FRESH TRACKS
New York Live Arts
219 West Nineteenth St. between Seventh & Eighth Aves.
Friday, June 16, and Saturday, June 17, $16-$30, 7:30
newyorklivearts.org
The fifty-eighth iteration of New York Live Arts’ Fresh Tracks takes place this weekend, with five emerging creators debuting pieces developed over the last year in the Residency & Performance program, working with artistic advisor, choreographer, dancer, activist, mother, grandmother, warrior, and educator nia love. Each artist received a fifty-hour studio residency and $3000 fee to develop a new piece through development workshops and access to staff from multiple NYLA departments.
Inspired by Anne Anlin Cheng’s idea of ornamentalism, California-born Filipina American artist Kristel Baldoz will be using dance, ceramics, and indictment to explore female Asian identity, objecthood, and personhood in Yellow Fever. “I mix materials and movement to reframe the way we view colonial relations and how the laborious body, the dancing body, creates tension to release objects from their colonial meaning,” she explains in her artist statement. Black visual and performance artist Malcolm-x Betts is premiering Niggas at Sundown, collaborating with performer Nile Harris and performer and sound designer Admanda Kobilka. The piece is the third in the “Kinfolk” series, which began with Midnight Glow and Butch Queen, and explores white supremacy and sundown towns, with Betts’s jumpsuits serving as performance scores encouraging improvisation.
In Loud and Clear, Venezuelan interdisciplinary choreographer, director, installation artist, educator, and performer Miguel Alejandro Castillo, who was one of the ten dancers in Faye Driscoll’s remarkable Weathering at NYLA in April, looks at folklore and the Venezuelan diaspora, joined by musician Daniella Barbarito and visual artist Lexy Ho-Tai. Milwaukee-born, Brooklyn-based interdisciplinary artist, choreographer, filmmaker, and dance educator Jade Charon teams up with visual designer and technician Ker Chen and musician and composer Farai Malianga for Gold Pylon, the latest in her “Gold” series, which has included a children’s book and a superhero dance film. In this solo, Charon uses a grandmother’s prayer to reach the gateway of the higher self. And New Jersey–born, New York City–based performer, choreographer, theater maker, and musician Orlando Hernández delves into colonialism and the Caribbean diaspora in Too soon to discover planets, too late to discover islands, incorporating tap dance, masks, and sacred music.