Who: Taylor Schilling, Bill Camp, David Strathairn, Nyasha Hatendi, Bryan Doerries What: Livestreamed Zoom reading and discussion Where:Theater of War Zoom When: Wednesday, June 30, free with RSVP, 8:30 Why: Theater of War continues its extraordinary pandemic programming with “Frontline,” an evening of dramatic readings featuring Taylor Schilling, Bill Camp, David Strathairn, and Nyasha Hatendi of scenes from ancient Greek plays by Sophocles (Ajax, Oedipus the King, Philoctetes, Women of Trachis) that relate to today’s health care crisis. Following the reading, there will be a discussion facilitated by director, translator, adapter, and artistic director Bryan Doerries focusing on nurses, doctors, first responders, and other health care professionals, hosted by Michigan Health & Hospital Association and Blue Cross Blue Shield Blue Care Network of Michigan. Admission is free; if you haven’t seen any of Theater of War’s events, now is the time; among their other recent presentations are The Oedipus Project exploring the pandemic and the climate crisis, Antigone in Ferguson looking at racialized police violence, End of Life and King Lear Project examining caregiving and death, and Poetry for the Pandemic.
Who:Gibney Company What: Thirtieth anniversary benefit gala Where:Gibney online When: Tuesday, June 30, free – $30, 7:30 Why: Founded in 1991 by choreographer Gina Gibney, Gibney Dance will be celebrating its thirtieth anniversary as a socially active company with a virtual gala on June 30 at 7:30. The evening will feature the world premiere of the dance film Dream Scenarium, by choreographic associate Rena Butler and performed by the newly expanded troupe, along with a look at both the history and future of Gibney Dance. Admission is free, although donations of $30 (or any amount) will gladly be accepted.
“Immersive Van Gogh” features three rooms of music and large-scale projections (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
IMMERSIVE VAN GOGH EXHIBIT NEW YORK
Pier 36, 299 South St.
Daily through September 6, $29.99-$99.99 (return engagement November 17 – January 2) www.vangoghnyc.com
VAN GOGH: THE IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCE
Skylight on Vesey, 300 Vesey St.
Daily through September, $49.90 vangoghexpo.com/new-york
Discussing the success of a 1935–36 eponymously titled Vincent van Gogh exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, a MoMA press release explained, “In the opinion of Alfred H. Barr, Jr., Director of the Museum, van Gogh’s popularity is just what the artist himself would most passionately have desired. ‘Again and again,’ said Mr. Barr, ‘van Gogh wrote of his desire to make pictures for laborers, peasants, miners, weavers, fishermen, postmen, seamen, and shopkeepers — in short, for the great aesthetically naive public. It is the central miracle of van Gogh’s artistic career that with such an evangelical desire for popularity he never for a single moment compromised with the popular taste of his time — which was then even more lazy, conventional, and unadventurous than it is now.’ . . . van Gogh’s work itself is the cause of his popularity — and the interest aroused in the tragic life of the artist due more to the appeal of his art than vice versa.”
Over the last several decades, van Gogh exhibitions at MoMA and the Met have deservedly been hugely popular, must-see events that draw long lines and come with a certain cache. When I posted on social media about my visit to one of two concurrent shows in New York City right now that re-create van Gogh’s work using immersive technology, I was surprised by how many of my friends, from across the socioeconomic and political spectrum, had already purchased tickets (primarily between $30 and $60) to at least one of the exhibits, well in advance of their openings. It is impossible to know what van Gogh or Barr would have thought of the idolizing demand; I can only tell you what I think about what turns out to be a pair of Instagram-friendly presentations that are not necessarily worth the price of admission. I suggest instead taking the money and going to a real museum, with real art, although you might not end up with such awesomely cool photos and videos to share online.
Mirrored sculptures offer Instagram-friendly opportunities at van Gogh show at Pier 36 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
At Pier 36 on South St., “Immersive Van Gogh,” designed by creator Massimiliano Siccardi and New York City creative director David Korins, consists of three rooms, each larger than the previous, boasting more than half a million square feet of animated projections of the artist’s work. You enter through a narrow hallway lined with very basic facts about the painter’s life and career, along with brief audio narration. As you enter the first room, you are bombarded with a curiously random score consisting of familiar tunes as well as new music composed and curated by Luca Longobardi, echoing through the full venue, including Thom Yorke’s “Dawn Chorus,” Edith Piaf’s “Non, je ne regrette rien,” and Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition: The Great Gate of Kiev,” as dozens of van Gogh’s paintings come to life on four walls and the floor. Irises and sunflowers bloom, clouds swirl and stars dance, crows and cicadas soar, trees and wheat grow, and self-portraits emerge.
