Pam Tanowitz's The Wanderer Fantasy at Danspace Project
http://www.thirteen.org/sundayarts/blog/ballet/pam-tanowitz-at-danspace-project/845/
You have to wonder that if Pam Tanowitz were male, would she be twice as well-known as she is now? Her talent is at least as deserving as that of some of her male counterparts, and in fact the choreographers whose work hers occasionally elicits—Merce Cunningham and Mark Morris, to name a couple—are household names. In any case, her latest work, The Wanderer Fantasy (Dances 1 and 2), performed at Danspace Project last week, further etched her name into the “don’t miss” pantheon of contemporary New York choreographers.
The SUNY Purchase Dance Corps performedDance 1, augmented by Cunningham dancer Daniel Madoff, set to a taped score of music by Schubert and Liszt and performed before Philip TreviƱo’s cheap-chic set of squiggle-painted cardboard boxes. Though they may be students, the dancers showed a technical refinement and polish necessary to perform Tanowitz’s structured hybrid of modern and ballet that often evokes Cunningham. It is a natural fit on Madoff, and on Dylan Crossman, another Cunningham dancer who joins in later. Crisp right-angle arabesques and attitudes mix with contracted torsos and rocking pelvises in Tanowitz’s particular blend of casually formal and intentionally relaxed. Five pairs freeze in quasi-serious ballet poses; the group links arms and steps slowly, ceremoniously. The dramatic, romantic music is sometimes visualized, other times refuted. Black light set off the painted motifs, plus the white shirts and programs in the audience.
Tanowitz’s company of eight performed Dance 2, this time to Schubert played live by Alan Feinberg. Karen Young designed elegant one-sleeved tunics, black with yellow accents, were worn with beige tights by both genders. The choreographer’s deliberate movement was clearly supported by lots of rehearsal time, making everything—fast, slow, heavy, light—feel substantial. Moving in pairs and trios, the groups intersected, or danced in their own zones, and some expressionistic gestures added a human dimension to a pleasingly rigorous, formal, abstract work.
Image: Pam Tanowitz’s company. Photo by Julie Lemberger.
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