Yearly Archives: 2011

MAKER FAIRE

Sam Blanchard will show off his Polaroid Matrix Flipbook at fifth annual Maker Faire

New York Hall of Science
47-01 111th St., Flushing Meadows Corona Park
September 17-18, $10-$25
718-699-0005
www.makerfaire.com
www.nysci.org

The annual Maker Faire, being held this weekend at the New York Hall of Science, celebrates the cutting edge of creativity and innovation over the course of two days of talks, demonstrations, live performances, and workshops focusing on such topics as engineering, recycling, sustainability, and music. The DIY festival will feature hundreds of makers from all over the world showing off their latest projects, from Ayah Bdeir’s littleBits and Mark Perez’s Life-Size Mousetrap to Marek Michalowski’s BeatBots and Sean Casey’s Tornado Intercept Vehicle, from Tamar Ziv’s Projected Realities and Eben Upton’s Raspberry Pi to Patti Robinson’s Time Warp Souvenir and Lynn Pentecost’s Dogzilla. The schedule includes such programs as Custom Pet Applique Tote Demonstration and How to Sew a Skirt in One Hour at the Craft Demo Stage, Kinect Abnormal Motion Assessment System, Hacking Your Sleep, and PCR and DNA Barcoding at Health 2.0, Paul Rudolph’s percussive GLANK at the Music Stage, Coke Zero & Mentos Fountains, a deconstruction competition, acts from Circus Warehouse, and twi-ny fave Bill Shannon highlighting his Shannon Technique (in which he street-dances with crutches he needs because of a degenerative physical condition) on the Rocket Stage. Meanwhile, the Live Stage will showcase such projects as Christopher Olah’s Programmatic CAD and Its Future, Tim Lillis & Andy Turley’s Collaborative Gaming in the Twitter Age, Karen Kaun’s STEMGarden, and Hackerspaces: Schools of the Future. It should be quite a time for science geeks and computer nerds of all ages, and at heart, doesn’t that mean all of us?

TWI-NY TALK: BILL T. JONES

Kennedy Center honoree and two-time Tony winner Bill T. Jones begins his company’s inaugural New York Live Arts season this week

BODY AGAINST BODY
New York Live Arts
Bessie Schönberg Theater
219 West 19th St. between Seventh & Eighth Aves.
September 16-24, $32-$40 ($15 on 9/20)
212-691-6500
www.newyorklivearts.org

Last December was a big month for two-time Tony-winning choreographer Bill T. Jones (Spring Awakening, Fela!). The Florida-born dance legend, who formed the highly influential Bill T. Jones / Arnie Zane Dance Company in 1982, was awarded the prestigious Kennedy Center Honor, which he called “one of the highest moments in my life,” and he also teamed up with Dance Theater Workshop to create the artist-led New York Live Arts, which is dedicated to producing, presenting, and educating in its mission “to become a place for dance that is vital to the fabric of social and cultural life in New York, America, and beyond.”

This week Bill T. Jones / Arnie Zane Dance kicks off the inaugural New York Live Arts season with the exciting Body Against Body program: “Monkey Run Road” (1979), “Continuous Replay” (1977/1991), and “Valley Cottage: A Study” (1980) will be performed September 16, 18, 21, 23, and 25, with “Duet x 2” (1982), “Continuous Replay,” and “Blauvelt Mountain” (1980) scheduled for September 17, 20, 22, and 24. “Valley Cottage” and “Monkey Run Road” are being performed in New York for the first time since their premieres. “Continuous Replay” will also feature live music played by John Oswald or DJ Spooky as well as a rotating cast of guest performers, including Matthew Rushing from Alvin Ailey, Janet Eilber and Blakeley White-McGuire from Martha Graham, Arthur Aviles from Typical Theater, Elena Demyanenko from Trisha Brown, Jennifer Goggans from Merce Cunningham, Megan Sprenger from mvworks, and Richard Move from MoveOpolis! Jones will take part in a preshow talk with Marcia B. Siegel on September 21 and a postshow discussion with Janet Wong, DTW/NYLA artistic director Carla Peterson, and the nine-member Bill T. Jones company on September 23. The premiere gala takes place September 15. Amid this flurry of activity, Jones was able to squeeze in some time to answer a few questions from twi-ny.

twi-ny: Last December, when the merger between Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company and Dance Theater Workshop was announced, you said, “We are doing something that supposedly can’t be done.” Now you are about to present your first season together. How did you, in fact, get it done?