The songs are timed to each individual painting — Starry Night, The Potato Eaters, Bedroom at Arles, Café Terrace at Night — evoking the feeling of watching fireworks with the radio simulcast; one blast ends, and you wait with anticipation for the next flurry. It’s hunky-dory and all, silly fun, but it’s primarily a grand gimmick. Each room has mirrored sculptures that are not exactly organic to van Gogh in any way, instead merely offering the opportunity to take swell pictures of the works distorted in the reflections, along with selfies of you and your friends. Good luck trying to take a picture or video without someone else taking a picture or video in yours.
Lobby at Pier 36 installation includes oversized reproduction of van Gogh self-portrait (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
The third and largest room features an observation platform and benches to sit on and take it all in; putting away your camera and relaxing for a while, letting it flow over you, is not unpleasant, but so much of the animation is arbitrary and frivolous that it becomes tiresome. In the lobby and enormous gift shop, there is also a ceiling constructed of nearly eight thousand paintbrushes re-creating Starry Night, a Pocket Gallery where paint splotches explode off canvases and become famous van Gogh paintings using AR, an interactive sculpture in which visitors can ask a question and get a letter from Vincent, and a walk-in circular installation of ten booths that uses color, light, and sound to deliver a “chromesthesia experience” inspired by the possibility that van Gogh had a form of synesthesia, allowing him to hear color and see sound. Oh, I almost left out the fashion show in the exit hallway, a seeming afterthought in which mannequins are adorned with clothing inspired by van Gogh’s imagery. Or something like that. There are also jokes on signs using the pronunciation “van go,” which would confuse Diane Keaton’s character in Woody Allen’s Manhattan, who pronounces the artist’s name as “van gokh.”
Meanwhile, on the third floor space known as Skylight on Vesey, near Brookfield Place, the competing “Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience” offers a somewhat different trip into the work of the Dutch master, with a greater appreciation and understanding of Vincent as an artist, although not the kind of deep dive you’d get in a museum or gallery. You first make your way through several rooms that detail the influence Japanese prints had on him, his friendship with onetime roommate Paul Gauguin, his vase paintings (projected in 3D), his relationship with his brother, Theo, and his stay at the Saint-Paul de Mausole asylum in Saint-Rémy, complete with a nifty (but necessary?) re-creation of his bedroom at Arles. Digital reproductions of seminal works are hung on the walls (and are available in the gift shop). Quotes abound, both in the labels and on the soundtrack, narrated by an unnamed man who sounds like Jeremy Irons: “The way to know life is to love many things,” “I put my heart and my soul into the work and have lost my mind in the process,” “I dream of painting and then I paint my dream.”
In the central two-story, twenty-thousand-square-foot room, comfy beach chairs with Starry Night on them allow you to sit and watch a thirty-five-minute massive projection display on four walls and the floor as paintings come to life against architectural backgrounds. Rows of Van Gogh’s self-portraits, landscapes, flowers, and other works appear and disappear, sometimes with animation that makes it look like the canvas itself falls to the ground, revealing new works underneath. As opposed to the Pier 36 show, the one on Vesey St. concentrates more on van Gogh’s actual paintings; the works are usually seen within their frames, not busting dramatically out of nowhere, although a few do.
Skylight on Vesey van Gogh show has different perspectives that Pier 36 presentation (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
The bony figure in Skull of a Skeleton with Burning Cigarette takes a drag off his butt, smoke from a train envelops the space, vehicles move in Landscape with Carriage and Train and farm scenes, pages flip in Still Life with Bible, and a windmill turns in Le Moulin de la Galette, to the sounds of gentle classical music.
A series of self-portraits leads to an interactive workshop where you can draw your own van Gogh, followed by a virtual reality room where you are taken on a colorful 360-degree VR adventure through eight of van Gogh’s most important paintings, displayed in frames as you meander through nature and toward the sea in Arles, as if you are seeing the world as van Gogh saw it, and then painted it. Finally, the gift shop is tiny, which is a relief after the grandiosity of the competing exhibit’s extensive merch.
Vesey St. van Gogh show includes 3D reproduction of van Gogh’s Bedroom in Arles (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
“Success is sometimes the outcome of a whole string of failures,” van Gogh said. While the artist did not make much money from his art during his lifetime — the only recorded sale was of The Red Vineyard at Arles — his 1890 Portrait of Dr. Gachet sold for $163.4 million a century later. Now people around the world — these immersive experiences are being held in more than fifteen US cities and half a dozen countries — are paying upwards of $99 for VIP access to watch digital manipulations of his work that will look great on social media, but the experience is fleeting. Better to spend your money on immersing yourself in the real thing at the Met or MoMA, losing yourself in actual van Gogh canvases that will take you to another place, the crows and cicadas, irises and sunflowers, portraits and self-portraits, and wheatfields and starry nights invigorating your mind and penetrating into your heart and soul.
