

‘Les Temps Tiraillés’ is presented with reviews and an interview

WATCH HERE

Read more…



JANUARY 5-15, 2012

ABRONS ARTS CENTER

NEW YORK CITY 


“fiercely contemporary”
- Claudia La Rocco,  The New York Times

American Realness is festival of contemporary performance returning to the Abrons Arts Center for it’s third consecutive year, January 5-15, 2012.

The 2012 festival engages all three theater spaces at the Abrons Arts Center for a immersive experience offorty-six performances of twenty productions over ten days. Performances include the world premiere ofBig Art Group’s Broke House, a contemporary spin on Chekhov's Three Sisters, and four U.S. premieres including Daniel Linehan’s Zombie Aporia, a dance based on the structure of the rock concert and Montage for Three, an exploration of portraiture and representation, Jennifer Lacey’s intimate Gattica and Eleanor Bauer and Heather Lang’s cunning trash/drag spectacle, The Heather Lang Show by Eleanor Bauer and Vice Versa - Trash is Fierce Episode 2: Destiny's Realness. In addition American Realness is thrilled to present the New York premiere of San Francisco based Laura Arrington’s exploration of feminine identity and tropes, Hot Wings.

American Realness is also thrilled to welcome back the irreverent revelry that is AMERICAN PUSSY FAGGOT! REALNESS. Under the direction of nightlife and performance impresario Earl Dax, APF!R brings you the dynamic milieu of New York Nightlife in a party jam-packed with two stages for performances, cocktails and conversation.

The 2012 program welcomes the implementation of SHOW & TELL, a free series of informal conversations and work-in-progress showings from artists with new projects in development. Showings and talks will be hosted byDD Dorvillier, Reggie Wilson/Fist & Heel Performance Group, Luciana Achugar, Miguel Gutierrez and the Powerful People, Big Dance Theater, Keith Hennessy and Holcombe Waller.

While at Abrons for performances, audiences will have access to American Realness’ two exhibitions.UNREAL features staged and candid portraits along with performance photography from the extensive collection of images by photographer Michael Hart. The images will be accompanied by a text from writer, performer and composer, Ryan Tracy. The exhibition program also features “THE Sarah Michelson,” a survey of the iconic and mythological, sculptural or decorative representations of the self through which Sarah Michelson visibly owns and authors her performance works. “THE Sarah Michelson” includes paintings and sculptural neon created for Michelson’s work by TM Davy, Claude Wampler and Charlotte Cullinan.

American Realness patrons can further engage with the work of festival artists through the @r Shop, a bookshop featuring performance texts, catalogues and artist merchandise. The @r Café by Push Cart Coffeewill offer patrons a respite from their marathon performance going, where they can sit down and enjoy a coffee, sandwich, salad, beer or glass of wine.

American Realness also welcomes dance-tech.tv founder and director Marlon Barios Solano and co-producer Josephine Dorado as the official embedded_vloggers @ American Realness 2012. The vloggers will create and distribute video podcasts in conversation with festival artists and audiences. In addition, they will post video excerpts from festival performances online through dance-tech.tv and on-site at the Abrons Arts Center in the dance-tech.tv Media Hub. Stop by the Media Hub to view podcasts and video excerpts and find out more about dance-tech.tv

American Realness 2012 is going for broke. We hope you will join us at the Abrons Arts Center on Manhattan’s lower east side for some of the most rigorous and ambitious American performance works from in and outside of the United States. Come downtown and spend a day, or two, or five, or all ten. You won’t be sorry.   

DOWNLOAD FULL PRESS RELEASE 

American Realness is made possible in part with support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Abrons Arts Center and Sondra Graff | RPM Projects.

 

EXHIBITION



UNREAL
MICHAEL HART & RYAN TRACY


THURS JAN 5 – SAT FEB 4
GALLERY HOURS: TUESDAY - SATURDAY 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
OPENING RECEPTION THURS, JAN 5, 5:00 PM
ABRONS ARTS CENTER CULPEPPER & UPPER GALLERIES

Artists are people too; people with lives; people who chose to make art for a living. It's easy to forget that. Photographer Michael Hart has been capturing the art and lives of artists in photography for nearly a decade.UNREAL presents this photographic work in a survey of artists involved in and around the American Realness festival. The photographs include images from live performances as well as staged and improvised photo sessions where the line between artist and art, real and unreal is ecstatically blurred. The images will be accompanied by a text piece by writer and performer Ryan Tracy in conversation with the photographer.



"THE SARAH MICHELSON"
SARAH MICHELSON WITH PAINTINGS AND DECOR FROM HER WORK BY TM DAVY, CLAUDE WAMPLER AND CHARLOTTE CULLIAN 

THURS JAN 5 – SAT FEB 4
GALLERY HOURS: TUESDAY - SATURDAY 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
OPENING RECEPTION THURS, JAN 5, 5:00 PM
ABRONS ARTS CENTER CULPEPPER & UPPER GALLERIES

British/New York Choreographer Sarah Michelson’s rigorous experiments in formalist dance have long deployed reflexive tactics through iconic and mythological, sculptural or decorative representations of the self. Michelson owns and authors her work through the consistent presence of the artist as historicized object. This tactic has functioned as nod to Michelson’s own legacy, trajectory, geography and economy in the lineage of modern, post-modern and contemporary dance.
 
“THE Sarah Michelson” exhibits TM Davy’s portraits of Michelson with histrionic overtones as seen inDevotion (2011), a Claude Wompler painting from Daylight (2005), the iconic neon sculptural décor by Charlotte Cullinan for Dover Beach (2009) and the ready-to-wear tracksuits for Devotion (2011).

 
“I saw this dance about dance and dance making three times in one week. Each time I held onto it thinking, “This is as good as it gets.” - David Velasco, BEST OF DANCE 2011, ARTFORUM
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\




PERFORMANCE 



LAURA ARRINGTON 
HOT WINGS NEW YORK PREMIERE  

THURS JAN 5 7:00 PM
SAT JAN 7 4:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Hot Wings is a charged dance that’s probably feminist, examining artifice and authenticity in representations of sex, gender, and violence. The work follows a cast of three women and a drag queen who are femme, fearlessly engaging, strong, and smart women, as they sing, scream, and dance towards resolution. Looking at how femininity is performed Hot Wing aims directly at the contemporary fabricated female in a critique that uncovers a deeper feminine truth.

“Laura Arrington… interrogate(s) issues of femininity, sexuality, individuality and our visceral and cerebral connection to the body.” - Nirmala Nataraj, SFGate.com
 
How Wings was created with generous support from CounterPULSE Artist Residency Commissioning Program.



BIG ART GROUP
BROKE HOUSE WORLD PREMIERE

THURS JAN 5 & 12 8:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 9:30 PM
FRI JAN 13 8:30 PM
SAT JAN 14 7:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Broke House is the new performance by Big Art Group inspired by Chekhov's Three Sisters. It explores social aspects of modernity and time: the frustration of social progress and the problem of presence in a world compromised by the virtual. From a bare stage the company constructs and dismantles the wooden skeleton of a house as they simultaneously film a documentary of its residents. Issues about the tragic entrapment of nostalgia and the futility of escapist fantasies of the future play out through colliding and disintegrating stories refracted across Big Art Group's sculptural scenography and lightning fast Real Time Film matrix.

"True to their name, Big Art Group's performances are big in every possible way: prismatic visuals hurtle across a panoply of screens, dazzling with flashing colors; strange conjunctions of video imagery captured live by a battery of cameras and spliced together in real time, ambush the eye; digital soundscapes thrum, groan, and roar at synesthesia-inducing volumes." - Jacob Gallagher-Ross, The Drama Review
 
Broke House is produced by Big Art Group with support from King's Fountain and NYSCA.



ELEANOR BAUER & HEATHER LANG
THE HEATHER LANG SHOW BY ELEANOR BAUER AND VICE VERSA: Trash is Fierce Episode 2: Destiny's Realness U.S. PREMIERE 

THURS JAN 5 10:00 PM
SUN JAN 8 6:00 PM
WEDS JAN 11 11:00 PM
SUN JAN 15 9:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

The Heather Lang Show by Eleanor Bauer and Vice Versa is a double one-woman show: double the woman, double the show. In the uniquely gregarious context of a drag show cum spiritual talk show cum QVC infomercial, two outrageous and entertaining performers appropriate and reinvent the language and performance ethics of "realness". Combining genres of performance, remixing character prototypes and archetypes, challenging the economy of stuff with the immeasurable value of experience, these unlikely partners in crime fashion a homemade and uncanny amalgam of critiques on cultural identity, capitalism, creative expression and entertainment that holds a broken compact mirror up to the real(ness) world in all its twisted glory.

“Eleanor and Heather together is a whole lotta fierce in one place, ok? GET INTO IT.” - Miguel Gutierrez

Trash is Fierce Episode 2: Destiny's Realness was made possible with space grants from Kaaitheater and Heather's living room.



DANIEL LINEHAN
ZOMBIE APORIA U.S. PREMIERE

FRI JAN 6 7:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 7:30 PM
SUN JAN 8 4:00 PM
MON JAN 9 4:30 PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Zombie Aporia is a dance performance that is composed of many small pieces, like a rock music concert, or a book of poetry. The dancers use their voices in order to create an intricate connection between dance and music, so that the dance and the music are both being generated by the very same bodies. The performance breaks down the boundaries that separate body from voice, sound from image, rhythm from meaning. 
Zombie Aporia seeks to discover possibility within apparently impossible contradictions: music that is the result of dancing, emotional expression that begins physically, spontaneous feelings that are designed, words that give more of a sense of vibration than meaning.

“Linehan dissipated minimalism by breaking the nuclei of its structures.” - Gerard Mayen, Mouvement
 
Co-production support for Zombie Aporia was provided by Rencontres chorégrapiques internationales de Seine-Saint Denis, Centre national de la danse (Pantin, FR); Centre de Développement Chorégraphique Toulouse / Midi- Pyrénées (FR), in the context of the European project ‘Departs’; Kunstencentrum Vooruit (Gent, BE); BUDA Kunstencentrum (Kortrijk, BE), and was supported through residencies at L’Agora, Cité International de la danse, Montpellier Danse (FR); Centre de Développement Chorégraphique Toulouse / Midi-Pyrénées (FR); O Rumo do Fumo & Forum Dança  (Lisboa, PT); Kunstencentrum Vooruit (Gent, BE). Funding was provided by the Flemish authorities (BE) and Arcadi – distribution (FR).



