Jennifer Jones of skybetter and associates, photo by Tom Caravaglia

In 2010, skybetter and associates left a lasting impression when they made their Joyce SoHo debut. This month, from April 5th to 22nd, they return to that venue with a world premiere and several works from their repertoire.  The Brooklyn-based company, founded in 2008 by artistic director Sydney Skybetter, will perform Near Abroad (2008), The Laws of Falling Bodies (2009), Temporary Matters (2011), Little Boy (2012), and the world premiere of For Want of Sleep, featuring a commissioned score by composer Sxip Shirey.

skybetter and associates has partnered with Nel Shelby Productions to produce an innovative, multi-camera live stream of the performance on April 15th.  Plus, every performance will be followed by a talk back with various artists, scholars, consultants and managers, including Eduardo Vilaro, artistic director of Ballet Hispanico (4/5); David Parker, artistic director of Bang Group (4/7); Bill Bragin of Lincoln Center and composer Sxip Shirey (4/14); Jill Johnson, Director of Dance at Harvard University (4/15); Tim Cynova, deputy director of Fractured Atlas (4/20); and Jennifer Edwards of Edwards & Skybetter | Change Agency (4/22).

Skybetter explained, “I’ve learned through extensive work in the dance community as a marketer and technologist that post-show talk backs are square one in audience engagement. So we thought, why just have one during the run when we can have one following every show.”

skybetter and associates performs at Joyce SoHo April 5, 7, 11, 15 & 20 at 7:30pm, and April 14 & 22 at 2pm. Seating is very limited. Tickets are available online.

155 Mercer Street, New York City
B/D/F/M to Bway-Lafayette, R to Prince, 6 to Bleecker

Batsheva Dance Company in Ohad Naharin's "Hora", photo by Gadi Dagon

Last month, I had the privilege of speaking with Batsheva Dance Company’s artistic director, Ohad Naharin.  Our conversation is in this month’s issue of The Brooklyn Rail.  Also in this issue: Nancy Dalva talks with Paul Taylor, Siobhan Burke reviews Pat Catterson’s To Lie in the Sky (sad that I missed it!), and Christine Hou reviews works by Vanessa Anspaugh and Jen Rosenblit at New York Live Arts.  Take a look. Many thanks to the Rail’s dance editor – and my fellow blogger – Ryan Wenzel for making it all happen.

Summation Dance at BAC

March 5, 2012

Julie McMillan and Cat De Angelis of Summation Dance, photo by David Andrako

Summation Dance presents its second annual New York City season this weekend at Baryshnikov Arts Center with the world premiere of Deep End, choreographed by Sumi Clements and produced by Taryn Vander Hoop. The new work casts its audience into the depths of a fishbowl, imagined anew and harboring the illustrious, yet formidable, New York City. Drawing upon this metaphor, the work explores the ideas of confinement, self-awareness, co-habitation in an environment constantly in flux, and the insatiable quest to achieve. Seen through the female perspective, ten women transform the stage into a world in which failure and success are fundamentally equal in a place whose inhabitants seem to ignore the futility of it all.

Summation Dance will perform this Thursday through Saturday, March 8th to 10th, at the Baryshnikov Arts Center – 450 West 37th Street, NYC. Tickets are $20 ($12 for students) and are available at www.smarttix.com or by phone at 212.868.4444.

Writing About Gaga for BAM

February 26, 2012

BAM asked me to share some thoughts on Gaga, the movement language created by Batsheva Dance Company’s artistic director Ohad Naharin, in anticipation of the company’s performances next month at the BAM Howard Gilman Opera House. I was happy to do so, and am looking forward to seeing Batsheva in Hora. You can read my blog post here, and enjoy the above footage from MAX.

New York City Ballet in Christopher Wheeldon's "Polyphonia", photo by Erin Baiano

From 2001 to 2008, Christopher Wheeldon was New York City Ballet’s first-ever resident choreographer, providing him with a home for creating dances (not to mention a company of talented dancers) and offering NYCB new work from the man that many considered a promising heir to Balanchine. Though Wheeldon departed in 2008 to start his own company, Morphoses, he returned to NYCB often.  On January 28th and February 4th, the company honored him with an all-Wheeldon program.

This is the first time that NYCB has created such a program, but it has popped up elsewhere in the past.  Miller Theatre presented three of his works (all set to music by Gyorgy Ligeti) in 2005.  Each ballet on that program was fascinating on its own, but when placed side by side, certain choreographic habits became apparent.  NYCB’s program suffered in a similar way: by the third ballet, there was repetition in his choice of movement and shapes. Angular arms that carve through space and women held aloft with spread limbs make frequent appearances in his work. Last week’s program was further proof of this, and it revealed Wheeldon’s limitations – making each piece look less striking on a Wheeldon triple bill.

Les Carillons, a world premiere this season, is chock-full of movement – particularly arm gestures – that seemed detached from the music.  The endless footwork and changing formations were too excessive for Georges Bizet’s regal score.  Although the choreography tapped into the principal women’s individual strengths (Tiler Peck’s musicality, Sara Mearns’ lyricism and supple back, and Maria Kowroski’s long limbs), the ballet suffered from a “more is better” mentality and appeared thematically disjointed. Wearing brown costumes with a hint of color, the corps of ten swept on and off the stage between solos and duets for the principals in a dizzying rush of movement.

New York City Ballet in Christopher Wheeldon's "Les Carillons", photo by Andrea Mohin

Even though Les Carillons felt chaotic, it looked rather calm compared to DGV: Danse à Grande Vitesse, a 2006 work for The Royal Ballet that was making its NYCB premiere.  Set to Michael Nyman’s propulsive but eventually repetitive score, which was created to commemorate the 1993 inauguration of the north European train line known as TGV, twenty-four dancers were on a journey of their own that rushed from one place to the next.  Jean-Marc Puissant’s thin sheets of metal peeled upward from the stage, creating a sense of motion. Arms and legs carving through space; bodies suspended in geometric shapes; and countless lifting of women overhead – the dancers’ lightning-quick bodies were part of DGV’s powerful but frustratingly busy engine.

Sandwiched between the two works – a smart choice – was the spare and haunting Polyphonia, to a piano score by Ligeti.  With architecturally rich movement set within an environment that shifted from tense to meditative, the ballet looked as inventive as it did when it premiered in 2001. The four couples, in simple purple costumes, are sublime.  Sara Mearns was poignant in her slow duet with Craig Hall, and Tiler Peck and Gonzalo Garcia’s waltz was quietly profound.  Wendy Whelan, performing in the role she originated, was otherworldly. In her second pas de deux with Jared Angle, the final image of Whelan rotating overhead and crawling underneath one of Angle’s legs to end in a sitting position, was chilling.  She looked so at home in the choreography, filling every shape and line with spectacular dimensionality.  On a program with two large-scale, fast-moving works, Polyphonia is even more gratifying for its minimalism and severe beauty.

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