Stacy Ross guides a live audience through a Zoom gathering in Communion
COMMUNION
American Conservatory Theater (A.C.T.)
Through June 27, $60 www.act-sf.org
“Can we build a true sense of community over Zoom in one evening?” Stacy Ross asks in Christopher Chen’s Communion, a live, interactive presentation from A.C.T. in San Francisco. Continuing through June 27, the seventy-minute Zoom production is hosted by the popular Bay Area actress, who has played such characters as Hedda Gabler, Malvolio, Clytemnestra, Ophelia, Candida, and Leni Riefenstahl. In Communion, she’s herself — or is she? — speaking directly into the camera from a small, cluttered room. She wears a green felt hat and braids, asking us questions, discussing bliss and tacos, and considering Zoom as a tool for intimacy.
Prior to the show, attendees are given several prompts, one involving a guiding principle you have, another a person you’ve allowed to get inside your head in a bad way. Volunteers come forward and share their answers, with Ross commiserating. Viewers are also sent to breakout rooms to talk about the idea of “communion” in smaller groups. Thus, a good part of your experience will be impacted by how much you and others choose to participate. Ross may be a consummate host, but she can control only so much of what happens.
Obie winner Chen (The Hundred Flowers Project,The Headlands) and Tony-winning director Pam MacKinnon (Clybourne Park,Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) navigate through Zoom fatigue — with America opening up, is the end coming for entertainment via little onscreen boxes? — with a wink and a nod, holding back a surprise (which one of the people in my breakout room guessed). To say any more would be to say too much.
Most Zoom theater has been created as an alternative to live, in-person shows, where strangers congregate in dark spaces, suspending disbelief as they are temporarily transported to different worlds. Communion was made specifically for Zoom, challenging us to look at who we are, as individuals and as theater lovers, as we come out of a pandemic that has changed us all, for better or worse.
THE DARK MASTER
Japan Society
333 East 47th St.
June 23-28, $45
212-715-1258 www.japansociety.org
Kuro Tanino’s The Dark Master was originally scheduled to be a fully staged production at Japan Society in January 2021 as part of a four-city US tour. However, because of the pandemic lockdown, Japan Society artistic director Yoko Shioya suggested that Tanino reimagine the piece for virtual reality. The result is a thoroughly satisfying and uniquely tasty experience, a delectable treat for the senses.
Continuing through June 28, The Dark Master is presented to ten audience members at a time, sitting in individual mirrored cubicles on Japan Society’s stage. Wearing headphones and VR headsets (and facemasks), you are taken into a tiny, claustrophobic restaurant where you are served food by a grouchy owner-chef (Kiyobumi Kaneko). He decides that you are to become the next cook, and your training begins as hungry customers come in and sit at the counter, excited for the carefully prepared fare.
Inspired by first-person video games and an indie manga written by Marei Karibu and illustrated by Haruki Izumi, The Dark Master immerses you in a mysterious world that can be as funny as it is creepy. Kaneko is a hoot as a surly smoker who seems relatively disinterested in what he’s doing yet creates miraculous dishes that not only look good but smell great — be prepared for a multisensory adventure. The virtual reality extends about 180 degrees, so be sure to turn to your right and left and up and down to take it all in; you are also given hands that hold a menu, pour a drink, and bring the victuals to your mouth, which could produce a sort of personal AMSR encounter A brief video at the end takes you behind the scenes of how some of it was done.
A sculptor, painter, and former psychiatrist, Tanino (Frustrating Picture Book for Adults,Fortification of Smiles) literally and figuratively gets into your head for forty-five minutes as performers from his experimental theater company, Niwa Gekidan Penino (NGP), including Kaneko, F. O. Pereira Koichiro, and Bobmi Hidaka, traipse through the restaurant, with narration by Saika Ouchi. The dialogue has been dubbed into English by the original Japanese cast; the fab set is by Takuya Kamiike, with moody lighting by Masayuki Abe, crackling sound by Koji Sato and Shintaro Mastunomiya, and videography and editing by Nobuhiro Matsuzawa. In 2014, NGP made its American debut at Japan Society with The Room Nobody Knows, which featured a spectacular two-level set that represented the unconscious and subconscious minds. With this VR iteration of The Dark Master, Tanino serves up a wonderful physical and psychological meal, one that can be enjoyed together by strangers, just like watching theater or eating in a restaurant, two of life’s necessities (and genuine pleasures) that were unavailable for so much of the last sixteen months.