JOHN JASPERSE 
CANYON

A canyon is formed by the simple act of erosion—in which the earth yields over time to a repetitive force, giving birth to a landscape of opening rather than of imposition. Many have described witnessing nature on this scale as life-changing—an experience not easily put into words. While abstract in nature, this new work by Jasperse and his collaborators seeks to reflect these qualities by exploring the extraordinary that originates with the ordinary. Six dancers, including Jasperse, turn the stage into a space beyond language, where strangeness, subtlety, spaciousness, density, and fervent shifts all play a role—centering on the transformative power of losing oneself in visceral experience, where intellect is humbled into a state of wonder.

“Mr. Jasperse has a keen eye for detail and composition; the subtle internal logic of his choreography tends to drive both sense and sensibility in his dances.”  - Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times

FRI JAN 6 9:00 PM
SAT JAN 7 2:30 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Canyon is commissioned as part of the BAM 2011 Next Wave Festival, and is co-commissioned by the Wexner Center for the Arts. Canyon is made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Canyon is supported by The MAP Fund, a program of Creative Capital supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Canyon is commissioned through Meet The Composer’s Commissioning Music/USA program and by the American Music Center Live Music for Dance Program. Canyon is supported, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Bossak/Heilbron Charitable Foundation, the Harkness Foundation for Dance, the James E. Robison Foundation, and by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Canyon was developed in residencies at The Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography (MANCC), MASS MoCA and CPR – Center for Performance Research.



CECILIA BENGOLEA, FRANCOISE CHAIGNAUD, MARLENE MONTEIRO FERITAS AND TRAJAL HARRELL

(M)IMOSA / TWENTY LOOKS OR PARIS IS BURNING AT THE JUDSON CHURCH (M)

FRI JAN 6 10:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 6:00 PM
SUN JAN 8 9:00 PM
MON JAN 9 6:00 PM
 
Run time: 90 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
(M)imosais a choreographic collaboration between Cecilia Bengolea, Francis Chaignaud, Marlene Monteiro Freitas and Trajal Harrell. The work is the third installment of Harrell’s Twenty Looks or Paris is Burning at the Judson Church, a series of five works in five sizes (XS to XL). The series revolves around the proposition "What would have happened in 1963 if someone from the voguing ball scene in Harlem had come downtown to perform alongside the early postmoderns at Judson Church?"
 
(M)imosais a performance by four choreographers investigating the collision of voguing culture, post-modern dance and the artists’ own personal and artistic identities, exploring the intensity of the fault between the desire and the impossibility of becoming another person.

 
“At the confluence of the ordinary and the spectacular are both beauty and entertainment.” - Roslyn Sulcas,The New York Times
 
Production: VLOVAJOB PRU; Co-Production:  Le Quartz – Scène nationale de Brest, Théâtre National de Chaillot, Centre de Développement Chorégraphique Toulouse, The Kitchen, Bomba Suicida / organisation funded by the Presidency of the Council of Ministers - Secretary of State for Culture/Directorate General for the Arts (DGArtes). Rehearsal space also provided by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Additional Funding has been provided by FUSED (French U.S. Exchange in Dance). With support from La Ménagerie de Verre (Paris) and Laboratoires d’Aubervilliers. Francois Chaignaud and Cecilia Bengolea are associated artists of La Ménagerie de Verre (Paris). VLOVAJOB PRU is funded by the DRAC Poitou-Charentes and receives support from the French Institute for its overseas projects.



ELASTIC CITY
SALVE 


FRI JAN 6 10:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 4:00 PM & 7:30 PM
SUN JAN 8 7:30 PM

Run time: 75 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Winter chills:
stuck in cold American
brick hallways and leftover props.
Todd Shalom and Niegel Smith walk you home
to putty floors, player-paintings and back-
stage Realness.
Take off your snowsuits, baby. This is not a walking tour.


“it’s refreshing to find a deliberately constructed experience—a performance—that exists just for itself, or just for you.” - Patricia Milder, The Brooklyn Rail



TRAJAL HARRELL 
ANTIGONE JR. 

SAT JAN 7 11:00 PM
SUN JAN 8 1:00 PM

Run time: 30 minutes 

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

In American and English naming tradition, a junior (jr.) is the son of a father with the same name. Thus, with Antigone Jr., the New York choreographer Trajal Harrell takes on a study of the role of Antigone from Sophocles' tragedy alongside performer Thibault Lac as Ismene, Antigone’s sister. This work is part of an ongoing series entitled Twenty Looks or Paris is Burning at The Judson Church, that comes in five regular sizes -  Extra Small (XS), Small (S), Medium known as (M)imosa, and the upcoming Large (L) and Extra Large (XL)- plus this junior size. They all take on the proposition: "What would have happened in 1963 if someone from the voguing dance tradition in Harlem had come downtown to Judson Church in Greenwich Village to perform alongside the early postmoderns?" Thus, what new relations would have been produced by voguing a greek tragedy, a concept against the aesthetic trends of 1963 Judson? Rather than illustrating a historical fiction, Harrell uses this proposition to rethink our contemporary context. What we see was neither possible at the voguing balls nor at Judson Church, but a third possibility is created, here and now. This jr. represents a potential uni-size in the series, both unique and unisex.

“I love watching Harrell indicate styles—now with down-and-dirty swiveling hips, now with weaving, undulating arms and soft stroking-the-air hands, now with high-stepping feet. Every pose resonates.” - Deborah Jowitt, The Village Voice

Antigone Jr. is a co-production of Menagerie de Verre. Residency support has been provided by Menagerie de Verre, Workspace Brussels, and Pact Zollverein.



AMERICANPUSSYFAGGOT!REALNESS 
CURATED BY EARL DAX

SAT JAN 7 8:00 PM – 4:00 AM

PUBLIC ASSEMBLY
70 North 6th Street between Wythe and Kent, Brooklyn
L train to Bedford Avenue

AMERICAN PUSSYFAGGOT! REALNESS is a performance-laden club night with two stages showcasing over twenty artists from the often-disparate worlds of dance, burlesque, cabaret, club and contemporary performance. For 2012 the event takes place at Public Assembly in vibrant Williamsburg, just a few minutes from the Bedford L subway stop or a short cab ride over the Williamsburg Bridge.

New York City nightclubs have long played a crucial role in the development of cutting edge performance. The real challenges - drunk and often inattentive crowds, limited technical capacity, etc - demand that artists wrest the attention of their audiences, helping to foster the intensity and dynamism characteristic of so many New York performers. 

With a name derived from an epithet slung at him during a fabled bar brawl, "downtown impresario" Earl Dax has developed PUSSYFAGGOT! into a one night only, mini-festival of queer culture which is presented quarterly in New York City and has been featured internationally at Queer Up North and Queer Zagreb. With a fellowship from the Museum of Arts and Design, Dax has also brought the event to New Orleans and a rural radical faerie community in Tennessee. This year's festival edition of the event will once again be hosted by internationally acclaimed performance artist Penny Arcade, herself a product of the club scene and "a criminal, homosexual avant garde." It's a night you won't want to miss and one you won't soon forget.

 
“Mr. Dax’s events, the most historically minded of the current generation of club performances, form one of the surest and most politically conscious links to the fabled East Village club scene of  [the 1970's and 80's].” - Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times



WALLY CARDONA AND JENNIFER LACEY WITH JONATHAN BEPLER 
TOOL IS LOOT 

SUN JAN 8 2:30 PM
MON JAN 9 8:00 PM

Run time: 70 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

“We would like to believe that our bodies and our brains are fantastically flexible and responsive to change, containing - at any moment - both the abstract and the specific.  Well… what we’ve learned is that this is both gloriously true and frustratingly untrue. But that’s okay, really, and this dance proves it.  There will be a swan, a prince, a robot, sexual behavior and two chairs. Sometimes all at once.” – Wally Cardona & Jennifer Lacey

For one year, choreographers Wally Cardona and Jennifer Lacey worked apart, holding tandem projects, in the U.S. and France respectively. Each artist solicited weeklong encounters with non-dance experts, voluntarily subjecting their aesthetic position to a barrage of assessment, opinions and desires from the “outsiders”, including an astro-physicist, sommelier, architect, film editor, medical supply salesman, kinetic sculptor, baroque opera singer, art critic, acoustician and social activist. Now, as the two choreographers come together in TOOL IS LOOT, the identity of each artist is simultaneously undone and strengthened in a duet that carries the ghosts of aesthetic propositions that are not their own. The opinions and interpretations of composer Jonathan Bepler and lighting designer Thomas Dunn function as yet another clarification and reinterpretation of TOOL IS LOOT.


“…utterly original, deeply comic and deviously beautiful. It doesn’t hurt, of course, that both Ms. Lacey and Mr. Cardona are effortlessly charismatic performers.” - Brian Seibert, The New York Times


A production of WCV, Inc., TOOL IS LOOT is co-commissioned by The Kitchen and EMPAC, Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY. Creation of the work was made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project with lead funding from the Dorris Duke Charitable Foundation and additional funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Boeing Company Charitable Trust; a 2010-2011 Joyce SoHo Creative Residency, funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; CNDC Angers and FUSED; Les Laboratoires d’Aubervilliers with the Département de la Seine-Saint-Denis; Baryshnikov Arts Center; Dance Place (D.C.); Atlantic Center for the Arts; the National Endowment for the Arts; public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; and Bossak/Heilbron Charitable Foundation.TOOL IS LOOT was commissioned through the Meet The Composer’s Commissioning Music/USA program.



CYNTHIA HOPKINS 
THIS CLEMENT WORLD WORK-IN-PROGRESS

SUN JAN 8 7:30 PM
TUES JAN 10 5:00 PM
 
Run time: 45 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
This Clement Worldis a new musical performance work by Cynthia Hopkins that poetically but urgently addresses our global climate crisis. The work is a live documentary film infused with three fictional characters that serve as tour guides for an imaginary exhibit conveying the wonders of our currently clement world. These guides in the form of the ghost of a Native American woman of the Cheyenne, a neutral alien observer visiting from the far reaches of outer space and a child from the not-so-distant future who has traveled back in time to visit the present, interpret this imaginary exhibit according to their own uniquely informed perspective. This Clement World uses original avant-folk orchestral songs, fantasy, imagination and storytelling to convey vital information regarding the climate crisis through a deeply personal and idiosyncratic lens.
 
This Clement Worldis scheduled to premiere at Les Subsistances in November 2012, followed by presentations at the Walker and St. Ann’s during the 2012-13 season. In May 2012, a work in progress concert version of the piece will be presented at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn.    
 

