Showing posts with label cori kresge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cori kresge. Show all posts

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Rashaun Mitchell's Interface

Silas Riener standing on Rashaun Mitchell. Photo: Stephanie Berger
Interface, choreographed by Rashaun Mitchell with the performers, at Baryshnikov Arts Center, Mar 14. 

Title applies to:
  • The dancers relating to one another
  • Their interior (mental) and exterior (physical)
  • Facial emoting vs. felt emotion
  • Portions of the body in different actions, like the old game of "exquisite corpse"
  • The dancers and the audience
  • Our reaction to their performance
  • The projections of spliced halves of two dancers' faces
  • The graphic b/w set panels abutting one another
  • All elements converging in that space at that time
The dance:
  • Rashaun Mitchell, Melissa Toogood, Cori Kresge, and Silas Riener all danced with Cunningham. These alumni are a uniquely talented, ready pool of superdancers now dispersing throughout myriad performances. Seize on chances to see these great artists.  
  • The dancers make various faces indicative of different emotions. Do they feel how they look?
  • Start: they stand in four corners of the white marley like boxers in a ring, shoulders skew, then limbs jut out at angles
  • They converge in the center, reaching up like children stretching
  • Mitchell is pulled in a split by the others; he runs around the perimeter and sometimes hides and watches from the edge
  • Near the end, one dancer carries two others; they alternate roles
  • Facing outward, they circle, link elbows, and rotate in a circle, making exaggerated faces
  • A remarkable site-specific work using BAC's windowed theater
Melissa Toogood's wild solo:
  • She unties her long hair, which drapes over her face most of the solo
  • Seated in a pike, she shudders violently, pulls her legs into a butterfly, and tickles her feet with her hair
  • Kicks and stomps desperately
  • The others crawl under the painted set panels almost as if to take refuge from her fury
  • Mitchell grabs her ankles and spins her, face down, in circles, faster, until only her hands are brushing the ground
The choreographer, pulled every which way. Photo: Stephanie Berger
Silas Riener's solo:
  • Folds his arms into triangles and holds them next to his head, like wings
  • Contorts his face in varying emotions
  • One leg folded into a rétiré, he rises glacially on the other (magnificent) foot, pulling himself taut vertically
  • Stepping forward and then back, he arches backward dangerously deeply
  • He pushes through splits, showing more remarkable flexibility 
Production notes:
  • The inventive site-specific visual design is by Mitchell with Fraser Taylor and Davison Scandrett (who also designed the lighting) 
  • Taylor designed the b/w silkscreen rectangular prints that  slide like barn doors alternate with exposed windows on two walls of the Gilman Space at BAC
  • Video by Nicholas O'Brien is projected on the windows: spliced faces, animated biomorphic shapes
  • Music by Thomas Arsenault, mixed live, varies from moos to rumbles to bells