Bill T. Jones: At the core of this merger was collaboration, and that’s exactly how this inaugural season came together. Carla Peterson spearheaded the curation process, and our talented staff and board of directors have worked tirelessly to bring ideas and resources to the table to make this institution a leader in the performing arts community and a home for movement-based artists. I am very excited about the artists on our season and am proud of the new programs we’re building.

New York Live Arts season kicks off with Bill T. Jones’s “Body Against Body” program

twi-ny: For your first series of performances at NYLA, you are revisiting some of your most iconic works, including the third iteration of “Continuous Replay.” Why did you choose these particular works for this inaugural season?

BTJ: Body Against Body is a program that the company premiered earlier this year (at the ICA/Boston) and we’re now touring it extensively in the upcoming season. It only seemed fitting that we would open the inaugural season of New York Live Arts with this program: It consists of some of the earliest pieces that Arnie Zane and I created together — two of which [“Valley Cottage” and “Blauvelt Mountain”] we premiered at Dance Theater Workshop in the early ’80s.

The newest reconstruction on the program, which will premiere at New York Live Arts, is “Valley Cottage: A Study.” This work has not been seen since Arnie and I first performed it in 1981. I think collectively these seminal works give audience members a glimpse of my roots as a choreographer while also acknowledging New Yorks Live Arts’ foundation, rooted in both my company’s and Dance Theater Workshop’s history and legacy. I like to think of it as a looking back to look forward.

EMIL & FRIENDS

Fans can say hello as they behold Emil & Friends celebrate new album at Piano’s on Thursday night

Piano’s
158 Ludlow St.
Thursday, September 15, $8, 9:00
212-505-3733
wwwww.myspace.com/emilandfriends
www.pianosnyc.com

Celebrating the upcoming release of Lo & Behold (Cantora, October 11, 2011), the follow-up to last year’s Downed Economy, Boston native Emil Hewitt, now a Williamsburgian who fronts Emil & Friends, will lead the band in the final night of its September residency at Piano’s on Thursday night at 9:00. The new record ranges from fresh, bright pop to funky R&B to fashionable indie rock on such tracks as “Crystal Ball,” “Prescriptions,” and “Lo & Behold.” On “Endless Waves,” the band says “hello,” and you can do the same at this show that says goodbye to summer and their residency. Also on the bill are Fort Lean (8:00), Echo-Friendly (10:00), and Thunder and Lightning (11:00).

GRANITO: HOW TO NAIL A DICTATOR

GRANITO shows the power and importance of independent documentary filmmaking

GRANITO: HOW TO NAIL A DICTATOR (Pamela Yates, Peter Kinoy & Paco de Onís, 2011)
IFC Center
323 Sixth Ave. at West Third St.
Opens Wednesday, September 14
212-924-7771
www.ifccenter.com
www.skylightpictures.com

The opening-night selection of the 2011 Human Rights Watch Film Festival, Granito: How to Nail a Dictator is an illuminating, if at times overly self-referential, examination of the power of documentary filmmaking. In 1982, Pamela Yates and Newton Thomas Sigel made When the Mountains Tremble, which told the inside story of civilian massacres of the indigenous Maya people as government forces and guerrilla revolutionaries fought in the jungles of Guatemala; one of the film’s subjects, Rigoberta Menchú, became an international figure and went on to win the Nobel Peace Prize. “When I made that film, I had no idea I was filming in the middle of a genocide,” Yates says at the beginning of Granito. A quarter-century after When the Mountains Tremble, Yates was contacted by lawyer Almudena Bernabeu, who asked Yates to comb through her reels and reels of footage to find evidence of the Guatemalan genocide and help bring charges again dictator Ríos Montt, whom Yates had met with back in 1982. In researching the case, Yates speaks with Menchú, forensic archivist Kate Doyle, journalist liaison Naomi Roht-Arriaza, forensic anthropologist Fredy Peccerelli, Spanish national court judge Santiago Pedraz, victims’ rights leader and genocide survivor Antonio Caba Caba, and Gustavo Meoño, a founding member of the Guerrilla Army of the Poor, each of whom sheds light on the proceedings from various different angles, from digging up bones in mass graves to discussing redacted documents that reveal U.S. involvement in Guatemala. Several of them are risking their lives by both continuing to fight the government and appearing on camera. Granito, which Yates directed with Peter Kinoy and Paco de Onís and was her sixth film to be shown at the Human Rights Watch festival, is a compelling look at how individuals can make a difference. The music is often overly melodramatic, and Yates does seem to like to show herself both in outtakes from her first film and in serious poses in the new film, but its ultimate point overrides those tendencies. Granito opens September 14 at the IFC Center, with the filmmakers present to talk about their work at the 7:40 showings Wednesday through Sunday as well as the 10:00 show Friday and Saturday night.