"a triumph of disciplined thinking, narrative fluidity and musical accomplishment."- Ginia Bellafante, The New York Times
 
This Clement Worldis inspired in part by a December 2009 Tipping Point Conference at Columbia's Earth Institute, and a September 2010 Arctic Expedition with Cape Farewell. This Clement World has been commissioned by Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, MN; St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn NY; and Les Subsistances in Lyon, France. The creation of This Clement World is made possible by the generous support of the Jerome Foundation, the MAP Fund; individual donors including Eleanor Alper, Warren Habib, Adam and Diane Max, and Jony Perez; and residencies provided by Acadia Summer Arts Program, Yaddo, and The MacDowell Colony.



JEREMY WADE 
FOUNTAIN 

SUN JAN 8 10:30 PM
MON JAN 2:30 PM
WEDS JAN 11 8:00 PM

Run time: 70 minutes  

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Fountain, a new solo from Jeremy Wade proposes a generative sphere of uncertainty. Wade circumvents traditional audience-performer dynamics and facilitates a generous group experience that evolves into a sensual engine. Wade assumes the role of preacher, shaman, and fool, by offering himself as a medium to receive and transform the energy of the theater space taking the audience on an emotional and alchemical journey.  

The development of this new work is the result of a longer research phase in which Wade practiced an amalgam of curating, hosting, teaching and choreographing, exploring the potential of the ecstatic body that lies within the community. Thus the combination of energetic interaction with the audience, suggestive visualizations and Wade’s virtuosic grotesque creates a supple machine that is strangely affecting.

Wade’s choreographic technique is a unique encounter of aesthetic, sociological and neurological dimensions. He derives movement from intense attention to the multiplicity of impulses in the body that are drawn from neurological processes, social constructions of norm and aesthetic decisions. The stage becomes an engine where the intersubjective actions/reactions are propelled into space enveloping the audience for maximal sensation and association.


“By turns frightening and pitiful, the process was fascinating to behold, and strangely affecting. The space was charged..” - Brian Seibert, The New York Times

BEST OF DANCE 2011 – David Velasco, ARTFORUM

A production by Jeremy Wade in co-production with HAU Berlin and Gaîté Lyrique Paris. Sponsored with funds from the Hauptstadtkulturfonds and by the Mayor of Berlin – Senate Chancellery – Cultural Affairs. With support by Tanzfabrik Berlin and Uferstudios.



JACK FERVER WITH MICHELLE MOLA 
ME, MICHELLE

MON JAN 9 9:30 PM
TUES JAN 10 8:00 PM

Run time: 60 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Me, Michelle is a duet between Jack Ferver and Michelle Mola, which takes on the forever-mysterious Queen Cleopatra as a vehicle for two performers to uncover the truths about iconography, monarchy, and themselves. Ferver offers a manic meta-characterization of Cleopatra during the infamous icon's final days. Attended by Mola’s portrayal of his/her servant, the two engage in funny, vicious, and tragic psychosexual games that vacillate between the childish to the sociopathic. Through coiling layers of performance ranging from the histrionically grand to the restlessly personal, Me, Michele illustrates how ego fueled by total power can turn into annihilation and the sadomasochism that can exist between gay men and heterosexual women.

"While he constructs and subverts identity, presenting and manipulating images of sexuality, abuse, and self love, those of us watching are implicated in his physically raw, violent works."- Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times

Me, Michelle was commissioned as part of the Museum of Art and Design’s series Risk + Reward and Performa 11.



DANIEL LINEHAN 
MONTAGE FOR THREE U.S. PREMIERE 
NOT ABOUT EVERYTHING 

TUES JAN 10 6:30 PM
WEDS JAN 11 7:00 PM
 
Total Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER 
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Montage for Three is a choreography-of-images that takes its source material entirely from found photographs, both famous and obscure. The two dancers embody the photographs with the absurd and impossible aim of giving presence to something which is absent. They strive to erase the inherent sentimentality of the photographs in order to see what lies beneath the nostalgia. The living/moving/present bodies confront the mechanical/static/reproduced bodies until the two forms begin to exchange roles. The still images begin to take on a life of their own, as the dancers begin to serve as a trigger for the viewer’s memory.
 
Daniel Linehan’s solo, Not About Everything, reflects on the basic elements that constitute art works as well as daily experiences – rhythm and change, language and meaning, energy and the human body.  The performance re-imagines these familiar concepts through a multi-layered system of intense physical effort and a constant cyclical use of language. Beginning from an apparent simplicity, the performer introduces a series of variations, accelerations, and subtle shifts, creating a funny and complex dance. As his obsessive circular motion inevitably produces feelings of disorientation and vertigo, Linehan struggles to remain lucid and strives to create a space for thoughtful reflection.


 “Linehan is extremely smart about what he’s doing, and he’s mesmerizing to watch in what seems like an ordeal of discovery” - Deborah Jowitt, The Village Voice

Co-production support for Montage for Three was provided by Rencontres Choréographiques Internationales de Seine Saint-Denis (Paris, FR) Not About Everythingwas created in part through the Bessie Schönberg/First Light Commissioning Program and Creative Residency Program of Dance Theater Workshop with support from the Jerome Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts (a US federal agency), the New York State Council of the Arts, and the Jerome Robbins Foundation. This work was also made possible in part through the Movement Research Artist Residency Project, funded in part by the Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund.



HOLCOMBE WALLER 
VISIONS OF A SONG MAN 

TUES JAN 10 9:30 PM
SAT JAN 14 10:00 PM

Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Visions of a song man presents singer, composer and performing artist Holcombe Waller in an evening of songs and musical excerpts from his recent interdisciplinary performances Surfacing (2011) and Into the Dark Unknown: The Hope Chest (2008). Holcombe and musical collaborator Ben Landsverk perform simplified arrangements that employ whittled down vocals, small guitars, viola and piano to evoke ghostly renditions of folk, liturgical, ceremonial and popular music forms.

"Waller's new album, Into the Dark Unknown, is a come-to-Jesus moment come to life,­ a clear-eyed look at confusion that's as arresting as it is intimate."  - Barbara Mitchell, National Public Radio



ANN LIV YOUNG
SLEEPING BEAUTY PART 1


WEDS JAN 11 9:30 PM
THURS JAN 12 7:00 PM

Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

There was once a sleeping woman. She was betrothed at birth, unknowingly. She hid in the forrest until she was a true woman. At first glance she fell in love with a noble man. Her heart was taken. A witch tried to kill her and her love. A spell was put on her family and her castle. They all slept for over a hundred years. At last, the noble prince understood and at true loves kiss she awoke.

“vulgar, raunchy, funny, earsplittingly loud” - Gia Kourlas, Time Out New York



KEITH HENNESSY 
ALMOST 

THURS JAN 12 10:00 PM
FRI JAN 13 10:00 PM

Run time: 45 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Almost is spontaneous performance action. Keith Hennessy comes to the American Realness to improvise; to invent a performance from almost nothing, accessing almost everything. Curious about histories of moving bodies and social movement, Hennessy’s improvisations are a dynamic mash-up of Judson, body art, stand up, Ridiculous, site-specific, lecture, and ritual (where Ridiculous means, among other things, queer subversive camp, and ritual is about how a group of people experience magic and/or death together). He might go off on a political rant, he might take questions from the audience; he’ll probably change costumes and struggle to be still.
 
A body accumulates information and makes choices. Tactics and images from the historical body of Hennessy’s work appear like habits, crutches, old friends. Almost is simultaneously research and the distillation of research into composition. Improvisation is sometimes like fishing, a practical effort that might become thriling or it might be boring and then it’s ok to space out and dream of other worlds... Remix, spectacle, ritual, action, dancing, not-dancing, speaking, playing, ridiculous, activist, visceral, performance.


"Hennessy is that rare artist who succeeds in translating fierce social concerns into artistically satisfying creations that enlighten and entertain.“ - Rita Felciano, SF Bay Guardian



JENNIFER LACEY 
GATTICA U.S. PREMIERE

FRI JAN 13 7:00 PM
SAT JAN 14 5:30 PM
SUN JAN 15 5:30 PM
 
Run time: 45 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
This piece was made especially for the Tanzquartier in Vienna under the stewardship of Sigrid Gareis in 2008. The event bore this unlikely title:  A Precise Woodstock of thinking. I was asked to consider the future of performance. Hmmm... What to do? My own future was more-than-unusually uncertain at that moment, which created a lovely calm about the whole business  as projections seemed un-urgent, unnecessary, inappropriate . I made the only thing I could which I still enjoy doing. The very pretty irony is that performance has no legitimate concern with the future. And also, this version of the future is a bit dated. Lovely. Please Come.
 

“a fearless, whip-smart artist” - Brian Seibert, The New York Times
 
Gattica was made possible with support from TanzQuartier Wein



ELEANOR BAUER 
(BIG GIRLS DO BIG THINGS) 

SAT JAN 14 8:30 PM
SUN JAN 15 4:00 PM
 
Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

An empty promise, a preemptive lament, a flirtation with expectations, a wrestling match with potential, whispering what should be shouted and singing what should be whispered, (BIG GIRLS DO BIG THINGS) is a solo on scale, volume, extreme limits and the grey areas between them; on grandeur and vulnerability, hubris and humility, visibility and subtlety; on the fragile braggadocio of living large when less is more but more is also unmistakably more.
 
Eleanor Bauer invites the audience into the depths of the surface-oriented world of the performer, where the personal and the material are mutually imminent, where style is content, the 'how' is inseparable from the 'what', and the difference between fiction and reality is irrelevant. Navigating the folds, surfaces, and transformative possibilities of a too-large bear suit, Bauer performs a series of metamorphoses that challenge, obscure, and exploit her diverse capacities as a performer, to exercise and exorcise questions about the use of self onstage.
 
Through surrender to the theater and its discontents, in (BIG GIRLS DO BIG THINGS), self-expression drops the self and expression takes over.


“Ms. Bauer is a shape-shifter…lunging for her desperate pleasures as if her life depended on securing them, and earning our hearts in the process.” - Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times

Co-production support was provided by Workspace Brussels (BE) and Kunstencentrum Vooruit (Gent, BE). Funding was provided the Flemish Community Commission of the Brussels Capital Region.