Who:The Neo-Political Cowgirls What: Fifth annual benefit gala Where:NPC Cowgirls online and Leiber Collection Museum in East Hampton When: Saturday, June 26, $25 streaming, $125-$250 in person, 5:00 Why: Last summer, the nonprofit organization the Neo-Political Cowgirls hosted the fourth annual “Andromeda’s Sisters” online, two virtual evenings of short performances, workshops, and discussion focused on advocacy, including, most memorably, Catherine Curtin in Joy Behar’s stirring monologue Where Are You At? and Laura Gómez in Dipti Bramhandkar’s Brown Girl’s Guide to Self-Pleasure. This year, “Andromeda’s Sisters: An Arts & Advocacy Gala,” which took place in person in 2019 at Guild Hall, goes hybrid, happening online as well as at the Leiber Collection Museum in East Hampton on June 26 at 5:00.
The 2021 event includes a reading of Kathryn Grant’s one-act play Order My Steps, about a prison inmate reconnecting with her estranged adult daughter, directed by Florencia Lozano and NPC founder Kate Mueth and starring Curtin and Irene Sofia Lucio, followed by a panel discussion on social justice and advocacy with Planned Parenthood Federation of America president and CEO Alexis McGill Johnson, New Hour for Women and Children — Long Island founder Serena Ligouri, and novelist and editor Angie Cruz. Founded in 2007, the Neo-Political Cowgirls “are committed to making work for women and about women — to creating a space where women and girls from all walks of life can share their experiences, joys, concerns, and spirits through professional dance.” The gala gets its name from the legend in which Princess Andromeda, captured by Poseidon, is saved by the daughters of the God of the Sea, leading to the idea that sisters should seek to help one another in these difficult times. Access to the livestream is $25; in-person tickets are $125-$250.
Who:Daniel Gwirtzman Dance Company with special guests Seán Curran, Michael Novak, Dante Puleio, and Tiffany Rea-Fisher What: New dance films and launch of dance platform Where:Daniel Gwirtzman Dance Company Zoom When: June 25-27, free with RSVP, 7:00 Why: “Contemporary dance has been seeping more and more into the mainstream culture for decades, enhanced with the advent of shows such as So You Think You Can Dance and Dancing with the Stars,” dancer, choreographer, and educator Daniel Gwirtzman said in a statement. “With the proliferation of dance online, increased exponentially during the pandemic, more people are arguably seeing contemporary dance than ever. And an appetite for innovative choreography is a byproduct of this exposure. The development of Dance with Us was in place years before the pandemic, with resources that have been created over the past two decades, an extension of programming we have offered as a company since our inception in 1998. We have long been committed to conversing about dance, empowering audiences to trust their opinions, and gain more knowledge of dance in pursuit of expanding one’s dance literacy. The ubiquity of dance on film, finding more currency in popular culture, is not going to change. This platform gives everyone, regardless of their exposure to dance, tools to use to speak about dance, encouraging them to understand their viewpoint is as valid as that of an ‘expert.’ At this moment when there is so much dance to see, this platform seeks to serve as a how-to primer.”
The New York-based Daniel Gwirtzman Dance Company is launching the educational digital platform Dance with Us with a series of special events June 25-27, all free with RSVP. Gwirtzman will host each evening, joined by Paul Taylor Dance Company artistic director Michael Novak, accompanied by Limón Dance Company artistic director Dante Puleio the first night, Elisa Monte Dance artistic director Tiffany Rea-Fisher the second, and Seán Curran Company artistic director Curran the third. The presentation will begin at 6:45 with an online slideshow, followed at 7:00 with Amuse-Bouche: Parade; screenings of two short dance films recorded last August in Newfield, New York, Willow, set to Scott Joplin’s “Weeping Willow,” and Dollhouse, set to George Gershwin’s “I Got Rhythm,” played by pianist Jonny May; a virtual tour of the new website and the Library, which holds DGDC’s archives; a look at the Fantasyland Project; and a sneak peek at such upcoming works as Castillo,Adrift, and Dandelion. There will be an interactive live discussion at 8:00, and the program will conclude at 8:30 with an after-party that includes learning how to do the Bus Stop. “I don’t want to see any more dances of dancers in their living rooms,” Gwirtzman wrote to troupe members last summer about the Fantasyland Project, which also relates to Dance with Us. “I think this moment in time is one in which we all are fantasizing: about life before, and after, the pandemic. To the extent that this project can reflect the urgent events shaping all of our lives — how this theme of utopia and harmony fits against the current climate — is something the company is interested in investigating.”