The New Dance
Changing Places is an hour long abstract work to Pulitzer prize winning composer Steve Reich’s 1970 masterwork, Drumming. Five women kaleidoscopically define space by creating points, lines and planes within it. Stillnesses and place-to-place movements join to generate configurations which overlap, punctuate and dissolve into each other. The place changes.
This dance began simply, in 2005, with the urge to move. Intricate stepping patterns and evocative movement knots gradually emerged and seemingly organized themselves into distinct families. By 2006 this dance had its own roots, both structurally and materially strong. But then inexplicably all work stopped for almost a year, until finally by chance the choreographer found Drumming. This music so enlivened the movement material that the choreographer felt forced to accept its challenge. So it is the twin gifts, the gift of the particular piece of music itself and the gift of finding it that in the end has brought about Changing Places.
To this effort lighting designer Mike Riggs brings knowledge of the work of composer Steve Reich and of light artist Dan Flavin, as well as his team, sound engineer Nathan Leigh and costumer Sidney Maresca. Dancers all new to Vencl Dance, are Lisa Bostwick, Erin Pellecchia, Sara Roer, Julia Sabangan, and Lindy Schmedt.
Tickets $15/$12, are available at the door at 212-388-9563 or at susan@vencldance.org. Take the 1, 2, 3, A, C or L to 14th street; walk west to Hudson Street, south to Bethune, and west on Bethune to 55 (Westbeth).
Not for me.
It is easier to tell, than to make.
I have been looking looking around for this kind of information. Will you post some more in future? I’ll be grateful if you will.
Thanks, Margaret.
I find I like the slide show format for the First Look at a new dance. Video cuts of rehearsal runs weaken the material partly because they are cuts and partly because so they are filled with so many visual distractions. But then photos are static, and this is a dance website. So……voila! A slide show!
I am learning. I think I now know what kind of photos I need to collect in order to make a slide show.
That is really wonderful! It is a little different, perhaps more interesting than some slide shows I have seen.