ISHMAEL HOUSTON-JONESmean Cait: a fairytale in progress
YVONNE MEIER Mad Heidi 

SUN JAN 15 7:30 PM

Total run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

ISHMAEL HOUSTON-JONES mean Cait: a fairytale in progress
After two years of focusing on revivals of his earlier work, (What We're Made Of for Philadelphia Dance Projects and THEM at PS 122 and last year's American Realness), Ishmael Houston-Jones has embarked on a new project, mean Cait, directed by Houston-Jones  and created in collaboration with performers Robert Maynard and Gillian Walsh.

Inspirations for mean Cait are as diverse as golden knee pads, enchanted boxer-briefs, water boarding, step-ball-change, ball torture, and more Stevie Nicks than anyone would ever want to hear.


“Unabashedly gay and gritty“ - David Velasco, ARTFORUM  

YVONNE MEIER Mad Heidi 
Mad Heidi is a portrait of a Swiss woman, battling against her Swiss expectations. Lifelong traumas like, "how many times must I hike up the mountain?" surface. A sexy witch-like broom dance becomes unavoidable. Consumed by equal parts madness, rage, and sadness, "Heidi" descends into the netherworld of the collective unconscious in order to ferociously and boisterously destroy Swiss stereotypes and clichés. The work evokes is a sense of homesickness and longing as the performer appears alone before her audience -- naked, both inside and out.

 “A true east village renegade with a special talent for creating havoc…” - Gia Kourlas, The New York Times 

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\




SHOW & TELL



DD DORVILLIER
CONVERSATION: Empty Spaces/Permanent Dances: A lecture and presentation on Danza Permanente

FRI JAN 6 6:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

The choreography of Danza Permanente comes from a musical composition created in Vienna two centuries ago by a nearly deaf man. Initially written for four stringed instruments, it's transposed to be seen, played by four dancers. They embody the musical structure, behaviors, and dynamics of the string quartet over time, and through space. The dancers behave as sound, in their becoming of visible music. We propose that you watch this performance in near-silence as you would listen to music in a shadowy room. The transposition is by DD Dorvillier and Zeena Parkins and dancers Fabian Barba, Nuno Bizarro, Walter Dundervill, Naiara Mendioroz and Heather Kravas. The acoustic environment created by Zeena Parkins and lighting design by Thomas Dunn follow the score and frame this visible music.

Followed by a conversation led by André Lepecki with Dorvillier and her collaborators, Zeena Parkins, and Thomas Dunn. 



REGGIE WILSON / FIST & HEEL PERFORMANCE GROUP 
CONVERSATION: Why A Dramaturg? 

SAT JAN 7 12:30 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Reggie Wilson will be joined by dramaturg and historian Susan Manning to discuss the research process for his forthcoming work, (project) Moseses Project, slated for BAM’s Next Wave Festival in 2013. The conversation will explore how Wilson came to work with a dramaturge on this project, how the working relationship has evolved, and how the research process has embraced numerous tangents and unexpected connections in its explorations of Moses as story, myth and metaphor. Through this exploration Wilson and Manning will query “why a dramaturge” not only in Wilsons’ new work but also more broadly in the field of dance-making.



LUCIANA ACHUGAR 
WORK-IN-PROGRESS SHOWING: FEELingpleasuresatisfactioncelebrationholyFORM

SUN JAN 8 12:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER  
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Inspired by the 1960's psychedelic experience, and its quest for enlightened interconnectivity and transcendence through altered states of consciousness, FEEL…FORM presents dance as a celebration of experience, and pleasure as the consummation of experience. With award-winning collaborators Michael Mahalchick (sound design) and Carrie Wood (lighting design), a quartet of women engage achugar’s signature durational phrasing, multiplying the dancers' movements to create an organic form reflecting both rigorous formalism and corporeal excess.



MIGUEL GUTIERREZ AND THE POWERFUL PEOPLE 
WORK IN PROGRESS SHOWING: And lose the name of action

MON JAN 9 1PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

And lose the name of action is a new performance in development by Miguel Gutierrez and the Powerful People, featuring Gutierrez and a star studded cast: Michelle Boulé, Hilary Clark, Luke George, K.J. Holmes and Ishmael Houston-Jones. Inspired by discoveries in neuroscience and paranormal phenomena, and drawing on the mysterious logic of improvisation, this new piece pushes Gutierrez’s persistent questions about the wonder of living with an ephemeral body into the beyond. Wry and perplexing, And lose the name of actiontreats the inscrutability of dance as its inherent power and savors its unique ability to be something that doesn’t make sense. The piece includes sound design by Neal Medlyn, lighting by Lenore Doxsee, and visuals and writing by Boru O’Brien O’Connell.

The work in process showing will be followed by a moderated conversation with writer Jenn Joy.



BIG DANCE THEATER 
WORK IN PROGRESS SHOWING: Ich, KürbisGeist.

TUES  JAN 10 3:30PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE STAGE 
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
Ich, Kürbisgeist, written by Sibyl Kempson, is a theatrical piece of writing, but it is not a play in the usual sense. The language itself manifests the harsh landscape of a world facing destruction, populated by five crude people speaking a rigorous, specific, invented language. Every word is semi-recognizable, an amalgam of English, Swedish, German and Sid Ceasar. The language is as tough and unforgiving as the windswept, uncultivated landscape. The five characters boast of surviving prior catastrophes and they bitterly recount lost times. They harvest pumpkin seeds; they sing; they dance; they reminisce. They are ever under threat from vaguely understood, external forces from which there is no protection. They are grounded in fear, absurd and doomed. Their outrageous costumes, created by visual artist Suzanne Bocanegra, place us in an unspecified medieval European locale. Characters pop up on video, further rattling our sense of time and place. Ich, Kürbisgeist, strangely comic, full of rawness, fragmentation, confusion, and superstition, is in the end a contemplation of language itself.
 
"Ut's o gaad life if yo dan't wikken" 
(It's a good life if you don't weaken.)
 
KurbisGeist is co-commissioned by The Chocolate Factory and PS 122. Big Dance is grateful to the Abrons Art Center for  residency support. The finished piece will premiere at The Chocolate Factory in Oct. 2012.



KEITH HENNESSY 
CONVERSATION: Turbulence (a dance about the economy) 

WEDS JAN 11 5:30 PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Turbulence (a dance about the economy) is a bodily response to economic crisis, an experimental hybrid of contemporary dance, performance, agitprop, and circus. A collaborative creation choreographed by Keith Hennessy, Turbulence features a core company from San Francisco, musician Jassem Hindi from Paris, and 10 local performers. Modeling efficient solutions to economic and ecological crises, Turbulence uses resources sparingly and is adaptable to various venues. The intent of Turbulence is to inspire engagement and discourse in response to current economic crises and their historical antecedents  visible is a performance work that explores epic journeys, myths, dreams, and memories of the known world and an imagined future in an unknown land.



HOLCOMBE WALLER WITH CYNTHIA HOPKINS AND MIGUEL GUTIERREZ  
CONVERSATION: Surfacing & Song Based Performance 

THURS JAN 12 5:30 PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Singer, songwriter and performance maker Holcombe Waller will be joined by choreographer and music maker Miguel Gutierrez for a conversation exploring the indefinable genre of contemporary song-based performance. Their conversation will seek to elucidate an understanding of how song-based performance has the potentiality to arrive in a similar pefromative space as the work of more theater or dance based contemporary performance. In addition these artists will explore the specific realities around the creation of Waller’s newest song-based performance, Surfacing, a collection of sung narrativesexploring Catholic beautification, anarchist communist revolution, health care activism and the history-in-the-remaking of contemporary performance art, that toe the line between realism and fantasy.



@r SHOP

Opening up new channels of information and exchange for the American Realness audience, the shop will feature performance texts, catalogues, companion publications, journals and artist merchandise.  Featured publications include performance texts by Miguel Gutierrez, Nature Theater of Oklahoma, Sibyl Kempson and Karinne Keithley Syers all published by the 53rd State Press.

Additionally the shop will carry back issues of the beloved Movement Research Performance Journal, THEATER Magazine, and full series of publications from Danspace Project’s Choreographic Center Without Walls (CW2) PLATFORM series featuring catalogues created by artists and editors including Ralph Lemon & Katherine Profeta, Juliette Mapp & Ursula Eagly, Trajal Harrell, and Judy Hussie-Taylor.


@r CAFÉ

by Push Cart Coffee

Before, after, or in between performances, the café offers American Realness patrons- coffee, tea, baked goods, pastries, sandwiches, hot paninis, salad, soup, wine and beer. Located on site at the Abrons Arts Center, the café is the perfect place to gather, hangout, meet with artists and colleagues, or just pickup a snack, stop by to enjoy a casual atmosphere and to engage in a dialogue around all the Realness you've been served.

12249527699?profile=original

DANCE-TECH .TV MEDIA HUB
Dance-tech.tv founder and director Marlon Barios Solano and co-producer Josephine Dorado will be the official embedded_vloggers @ American Realness 201, creating and distributing video podcasts in conversation with festival artists and audiences. In addition, they will post video excerpts from festival performances online through Dance-tech.tv and on-site at the Abrons Arts Center in the dance-tech.tv media hub. Stop by the Media Hub to view poscasts and video excerpts and find out more about dance-tech.tv





ADDITIONAL

UPCOMING

PERFORMANCES...



YVONNE MEIER THE SHINING

DECEMBER 13-18 & 20-23, 2011
NEW YORK LIVE ARTS
NEW YORK, NEW YORK

The Shining is a thrilling dance-installation set inside the intricate maze of 350 refrigerator boxes. Originally created and performed in 1993 at Performance Space 122, the Bessie Award winning, The Shining puts audience members and performers together in an extraordinarily crafted, anxiety producing, living, breathing and inimitable environment.

This reconstruction of The Shining is made possible, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius. Additional support for The Shining is given by contributors to The DTW Commissioning Fund at New York Live Arts.

Read more…



JANUARY 5-15, 2012

ABRONS ARTS CENTER

NEW YORK CITY 


“fiercely contemporary”
- Claudia La Rocco,  The New York Times

American Realness is festival of contemporary performance returning to the Abrons Arts Center for it’s third consecutive year, January 5-15, 2012.

The 2012 festival engages all three theater spaces at the Abrons Arts Center for a immersive experience offorty-six performances of twenty productions over ten days. Performances include the world premiere ofBig Art Group’s Broke House, a contemporary spin on Chekhov's Three Sisters, and four U.S. premieres including Daniel Linehan’s Zombie Aporia, a dance based on the structure of the rock concert and Montage for Three, an exploration of portraiture and representation, Jennifer Lacey’s intimate Gattica and Eleanor Bauer and Heather Lang’s cunning trash/drag spectacle, The Heather Lang Show by Eleanor Bauer and Vice Versa - Trash is Fierce Episode 2: Destiny's Realness. In addition American Realness is thrilled to present the New York premiere of San Francisco based Laura Arrington’s exploration of feminine identity and tropes, Hot Wings.