CARLITO CARVALHOSA: SUM OF DAYS

Carlito Carvalhosa’s “Sum of Days” is a palimpsestual participatory treat for the eyes and ears (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Museum of Modern Art
The Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium, second floor
11 West 53rd St. between Fifth & Sixth Aves.
Wednesday – Monday, $22.50 ($12 can be applied to the purchase of a film ticket within thirty days)
212-708-9400
www.moma.org
sum of days slideshow

For his “Sum of Days,” Brazilian artist Carlito Carvalhosa has created a palimpsestual participatory passageway in MoMA’s Marron Atrium that is more than initially meets the eyes — and ears. Sheets of white translucent fabric hang down from the high ceiling, forming a mazelike twisting walkway lined with a series of dangling speakers and microphones at different heights, recording current ambient sound while playing back the sounds of the installation’s previous days, melding everything together into a symphonic cacophony of the piece’s past and present, with the older sounds fading away in the background. Just as it’s hard to differentiate among the various noises and make out actual words, people’s vision is also impacted by the long sheets, which turn other visitors into shadowy figures walking by like ghosts. Many people go through the installation very quickly, but you should take your time, letting the sights and sounds envelop you for an energizing, ethereal experience. Once a week through November 10, a special sixty-to-ninety-minute musical performance will take place within the exhibition, but while MoMA has announced the lineup — Lisa Bielawa, David Crowell, Jon Gibson, Philip Glass, Carla Kihlstedt, Michael Riesman, Mick Rossi, and Andrew Sterman — the concerts will be announced on the actual day of the event via MoMA’s Twitter feed (@MuseumModernArt), although we can tell you that the first one is scheduled for September 15.

MOVIES ON THE SQUARE: ALL SINGING! ALL DANCING! ALL NEW YORK!

Milos Forman’s HAIR, set in Central Park, will kick off free musical film series in Washington Square Park

Washington Square Park
September 15, 19, 22, free, half hour after sunset
www.ifccenter.com
www.nycgovparks.org

NYU and the IFC Center are celebrating the renovations in Washington Square Park with three nights of film screenings that also say goodbye to summer. “Movies on the Square: All Singing! All Dancing! All New York!” begins on September 15 with Milos Forman’s 1979 cinematic version of the revolutionary Broadway musical Hair, starring John Savage, Treat Williams, and Beverly D’Angelo as part of a group of hippies and a straitlaced draftee hanging out in Central Park, pontificating about life, love, and the Vietnam War. On September 19, Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, and Jules Munshin (who?) are three sailors going out on the town in Kelly and Stanley Donen’s decidedly Hollywood-ized version of the Leonard Bernstein/Comden & Green musical On the Town, featuring the classic “New York, New York.” The series closes on September 22 with Charlie Ahearn’s pivotal 1983 graffiti party, Wild Style, which includes appearances by street-art legends in addition to a seminal hip-hop soundtrack.

BROOKLYN POUR

Skylight One Hanson
One Hanson Pl.
Saturday, October 15, VIP ($60) 2:00, general admission ($40) 3:00
www.villagevoice.com/brooklynpour

Beer connoisseurs will get to try three-to-five-ounce samples of more than one hundred craft brews in a souvenir tasting glass at the Village Voice’s Brooklyn Pour Craft Beer Festival. Held on October 15 at Skylight One Hanson, the old Williamsburg Savings Bank building in Fort Greene, the inaugural Brooklyn Pour will feature liquid refreshment from Shmaltz, Smuttynose, Captain Lawrence, Hooker, Weyerbacher, Sly Fox, Abita, Alagash, Lake Placid, Flying Dog, North Coast, Empire, Kelso, Blue Point, BOMB, Coney Island, and other brewing companies. Food will also be available from one of our favorite pizza places, Pizza 33, and one of our favorite burger joints, Bareburger, with live entertainment to be announced soon. Tickets for the three-hour event are $40, but if you want to get in an hour earlier, an extra twenty gets you VIP entry, snacks, and a gift bag.