The Best of 2008

December 30, 2008

There were a lot of memorable dance performances and events in 2008. Here are ten that I thought were outstanding.

1. PeepDance by Nimrod Freed’s Tami Dance Company: There’s nothing quite like a village of peepers in Central Park on a hot summer night.

PeepDance at Central Park SummerStage, photo by Evan

2. Hofesh Shechter’s Uprising at Fall For Dance: A fierce, intensely athletic piece for eight men depicting organized chaos. Watch the video by Article 19.

3. Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet’s performance of Sunday, Again, choreographed by Jo Strømgren: One of the most exhilarating works of the year.

Cedar Lake dancers in Sunday, Again, photo by Carina Musk-Anderson

4. Damian Woetzel’s final performance at New York City Ballet: It was sad to see one of the company’s finest male dancers end his 23-year performing career.

Damian Woetzel in Prodigal Son, photo by Richard Corman

5. Participating in a Gaga workshop at the JCC Manhattan, led by a dancer from Batsheva Dance Company: This was an excellent introduction to Ohad Naharin’s movement language.

6. Lar Lubovitch Dance Company at City Center: The mysterious North Star, set to Philip Glass’s score of the same title, was particularly captivating.

7. Jo Strømgren’s The Society at Abrons Arts Center: A clever examination of ethnocentrism that starts as a battle between coffee and tea drinkers.

Jo Strømgren’s The Society, photo by Knut Bry

8. Christopher Wheeldon’s Liturgy, performed by Wendy Whelan and Albert Evans: Although this work premiered in 2003, last January was my first time seeing it. The hauntingly beautiful score by Arvo Pärt, Wheeldon’s mesmerizing movement, and Whelan’s ethereal dancing brought me to tears.

Wendy Whelan and Albert Evans in Christopher Wheeldon’s Liturgy, photo by Paul Kolnik

9. Going behind the scenes for Jill Johnson’s The Copier, performed by Cedar Lake: Following Jill and the dancers throughout the creative process was just as enjoyable as watching the final product.

Opening night of The Copier, photo by Gillian Crosson

Jill Johnson watching a rehearsal of The Copier, photo by Evan

10. David Alvarez’s performance in Billy Elliot: This kid can dance. He was in total command for the nearly 3-hour show.

David Alvarez in Billy Elliot, photo by Sara Krulwich


Ana-Maria Lucaciu in The Copier, photo by Evan

I returned to Chelsea on Friday evening for a final viewing of Jill Johnson’s The Copier. As I mentioned in my review of the opening night performance, every viewing of an interactive installation such as The Copier provides a unique and slightly different experience. So I was eager to observe the installation again and see what new subtleties I would discover.

David Poe’s score, which is filled with digital chaos, resonated with me even more as I became aware of the sounds around me: the distant blare of an ambulance, cell phones beeping before the performance began, the sound of people shifting from one part of the room to another, even the faint sound my camera made when I took a photograph. But the harsh technological sounds in the score are balanced by melodic piano solos, and the choreography reflected the distinctions between the two. The dancers moved as an ensemble to the jarring city noise or the sound of a copier, often rushing about at lightning speed and following – or at least recognizing – each others’ movement. To the more serene sections of the score, they danced slowly, almost delicately, in duets or solos – without any noticeable copying. The piece’s peaceful closing, with dimmed lighting that distinctly contrasted with the fluorescent white lights that hung along the sides of the theater, emphasized the significance and rarity of an individual moving freely and independently. Copying was the inspiration for and theme of The Copier, but I found the moments of individuality to be the most poignant and striking.

Ana-Maria Lucaciu in Jill Johnson’s The Copier, photo by Gillian Crosson

Gillian Crosson, a friend of David Poe (the composer of Cedar Lake’s The Copier), was generous enough to send me some of her beautiful photographs from opening night of the installation. You can view all of her photos from the performance here. Enjoy!

Soojin Choi in The Copier, photo by Gillian Crosson

Cedar Lake dancers in The Copier, photo by Gillian Crosson

Acacia Schachte in The Copier, photo by Gillian Crosson

Cedar Lake dancers in Jill Johnson’s The Copier, photo by Evan

I’ve been fortunate enough to follow the progress of Jill Johnson’s The Copier for Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet over the past two weeks by observing rehearsals, but I still wasn’t sure what to expect at the installation’s premiere. The space felt and looked different when it was filled with an audience, making it more challenging yet exciting to navigate around the T-shaped stage. While I chose to circulate throughout the performance (it took me the entire forty minutes to make a complete circle around the stage) in order to continually change my vantage point, the majority of the audience remained stationary, either sitting on the floor or in the provided seating. As Jill mentioned in my initial interview with her, an installation requires the audience to be selective about what they watch. There’s no right or wrong, but how and where someone chooses to observe the performance certainly affects his or her viewing experience.