American Realness is also thrilled to welcome back the irreverent revelry that is AMERICAN PUSSY FAGGOT! REALNESS. Under the direction of nightlife and performance impresario Earl Dax, APF!R brings you the dynamic milieu of New York Nightlife in a party jam-packed with two stages for performances, cocktails and conversation.

The 2012 program welcomes the implementation of SHOW & TELL, a free series of informal conversations and work-in-progress showings from artists with new projects in development. Showings and talks will be hosted byDD Dorvillier, Reggie Wilson/Fist & Heel Performance Group, Luciana Achugar, Miguel Gutierrez and the Powerful People, Big Dance Theater, Keith Hennessy and Holcombe Waller.

While at Abrons for performances, audiences will have access to American Realness’ two exhibitions.UNREAL features staged and candid portraits along with performance photography from the extensive collection of images by photographer Michael Hart. The images will be accompanied by a text from writer, performer and composer, Ryan Tracy. The exhibition program also features “THE Sarah Michelson,” a survey of the iconic and mythological, sculptural or decorative representations of the self through which Sarah Michelson visibly owns and authors her performance works. “THE Sarah Michelson” includes paintings and sculptural neon created for Michelson’s work by TM Davy, Claude Wampler and Charlotte Cullinan.

American Realness patrons can further engage with the work of festival artists through the @r Shop, a bookshop featuring performance texts, catalogues and artist merchandise. The @r Café by Push Cart Coffeewill offer patrons a respite from their marathon performance going, where they can sit down and enjoy a coffee, sandwich, salad, beer or glass of wine.

American Realness also welcomes dance-tech.tv founder and director Marlon Barios Solano and co-producer Josephine Dorado as the official embedded_vloggers @ American Realness 2012. The vloggers will create and distribute video podcasts in conversation with festival artists and audiences. In addition, they will post video excerpts from festival performances online through dance-tech.tv and on-site at the Abrons Arts Center in the dance-tech.tv Media Hub. Stop by the Media Hub to view podcasts and video excerpts and find out more about dance-tech.tv

American Realness 2012 is going for broke. We hope you will join us at the Abrons Arts Center on Manhattan’s lower east side for some of the most rigorous and ambitious American performance works from in and outside of the United States. Come downtown and spend a day, or two, or five, or all ten. You won’t be sorry.   

DOWNLOAD FULL PRESS RELEASE 

American Realness is made possible in part with support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Abrons Arts Center and Sondra Graff | RPM Projects.

 

EXHIBITION



UNREAL
MICHAEL HART & RYAN TRACY


THURS JAN 5 – SAT FEB 4
GALLERY HOURS: TUESDAY - SATURDAY 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
OPENING RECEPTION THURS, JAN 5, 5:00 PM
ABRONS ARTS CENTER CULPEPPER & UPPER GALLERIES

Artists are people too; people with lives; people who chose to make art for a living. It's easy to forget that. Photographer Michael Hart has been capturing the art and lives of artists in photography for nearly a decade.UNREAL presents this photographic work in a survey of artists involved in and around the American Realness festival. The photographs include images from live performances as well as staged and improvised photo sessions where the line between artist and art, real and unreal is ecstatically blurred. The images will be accompanied by a text piece by writer and performer Ryan Tracy in conversation with the photographer.



"THE SARAH MICHELSON"
SARAH MICHELSON WITH PAINTINGS AND DECOR FROM HER WORK BY TM DAVY, CLAUDE WAMPLER AND CHARLOTTE CULLIAN 

THURS JAN 5 – SAT FEB 4
GALLERY HOURS: TUESDAY - SATURDAY 11:00 AM - 6:00 PM
OPENING RECEPTION THURS, JAN 5, 5:00 PM
ABRONS ARTS CENTER CULPEPPER & UPPER GALLERIES

British/New York Choreographer Sarah Michelson’s rigorous experiments in formalist dance have long deployed reflexive tactics through iconic and mythological, sculptural or decorative representations of the self. Michelson owns and authors her work through the consistent presence of the artist as historicized object. This tactic has functioned as nod to Michelson’s own legacy, trajectory, geography and economy in the lineage of modern, post-modern and contemporary dance.
 
“THE Sarah Michelson” exhibits TM Davy’s portraits of Michelson with histrionic overtones as seen inDevotion (2011), a Claude Wompler painting from Daylight (2005), the iconic neon sculptural décor by Charlotte Cullinan for Dover Beach (2009) and the ready-to-wear tracksuits for Devotion (2011).

 
“I saw this dance about dance and dance making three times in one week. Each time I held onto it thinking, “This is as good as it gets.” - David Velasco, BEST OF DANCE 2011, ARTFORUM
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\




PERFORMANCE 



LAURA ARRINGTON 
HOT WINGS NEW YORK PREMIERE  

THURS JAN 5 7:00 PM
SAT JAN 7 4:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Hot Wings is a charged dance that’s probably feminist, examining artifice and authenticity in representations of sex, gender, and violence. The work follows a cast of three women and a drag queen who are femme, fearlessly engaging, strong, and smart women, as they sing, scream, and dance towards resolution. Looking at how femininity is performed Hot Wing aims directly at the contemporary fabricated female in a critique that uncovers a deeper feminine truth.

“Laura Arrington… interrogate(s) issues of femininity, sexuality, individuality and our visceral and cerebral connection to the body.” - Nirmala Nataraj, SFGate.com
 
How Wings was created with generous support from CounterPULSE Artist Residency Commissioning Program.



BIG ART GROUP
BROKE HOUSE WORLD PREMIERE

THURS JAN 5 & 12 8:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 9:30 PM
FRI JAN 13 8:30 PM
SAT JAN 14 7:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Broke House is the new performance by Big Art Group inspired by Chekhov's Three Sisters. It explores social aspects of modernity and time: the frustration of social progress and the problem of presence in a world compromised by the virtual. From a bare stage the company constructs and dismantles the wooden skeleton of a house as they simultaneously film a documentary of its residents. Issues about the tragic entrapment of nostalgia and the futility of escapist fantasies of the future play out through colliding and disintegrating stories refracted across Big Art Group's sculptural scenography and lightning fast Real Time Film matrix.

"True to their name, Big Art Group's performances are big in every possible way: prismatic visuals hurtle across a panoply of screens, dazzling with flashing colors; strange conjunctions of video imagery captured live by a battery of cameras and spliced together in real time, ambush the eye; digital soundscapes thrum, groan, and roar at synesthesia-inducing volumes." - Jacob Gallagher-Ross, The Drama Review
 
Broke House is produced by Big Art Group with support from King's Fountain and NYSCA.



ELEANOR BAUER & HEATHER LANG
THE HEATHER LANG SHOW BY ELEANOR BAUER AND VICE VERSA: Trash is Fierce Episode 2: Destiny's Realness U.S. PREMIERE 

THURS JAN 5 10:00 PM
SUN JAN 8 6:00 PM
WEDS JAN 11 11:00 PM
SUN JAN 15 9:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

The Heather Lang Show by Eleanor Bauer and Vice Versa is a double one-woman show: double the woman, double the show. In the uniquely gregarious context of a drag show cum spiritual talk show cum QVC infomercial, two outrageous and entertaining performers appropriate and reinvent the language and performance ethics of "realness". Combining genres of performance, remixing character prototypes and archetypes, challenging the economy of stuff with the immeasurable value of experience, these unlikely partners in crime fashion a homemade and uncanny amalgam of critiques on cultural identity, capitalism, creative expression and entertainment that holds a broken compact mirror up to the real(ness) world in all its twisted glory.

“Eleanor and Heather together is a whole lotta fierce in one place, ok? GET INTO IT.” - Miguel Gutierrez

Trash is Fierce Episode 2: Destiny's Realness was made possible with space grants from Kaaitheater and Heather's living room.



DANIEL LINEHAN
ZOMBIE APORIA U.S. PREMIERE

FRI JAN 6 7:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 7:30 PM
SUN JAN 8 4:00 PM
MON JAN 9 4:30 PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Zombie Aporia is a dance performance that is composed of many small pieces, like a rock music concert, or a book of poetry. The dancers use their voices in order to create an intricate connection between dance and music, so that the dance and the music are both being generated by the very same bodies. The performance breaks down the boundaries that separate body from voice, sound from image, rhythm from meaning. 
Zombie Aporia seeks to discover possibility within apparently impossible contradictions: music that is the result of dancing, emotional expression that begins physically, spontaneous feelings that are designed, words that give more of a sense of vibration than meaning.

“Linehan dissipated minimalism by breaking the nuclei of its structures.” - Gerard Mayen, Mouvement
 
Co-production support for Zombie Aporia was provided by Rencontres chorégrapiques internationales de Seine-Saint Denis, Centre national de la danse (Pantin, FR); Centre de Développement Chorégraphique Toulouse / Midi- Pyrénées (FR), in the context of the European project ‘Departs’; Kunstencentrum Vooruit (Gent, BE); BUDA Kunstencentrum (Kortrijk, BE), and was supported through residencies at L’Agora, Cité International de la danse, Montpellier Danse (FR); Centre de Développement Chorégraphique Toulouse / Midi-Pyrénées (FR); O Rumo do Fumo & Forum Dança  (Lisboa, PT); Kunstencentrum Vooruit (Gent, BE). Funding was provided by the Flemish authorities (BE) and Arcadi – distribution (FR).



JOHN JASPERSE 
CANYON

A canyon is formed by the simple act of erosion—in which the earth yields over time to a repetitive force, giving birth to a landscape of opening rather than of imposition. Many have described witnessing nature on this scale as life-changing—an experience not easily put into words. While abstract in nature, this new work by Jasperse and his collaborators seeks to reflect these qualities by exploring the extraordinary that originates with the ordinary. Six dancers, including Jasperse, turn the stage into a space beyond language, where strangeness, subtlety, spaciousness, density, and fervent shifts all play a role—centering on the transformative power of losing oneself in visceral experience, where intellect is humbled into a state of wonder.

“Mr. Jasperse has a keen eye for detail and composition; the subtle internal logic of his choreography tends to drive both sense and sensibility in his dances.”  - Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times

FRI JAN 6 9:00 PM
SAT JAN 7 2:30 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Canyon is commissioned as part of the BAM 2011 Next Wave Festival, and is co-commissioned by the Wexner Center for the Arts. Canyon is made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Canyon is supported by The MAP Fund, a program of Creative Capital supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Canyon is commissioned through Meet The Composer’s Commissioning Music/USA program and by the American Music Center Live Music for Dance Program. Canyon is supported, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Bossak/Heilbron Charitable Foundation, the Harkness Foundation for Dance, the James E. Robison Foundation, and by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Canyon was developed in residencies at The Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography (MANCC), MASS MoCA and CPR – Center for Performance Research.



CECILIA BENGOLEA, FRANCOISE CHAIGNAUD, MARLENE MONTEIRO FERITAS AND TRAJAL HARRELL

(M)IMOSA / TWENTY LOOKS OR PARIS IS BURNING AT THE JUDSON CHURCH (M)

FRI JAN 6 10:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 6:00 PM
SUN JAN 8 9:00 PM
MON JAN 9 6:00 PM
 
Run time: 90 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
(M)imosais a choreographic collaboration between Cecilia Bengolea, Francis Chaignaud, Marlene Monteiro Freitas and Trajal Harrell. The work is the third installment of Harrell’s Twenty Looks or Paris is Burning at the Judson Church, a series of five works in five sizes (XS to XL). The series revolves around the proposition "What would have happened in 1963 if someone from the voguing ball scene in Harlem had come downtown to perform alongside the early postmoderns at Judson Church?"
 
(M)imosais a performance by four choreographers investigating the collision of voguing culture, post-modern dance and the artists’ own personal and artistic identities, exploring the intensity of the fault between the desire and the impossibility of becoming another person.

 
“At the confluence of the ordinary and the spectacular are both beauty and entertainment.” - Roslyn Sulcas,The New York Times
 
Production: VLOVAJOB PRU; Co-Production:  Le Quartz – Scène nationale de Brest, Théâtre National de Chaillot, Centre de Développement Chorégraphique Toulouse, The Kitchen, Bomba Suicida / organisation funded by the Presidency of the Council of Ministers - Secretary of State for Culture/Directorate General for the Arts (DGArtes). Rehearsal space also provided by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Additional Funding has been provided by FUSED (French U.S. Exchange in Dance). With support from La Ménagerie de Verre (Paris) and Laboratoires d’Aubervilliers. Francois Chaignaud and Cecilia Bengolea are associated artists of La Ménagerie de Verre (Paris). VLOVAJOB PRU is funded by the DRAC Poitou-Charentes and receives support from the French Institute for its overseas projects.



ELASTIC CITY
SALVE 


FRI JAN 6 10:30 PM
SAT JAN 7 4:00 PM & 7:30 PM
SUN JAN 8 7:30 PM

Run time: 75 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Winter chills:
stuck in cold American
brick hallways and leftover props.
Todd Shalom and Niegel Smith walk you home
to putty floors, player-paintings and back-
stage Realness.
Take off your snowsuits, baby. This is not a walking tour.


“it’s refreshing to find a deliberately constructed experience—a performance—that exists just for itself, or just for you.” - Patricia Milder, The Brooklyn Rail



TRAJAL HARRELL 
ANTIGONE JR. 

SAT JAN 7 11:00 PM
SUN JAN 8 1:00 PM

Run time: 30 minutes 

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

In American and English naming tradition, a junior (jr.) is the son of a father with the same name. Thus, with Antigone Jr., the New York choreographer Trajal Harrell takes on a study of the role of Antigone from Sophocles' tragedy alongside performer Thibault Lac as Ismene, Antigone’s sister. This work is part of an ongoing series entitled Twenty Looks or Paris is Burning at The Judson Church, that comes in five regular sizes -  Extra Small (XS), Small (S), Medium known as (M)imosa, and the upcoming Large (L) and Extra Large (XL)- plus this junior size. They all take on the proposition: "What would have happened in 1963 if someone from the voguing dance tradition in Harlem had come downtown to Judson Church in Greenwich Village to perform alongside the early postmoderns?" Thus, what new relations would have been produced by voguing a greek tragedy, a concept against the aesthetic trends of 1963 Judson? Rather than illustrating a historical fiction, Harrell uses this proposition to rethink our contemporary context. What we see was neither possible at the voguing balls nor at Judson Church, but a third possibility is created, here and now. This jr. represents a potential uni-size in the series, both unique and unisex.

“I love watching Harrell indicate styles—now with down-and-dirty swiveling hips, now with weaving, undulating arms and soft stroking-the-air hands, now with high-stepping feet. Every pose resonates.” - Deborah Jowitt, The Village Voice

Antigone Jr. is a co-production of Menagerie de Verre. Residency support has been provided by Menagerie de Verre, Workspace Brussels, and Pact Zollverein.



AMERICANPUSSYFAGGOT!REALNESS 
CURATED BY EARL DAX

SAT JAN 7 8:00 PM – 4:00 AM

PUBLIC ASSEMBLY
70 North 6th Street between Wythe and Kent, Brooklyn
L train to Bedford Avenue

AMERICAN PUSSYFAGGOT! REALNESS is a performance-laden club night with two stages showcasing over twenty artists from the often-disparate worlds of dance, burlesque, cabaret, club and contemporary performance. For 2012 the event takes place at Public Assembly in vibrant Williamsburg, just a few minutes from the Bedford L subway stop or a short cab ride over the Williamsburg Bridge.

New York City nightclubs have long played a crucial role in the development of cutting edge performance. The real challenges - drunk and often inattentive crowds, limited technical capacity, etc - demand that artists wrest the attention of their audiences, helping to foster the intensity and dynamism characteristic of so many New York performers. 

With a name derived from an epithet slung at him during a fabled bar brawl, "downtown impresario" Earl Dax has developed PUSSYFAGGOT! into a one night only, mini-festival of queer culture which is presented quarterly in New York City and has been featured internationally at Queer Up North and Queer Zagreb. With a fellowship from the Museum of Arts and Design, Dax has also brought the event to New Orleans and a rural radical faerie community in Tennessee. This year's festival edition of the event will once again be hosted by internationally acclaimed performance artist Penny Arcade, herself a product of the club scene and "a criminal, homosexual avant garde." It's a night you won't want to miss and one you won't soon forget.

 
“Mr. Dax’s events, the most historically minded of the current generation of club performances, form one of the surest and most politically conscious links to the fabled East Village club scene of  [the 1970's and 80's].” - Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times



WALLY CARDONA AND JENNIFER LACEY WITH JONATHAN BEPLER 
TOOL IS LOOT 

SUN JAN 8 2:30 PM
MON JAN 9 8:00 PM

Run time: 70 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

“We would like to believe that our bodies and our brains are fantastically flexible and responsive to change, containing - at any moment - both the abstract and the specific.  Well… what we’ve learned is that this is both gloriously true and frustratingly untrue. But that’s okay, really, and this dance proves it.  There will be a swan, a prince, a robot, sexual behavior and two chairs. Sometimes all at once.” – Wally Cardona & Jennifer Lacey

For one year, choreographers Wally Cardona and Jennifer Lacey worked apart, holding tandem projects, in the U.S. and France respectively. Each artist solicited weeklong encounters with non-dance experts, voluntarily subjecting their aesthetic position to a barrage of assessment, opinions and desires from the “outsiders”, including an astro-physicist, sommelier, architect, film editor, medical supply salesman, kinetic sculptor, baroque opera singer, art critic, acoustician and social activist. Now, as the two choreographers come together in TOOL IS LOOT, the identity of each artist is simultaneously undone and strengthened in a duet that carries the ghosts of aesthetic propositions that are not their own. The opinions and interpretations of composer Jonathan Bepler and lighting designer Thomas Dunn function as yet another clarification and reinterpretation of TOOL IS LOOT.


“…utterly original, deeply comic and deviously beautiful. It doesn’t hurt, of course, that both Ms. Lacey and Mr. Cardona are effortlessly charismatic performers.” - Brian Seibert, The New York Times


A production of WCV, Inc., TOOL IS LOOT is co-commissioned by The Kitchen and EMPAC, Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY. Creation of the work was made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project with lead funding from the Dorris Duke Charitable Foundation and additional funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Boeing Company Charitable Trust; a 2010-2011 Joyce SoHo Creative Residency, funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; CNDC Angers and FUSED; Les Laboratoires d’Aubervilliers with the Département de la Seine-Saint-Denis; Baryshnikov Arts Center; Dance Place (D.C.); Atlantic Center for the Arts; the National Endowment for the Arts; public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; and Bossak/Heilbron Charitable Foundation.TOOL IS LOOT was commissioned through the Meet The Composer’s Commissioning Music/USA program.



CYNTHIA HOPKINS 
THIS CLEMENT WORLD WORK-IN-PROGRESS

SUN JAN 8 7:30 PM
TUES JAN 10 5:00 PM
 
Run time: 45 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
This Clement Worldis a new musical performance work by Cynthia Hopkins that poetically but urgently addresses our global climate crisis. The work is a live documentary film infused with three fictional characters that serve as tour guides for an imaginary exhibit conveying the wonders of our currently clement world. These guides in the form of the ghost of a Native American woman of the Cheyenne, a neutral alien observer visiting from the far reaches of outer space and a child from the not-so-distant future who has traveled back in time to visit the present, interpret this imaginary exhibit according to their own uniquely informed perspective. This Clement World uses original avant-folk orchestral songs, fantasy, imagination and storytelling to convey vital information regarding the climate crisis through a deeply personal and idiosyncratic lens.
 
This Clement Worldis scheduled to premiere at Les Subsistances in November 2012, followed by presentations at the Walker and St. Ann’s during the 2012-13 season. In May 2012, a work in progress concert version of the piece will be presented at St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn.    
 

"a triumph of disciplined thinking, narrative fluidity and musical accomplishment."- Ginia Bellafante, The New York Times
 
This Clement Worldis inspired in part by a December 2009 Tipping Point Conference at Columbia's Earth Institute, and a September 2010 Arctic Expedition with Cape Farewell. This Clement World has been commissioned by Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, MN; St. Ann’s Warehouse in Brooklyn NY; and Les Subsistances in Lyon, France. The creation of This Clement World is made possible by the generous support of the Jerome Foundation, the MAP Fund; individual donors including Eleanor Alper, Warren Habib, Adam and Diane Max, and Jony Perez; and residencies provided by Acadia Summer Arts Program, Yaddo, and The MacDowell Colony.