The fifteen dancers warmed up to nature sounds while the audience filtered in, and a paper shredder spit white streamers out across the stage, suggesting that we shred our copying tendencies. The room fell quiet as the dancers took their places – many of them laying on the floor with their eyes closed – under dimmed lighting. Individual routines and patterns gained momentum, perhaps reflecting the ever-quickening pace of the city, and began to overlap with others’ routines, resulting in partnering work, trios, and quartets. The dancers, all in socks and dissimilar costumes by Stephen Galloway that emphasized individualism amid a theme of copying, slid gracefully across the floor, but countered this with piercing jumps, sweeping arms, and kinetic, multi-dimensional athleticism. A blend of city noise – the subway, cell phones, and other unidentifiable digital chaos – in David Poe’s imaginative score was suddenly replaced by the jarring, rhythmic sound of a copy machine as a bar of light moved slowly – perhaps too slowly considering the rapid pace of a copier – across the empty stage. Standing in a line, the dancers became aware of each other, following one another’s subtle shifts and intruding personal space. The line dispersed into a variety of thoughtful duets and expansive ensemble movement, but the piece ended as tranquilly as it began – not accompanied by city noise, but by a simple, melodic piano solo.

Ana-Maria Lucaciu, Jon Bond, Harumi Terayama, and Golan Yosef

The improvisational component of the installation might not have been noticeable on stage, as the dancers so masterfully and seamlessly executed the movement that I found it hard to believe they were improvising. However, working with and around an audience requires preparation for anything. While I was immersed in watching a trio, a dancer rushed behind me and got caught up in my shoulder bag. I assumed he would continue on his path – probably rushing to his next entrance point for the piece – as planned in rehearsal, but he stopped, turned, and apologized to me before proceeding. It might not have been the most “dancey” or intriguing interaction between dancer and viewer, but it demonstrated what can happen when there is no barrier between the two, and signified how interactive dance can be more personal.

After attending Cedar Lake’s spring season this past June, I wrote, “The more I see of Cedar Lake, the more aware I am that it is definitely not a “cookie-cutter” company filled with dancers that all move similarly and approach the works in the same way. Rather, Cedar Lake is a company of individuals who bring distinct personalities and movement qualities to the dances…” The notion that everyone copies was at the heart of The Copier, but the dancers moved so distinctively that even as they copied others’ movement, they looked unique. I think this was part of Jill’s intention – to demonstrate, as she wrote in the program notes, that “in a digital era defined by seamless duplication and instantaneous dissemination, the fact that dance mostly defies notation and replication is part of what makes it special”. Every movement – and every performance of The Copier – appears different every single time, and therefore, every experience viewing the installation is different as well. That being said, I’m looking forward to observing The Copier again before it closes on August 23rd.

Tickets can be purchased here, and remember to enter “BLOGCP” where it says “discount code” to receive a special discount for blog readers.

A bar of light like that of a copy machine moves across the stage

Nickemil Concepcion and Soojin Choi rehearsing Jill Johnson’s The Copier

Before yesterday’s tech rehearsal started at Cedar Lake, choreographer Jill Johnson warned me that The Copier will look entirely different when it premieres tomorrow (August 20th) and suggested that I pass this information along to readers. It was my first time seeing the piece from start to finish with costumes and lighting, and without going into detail about what I observed, suffice it to say that I was fascinated by the movement, fluorescent lighting, and ways in which the dancers interacted. Jill, music composer David Poe, some production staff, and I circled the T-shaped stage throughout the tech run, changing our vantage points and trying out the various seating options. I have included some photos, and I’ll leave you with several words that sprung to mind as I watched the installation: nature; noise; calm; chaos; collectives; individuals; leaders; followers; technology; connections; disconnections.

Don’t forget to order tickets for The Copier, August 20-23, and remember to enter “BLOGCP” where it says “discount code” to get a special discount for blog readers.

Jon Bond

 

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