JEREMY WADE 
FOUNTAIN 

SUN JAN 8 10:30 PM
MON JAN 2:30 PM
WEDS JAN 11 8:00 PM

Run time: 70 minutes  

ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Fountain, a new solo from Jeremy Wade proposes a generative sphere of uncertainty. Wade circumvents traditional audience-performer dynamics and facilitates a generous group experience that evolves into a sensual engine. Wade assumes the role of preacher, shaman, and fool, by offering himself as a medium to receive and transform the energy of the theater space taking the audience on an emotional and alchemical journey.  

The development of this new work is the result of a longer research phase in which Wade practiced an amalgam of curating, hosting, teaching and choreographing, exploring the potential of the ecstatic body that lies within the community. Thus the combination of energetic interaction with the audience, suggestive visualizations and Wade’s virtuosic grotesque creates a supple machine that is strangely affecting.

Wade’s choreographic technique is a unique encounter of aesthetic, sociological and neurological dimensions. He derives movement from intense attention to the multiplicity of impulses in the body that are drawn from neurological processes, social constructions of norm and aesthetic decisions. The stage becomes an engine where the intersubjective actions/reactions are propelled into space enveloping the audience for maximal sensation and association.


“By turns frightening and pitiful, the process was fascinating to behold, and strangely affecting. The space was charged..” - Brian Seibert, The New York Times

BEST OF DANCE 2011 – David Velasco, ARTFORUM

A production by Jeremy Wade in co-production with HAU Berlin and Gaîté Lyrique Paris. Sponsored with funds from the Hauptstadtkulturfonds and by the Mayor of Berlin – Senate Chancellery – Cultural Affairs. With support by Tanzfabrik Berlin and Uferstudios.



JACK FERVER WITH MICHELLE MOLA 
ME, MICHELLE

MON JAN 9 9:30 PM
TUES JAN 10 8:00 PM

Run time: 60 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Me, Michelle is a duet between Jack Ferver and Michelle Mola, which takes on the forever-mysterious Queen Cleopatra as a vehicle for two performers to uncover the truths about iconography, monarchy, and themselves. Ferver offers a manic meta-characterization of Cleopatra during the infamous icon's final days. Attended by Mola’s portrayal of his/her servant, the two engage in funny, vicious, and tragic psychosexual games that vacillate between the childish to the sociopathic. Through coiling layers of performance ranging from the histrionically grand to the restlessly personal, Me, Michele illustrates how ego fueled by total power can turn into annihilation and the sadomasochism that can exist between gay men and heterosexual women.

"While he constructs and subverts identity, presenting and manipulating images of sexuality, abuse, and self love, those of us watching are implicated in his physically raw, violent works."- Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times

Me, Michelle was commissioned as part of the Museum of Art and Design’s series Risk + Reward and Performa 11.



DANIEL LINEHAN 
MONTAGE FOR THREE U.S. PREMIERE 
NOT ABOUT EVERYTHING 

TUES JAN 10 6:30 PM
WEDS JAN 11 7:00 PM
 
Total Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER 
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Montage for Three is a choreography-of-images that takes its source material entirely from found photographs, both famous and obscure. The two dancers embody the photographs with the absurd and impossible aim of giving presence to something which is absent. They strive to erase the inherent sentimentality of the photographs in order to see what lies beneath the nostalgia. The living/moving/present bodies confront the mechanical/static/reproduced bodies until the two forms begin to exchange roles. The still images begin to take on a life of their own, as the dancers begin to serve as a trigger for the viewer’s memory.
 
Daniel Linehan’s solo, Not About Everything, reflects on the basic elements that constitute art works as well as daily experiences – rhythm and change, language and meaning, energy and the human body.  The performance re-imagines these familiar concepts through a multi-layered system of intense physical effort and a constant cyclical use of language. Beginning from an apparent simplicity, the performer introduces a series of variations, accelerations, and subtle shifts, creating a funny and complex dance. As his obsessive circular motion inevitably produces feelings of disorientation and vertigo, Linehan struggles to remain lucid and strives to create a space for thoughtful reflection.


 “Linehan is extremely smart about what he’s doing, and he’s mesmerizing to watch in what seems like an ordeal of discovery” - Deborah Jowitt, The Village Voice

Co-production support for Montage for Three was provided by Rencontres Choréographiques Internationales de Seine Saint-Denis (Paris, FR) Not About Everythingwas created in part through the Bessie Schönberg/First Light Commissioning Program and Creative Residency Program of Dance Theater Workshop with support from the Jerome Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts (a US federal agency), the New York State Council of the Arts, and the Jerome Robbins Foundation. This work was also made possible in part through the Movement Research Artist Residency Project, funded in part by the Leonard and Sophie Davis Fund.



HOLCOMBE WALLER 
VISIONS OF A SONG MAN 

TUES JAN 10 9:30 PM
SAT JAN 14 10:00 PM

Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Visions of a song man presents singer, composer and performing artist Holcombe Waller in an evening of songs and musical excerpts from his recent interdisciplinary performances Surfacing (2011) and Into the Dark Unknown: The Hope Chest (2008). Holcombe and musical collaborator Ben Landsverk perform simplified arrangements that employ whittled down vocals, small guitars, viola and piano to evoke ghostly renditions of folk, liturgical, ceremonial and popular music forms.

"Waller's new album, Into the Dark Unknown, is a come-to-Jesus moment come to life,­ a clear-eyed look at confusion that's as arresting as it is intimate."  - Barbara Mitchell, National Public Radio



ANN LIV YOUNG
SLEEPING BEAUTY PART 1


WEDS JAN 11 9:30 PM
THURS JAN 12 7:00 PM

Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

There was once a sleeping woman. She was betrothed at birth, unknowingly. She hid in the forrest until she was a true woman. At first glance she fell in love with a noble man. Her heart was taken. A witch tried to kill her and her love. A spell was put on her family and her castle. They all slept for over a hundred years. At last, the noble prince understood and at true loves kiss she awoke.

“vulgar, raunchy, funny, earsplittingly loud” - Gia Kourlas, Time Out New York



KEITH HENNESSY 
ALMOST 

THURS JAN 12 10:00 PM
FRI JAN 13 10:00 PM

Run time: 45 minutes

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Almost is spontaneous performance action. Keith Hennessy comes to the American Realness to improvise; to invent a performance from almost nothing, accessing almost everything. Curious about histories of moving bodies and social movement, Hennessy’s improvisations are a dynamic mash-up of Judson, body art, stand up, Ridiculous, site-specific, lecture, and ritual (where Ridiculous means, among other things, queer subversive camp, and ritual is about how a group of people experience magic and/or death together). He might go off on a political rant, he might take questions from the audience; he’ll probably change costumes and struggle to be still.
 
A body accumulates information and makes choices. Tactics and images from the historical body of Hennessy’s work appear like habits, crutches, old friends. Almost is simultaneously research and the distillation of research into composition. Improvisation is sometimes like fishing, a practical effort that might become thriling or it might be boring and then it’s ok to space out and dream of other worlds... Remix, spectacle, ritual, action, dancing, not-dancing, speaking, playing, ridiculous, activist, visceral, performance.


"Hennessy is that rare artist who succeeds in translating fierce social concerns into artistically satisfying creations that enlighten and entertain.“ - Rita Felciano, SF Bay Guardian



JENNIFER LACEY 
GATTICA U.S. PREMIERE

FRI JAN 13 7:00 PM
SAT JAN 14 5:30 PM
SUN JAN 15 5:30 PM
 
Run time: 45 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
This piece was made especially for the Tanzquartier in Vienna under the stewardship of Sigrid Gareis in 2008. The event bore this unlikely title:  A Precise Woodstock of thinking. I was asked to consider the future of performance. Hmmm... What to do? My own future was more-than-unusually uncertain at that moment, which created a lovely calm about the whole business  as projections seemed un-urgent, unnecessary, inappropriate . I made the only thing I could which I still enjoy doing. The very pretty irony is that performance has no legitimate concern with the future. And also, this version of the future is a bit dated. Lovely. Please Come.
 

“a fearless, whip-smart artist” - Brian Seibert, The New York Times
 
Gattica was made possible with support from TanzQuartier Wein



ELEANOR BAUER 
(BIG GIRLS DO BIG THINGS) 

SAT JAN 14 8:30 PM
SUN JAN 15 4:00 PM
 
Run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

An empty promise, a preemptive lament, a flirtation with expectations, a wrestling match with potential, whispering what should be shouted and singing what should be whispered, (BIG GIRLS DO BIG THINGS) is a solo on scale, volume, extreme limits and the grey areas between them; on grandeur and vulnerability, hubris and humility, visibility and subtlety; on the fragile braggadocio of living large when less is more but more is also unmistakably more.
 
Eleanor Bauer invites the audience into the depths of the surface-oriented world of the performer, where the personal and the material are mutually imminent, where style is content, the 'how' is inseparable from the 'what', and the difference between fiction and reality is irrelevant. Navigating the folds, surfaces, and transformative possibilities of a too-large bear suit, Bauer performs a series of metamorphoses that challenge, obscure, and exploit her diverse capacities as a performer, to exercise and exorcise questions about the use of self onstage.
 
Through surrender to the theater and its discontents, in (BIG GIRLS DO BIG THINGS), self-expression drops the self and expression takes over.


“Ms. Bauer is a shape-shifter…lunging for her desperate pleasures as if her life depended on securing them, and earning our hearts in the process.” - Claudia La Rocco, The New York Times

Co-production support was provided by Workspace Brussels (BE) and Kunstencentrum Vooruit (Gent, BE). Funding was provided the Flemish Community Commission of the Brussels Capital Region.



ISHMAEL HOUSTON-JONESmean Cait: a fairytale in progress
YVONNE MEIER Mad Heidi 

SUN JAN 15 7:30 PM

Total run time: 60 minutes
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE
466 Grand Street / tickets $15 / AbronsArtsCenter.org

ISHMAEL HOUSTON-JONES mean Cait: a fairytale in progress
After two years of focusing on revivals of his earlier work, (What We're Made Of for Philadelphia Dance Projects and THEM at PS 122 and last year's American Realness), Ishmael Houston-Jones has embarked on a new project, mean Cait, directed by Houston-Jones  and created in collaboration with performers Robert Maynard and Gillian Walsh.

Inspirations for mean Cait are as diverse as golden knee pads, enchanted boxer-briefs, water boarding, step-ball-change, ball torture, and more Stevie Nicks than anyone would ever want to hear.


“Unabashedly gay and gritty“ - David Velasco, ARTFORUM  

YVONNE MEIER Mad Heidi 
Mad Heidi is a portrait of a Swiss woman, battling against her Swiss expectations. Lifelong traumas like, "how many times must I hike up the mountain?" surface. A sexy witch-like broom dance becomes unavoidable. Consumed by equal parts madness, rage, and sadness, "Heidi" descends into the netherworld of the collective unconscious in order to ferociously and boisterously destroy Swiss stereotypes and clichés. The work evokes is a sense of homesickness and longing as the performer appears alone before her audience -- naked, both inside and out.

 “A true east village renegade with a special talent for creating havoc…” - Gia Kourlas, The New York Times 

\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\




SHOW & TELL



DD DORVILLIER
CONVERSATION: Empty Spaces/Permanent Dances: A lecture and presentation on Danza Permanente

FRI JAN 6 6:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER  
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

The choreography of Danza Permanente comes from a musical composition created in Vienna two centuries ago by a nearly deaf man. Initially written for four stringed instruments, it's transposed to be seen, played by four dancers. They embody the musical structure, behaviors, and dynamics of the string quartet over time, and through space. The dancers behave as sound, in their becoming of visible music. We propose that you watch this performance in near-silence as you would listen to music in a shadowy room. The transposition is by DD Dorvillier and Zeena Parkins and dancers Fabian Barba, Nuno Bizarro, Walter Dundervill, Naiara Mendioroz and Heather Kravas. The acoustic environment created by Zeena Parkins and lighting design by Thomas Dunn follow the score and frame this visible music.

Followed by a conversation led by André Lepecki with Dorvillier and her collaborators, Zeena Parkins, and Thomas Dunn. 



REGGIE WILSON / FIST & HEEL PERFORMANCE GROUP 
CONVERSATION: Why A Dramaturg? 

SAT JAN 7 12:30 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER UNDERGROUND THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Reggie Wilson will be joined by dramaturg and historian Susan Manning to discuss the research process for his forthcoming work, (project) Moseses Project, slated for BAM’s Next Wave Festival in 2013. The conversation will explore how Wilson came to work with a dramaturge on this project, how the working relationship has evolved, and how the research process has embraced numerous tangents and unexpected connections in its explorations of Moses as story, myth and metaphor. Through this exploration Wilson and Manning will query “why a dramaturge” not only in Wilsons’ new work but also more broadly in the field of dance-making.



LUCIANA ACHUGAR 
WORK-IN-PROGRESS SHOWING: FEELingpleasuresatisfactioncelebrationholyFORM

SUN JAN 8 12:00 PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER  
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Inspired by the 1960's psychedelic experience, and its quest for enlightened interconnectivity and transcendence through altered states of consciousness, FEEL…FORM presents dance as a celebration of experience, and pleasure as the consummation of experience. With award-winning collaborators Michael Mahalchick (sound design) and Carrie Wood (lighting design), a quartet of women engage achugar’s signature durational phrasing, multiplying the dancers' movements to create an organic form reflecting both rigorous formalism and corporeal excess.



MIGUEL GUTIERREZ AND THE POWERFUL PEOPLE 
WORK IN PROGRESS SHOWING: And lose the name of action

MON JAN 9 1PM

ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

And lose the name of action is a new performance in development by Miguel Gutierrez and the Powerful People, featuring Gutierrez and a star studded cast: Michelle Boulé, Hilary Clark, Luke George, K.J. Holmes and Ishmael Houston-Jones. Inspired by discoveries in neuroscience and paranormal phenomena, and drawing on the mysterious logic of improvisation, this new piece pushes Gutierrez’s persistent questions about the wonder of living with an ephemeral body into the beyond. Wry and perplexing, And lose the name of actiontreats the inscrutability of dance as its inherent power and savors its unique ability to be something that doesn’t make sense. The piece includes sound design by Neal Medlyn, lighting by Lenore Doxsee, and visuals and writing by Boru O’Brien O’Connell.

The work in process showing will be followed by a moderated conversation with writer Jenn Joy.



BIG DANCE THEATER 
WORK IN PROGRESS SHOWING: Ich, KürbisGeist.

TUES  JAN 10 3:30PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER PLAYHOUSE STAGE 
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org
 
Ich, Kürbisgeist, written by Sibyl Kempson, is a theatrical piece of writing, but it is not a play in the usual sense. The language itself manifests the harsh landscape of a world facing destruction, populated by five crude people speaking a rigorous, specific, invented language. Every word is semi-recognizable, an amalgam of English, Swedish, German and Sid Ceasar. The language is as tough and unforgiving as the windswept, uncultivated landscape. The five characters boast of surviving prior catastrophes and they bitterly recount lost times. They harvest pumpkin seeds; they sing; they dance; they reminisce. They are ever under threat from vaguely understood, external forces from which there is no protection. They are grounded in fear, absurd and doomed. Their outrageous costumes, created by visual artist Suzanne Bocanegra, place us in an unspecified medieval European locale. Characters pop up on video, further rattling our sense of time and place. Ich, Kürbisgeist, strangely comic, full of rawness, fragmentation, confusion, and superstition, is in the end a contemplation of language itself.
 
"Ut's o gaad life if yo dan't wikken" 
(It's a good life if you don't weaken.)
 
KurbisGeist is co-commissioned by The Chocolate Factory and PS 122. Big Dance is grateful to the Abrons Art Center for  residency support. The finished piece will premiere at The Chocolate Factory in Oct. 2012.



KEITH HENNESSY 
CONVERSATION: Turbulence (a dance about the economy) 

WEDS JAN 11 5:30 PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Turbulence (a dance about the economy) is a bodily response to economic crisis, an experimental hybrid of contemporary dance, performance, agitprop, and circus. A collaborative creation choreographed by Keith Hennessy, Turbulence features a core company from San Francisco, musician Jassem Hindi from Paris, and 10 local performers. Modeling efficient solutions to economic and ecological crises, Turbulence uses resources sparingly and is adaptable to various venues. The intent of Turbulence is to inspire engagement and discourse in response to current economic crises and their historical antecedents  visible is a performance work that explores epic journeys, myths, dreams, and memories of the known world and an imagined future in an unknown land.



HOLCOMBE WALLER WITH CYNTHIA HOPKINS AND MIGUEL GUTIERREZ  
CONVERSATION: Surfacing & Song Based Performance 

THURS JAN 12 5:30 PM
 
ABRONS ARTS CENTER EXPERIMENTAL THEATER
466 Grand Street / FREE / Reservations Required / RVSP: americanrealness@gmail.com / AbronsArtsCenter.org

Singer, songwriter and performance maker Holcombe Waller will be joined by choreographer and music maker Miguel Gutierrez for a conversation exploring the indefinable genre of contemporary song-based performance. Their conversation will seek to elucidate an understanding of how song-based performance has the potentiality to arrive in a similar pefromative space as the work of more theater or dance based contemporary performance. In addition these artists will explore the specific realities around the creation of Waller’s newest song-based performance, Surfacing, a collection of sung narrativesexploring Catholic beautification, anarchist communist revolution, health care activism and the history-in-the-remaking of contemporary performance art, that toe the line between realism and fantasy.



@r SHOP

Opening up new channels of information and exchange for the American Realness audience, the shop will feature performance texts, catalogues, companion publications, journals and artist merchandise.  Featured publications include performance texts by Miguel Gutierrez, Nature Theater of Oklahoma, Sibyl Kempson and Karinne Keithley Syers all published by the 53rd State Press.

Additionally the shop will carry back issues of the beloved Movement Research Performance Journal, THEATER Magazine, and full series of publications from Danspace Project’s Choreographic Center Without Walls (CW2) PLATFORM series featuring catalogues created by artists and editors including Ralph Lemon & Katherine Profeta, Juliette Mapp & Ursula Eagly, Trajal Harrell, and Judy Hussie-Taylor.


@r CAFÉ

by Push Cart Coffee

Before, after, or in between performances, the café offers American Realness patrons- coffee, tea, baked goods, pastries, sandwiches, hot paninis, salad, soup, wine and beer. Located on site at the Abrons Arts Center, the café is the perfect place to gather, hangout, meet with artists and colleagues, or just pickup a snack, stop by to enjoy a casual atmosphere and to engage in a dialogue around all the Realness you've been served.

12249527699?profile=original

DANCE-TECH .TV MEDIA HUB
Dance-tech.tv founder and director Marlon Barios Solano and co-producer Josephine Dorado will be the official embedded_vloggers @ American Realness 201, creating and distributing video podcasts in conversation with festival artists and audiences. In addition, they will post video excerpts from festival performances online through Dance-tech.tv and on-site at the Abrons Arts Center in the dance-tech.tv media hub. Stop by the Media Hub to view poscasts and video excerpts and find out more about dance-tech.tv





ADDITIONAL

UPCOMING

PERFORMANCES...



YVONNE MEIER THE SHINING

DECEMBER 13-18 & 20-23, 2011
NEW YORK LIVE ARTS
NEW YORK, NEW YORK

The Shining is a thrilling dance-installation set inside the intricate maze of 350 refrigerator boxes. Originally created and performed in 1993 at Performance Space 122, the Bessie Award winning, The Shining puts audience members and performers together in an extraordinarily crafted, anxiety producing, living, breathing and inimitable environment.

This reconstruction of The Shining is made possible, in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius. Additional support for The Shining is given by contributors to The DTW Commissioning Fund at New York Live Arts.

Read more…

12249516272?profile=originalTere O'Connor Dance
Cover Boy

Dec 8-11,  Dec 13,  Dec 15
Danspace Project, St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, 131 East 10th Street (at Second Ave)

In this new evening-length work, Tere O’Connor uses the body as a site for transformation. Part expression, part exorcism, and part political observation, Cover Boy processes multiple layers of the closeted gay experience into an organically complex dance; a choreographic essay on  the socially charged nature of “otherness.”  Cover Boy is performed by Michael Ingle, Niall Jones, Paul Monaghan, and Matthew Rogers. The work includes an original score by O'Connor's longtime collaborator, composer James Baker, with set design by Aptum Architecture (Roger Hubeli and Julie Larsen) and costume design by FACADE/FASAD.

Presented as part of Danspace Project's 2011-12 Commissioning Initiative, Cover Boy is made possible, in part, with support from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Additional support has been provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, the Vapnek Family Fund, and the University of Illinois Research Board. Cover Boy was created in residence at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, Mt. Tremper Arts Festival, and through LMCC’s Residency Program at Governors Island.

General Admission: $18 ($12 members).  http://danspaceproject.org/

Read more…

Blog Topics by Tags

Monthly Archives