this week in dance

THE SET UP: SAYA LEI

Wally Cardona collaborates with Mandalay-style dance master Saya Lei in latest Set Up

Wally Cardona collaborates with Mandalay-style dance master Saya Lei in latest Set Up (photo courtesy of the artist)

Who: Wally Cardona, Jennifer Lacey, and Jonathan Bepler
What: River to River Festival
Where: Cannon’s Walk, 206 Front St. between Beekman & Fulton Sts., South Street Seaport
When: Wednesday, June 24, 6:00, Thursday, June 25, 9:30, Friday, June 26, 8:30, free with advance RSVP
Why: Wally Cardona will be presenting the sixth installment of his eight-part series The Set Up, in which he collaborates with a specially selected dance artist as they explore the concept of mastery, along with choreographer Jennifer Lacey and composer Jonathan Bepler, this week at Cannon’s Walk. (This is not to be confused with his other series, in which he collaborates with an expert from outside the dance world.) Cardona first meets the artist, who teaches him about his or her specific discipline, followed by a response period as Cardona and Lacey work on the piece without the master. They then present the final, full-length dance to the public in a nontraditional space, which in the past has included an empty office space and empty storefront and the Board of Officers room at the Park Avenue Armory. For this LMCC commission for the River to River Festival, Cardona will be joined by seventy-three-year-old Burmese Mandalay-style dance master Saya Lei; Cardona recently studied with Saya Lei, whose name means “young teacher,” in Burma in preparation for the piece. Cardona has previously collaborated with Junko Fisher (traditional Okinawan), Proeung Chhieng (classical Cambodian), Jean-Christophe Paré (French baroque), Heni Winahyuningsih (Javanese refined), and Nyoman Catra (Balinese Topeng).

NYC PRIDE: COMPLETE THE DREAM

Multiple locations
June 23-28, free – $1,500
www.nycpride.org

The theme for this year’s NYC Pride celebration is “Complete the Dream,” with nine events commemorating the Stonewall Riots of 1969 and dedicated to “a future without discrimination where all people have equal rights under the law.” The party begins with a free family screening of Finding Nemo on Tuesday night in Hudson River Park and continues with such annual traditions as the Rally, PrideFest, the March, and Dance on the Pier. The ticketed events are selling out fast, so you better act quickly if you want to shake your groove thang at some pretty crazy parties.

Tuesday, June 23
Family Night: Finding Nemo (Andrew Stanton, 2003), hosted by Miss Richfield 1981 and with remarks by the Family Equality Council, Pier 63, Hudson River Park, free, 8:30 pm

Friday, June 26
The Rally, with a live performance by Ashanti and others, Pier 26, Hudson River Park, free, 6:00 pm

Fantasy, with DJ sets by the Freemasons and Kitty Glitter, and special secret burlesque masquerade performances all evening long (in the home of Queen of the Night), the Diamond Horseshoe, 235 West 46th St., $29-$79, 10:00 pm – 5:00 am

Saturday, June 27
VIP Rooftop Party, with DJs Ben Baker, Saul Ruiz, Grind, and Cindel, Hudson Terrace, 621 West 46th St., $39-$500, 2:00 – 10:00 pm

Teaze, formerly known as Rapture on the River, exclusive party for women only, with DJs Ruby Rose, Sherock, and Whitney Day and Rich White Ladies, Pier 26, Hudson River Park at Laight St., general admission $25-$750, 3:00 – 10:00 pm

WE Party: University, Masterbeat dance party with DJs Sagi Kariv and Micky Friedmann, Hammerstein Ballroom, 311 West 34th St., $100-$1,500, 10:00 pm – 6:00 am

Sunday, June 28
PrideFest, street fair with music, food, merchandise, and live performances, Hudson St. between Abingdon Sq. & West 14th St., free, 11:00 am – 6:00 pm

The March, with more than four dozen floats and more than three hundred marching contingents, led by grand marshals J. Christopher Neal, Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera, Sir Derek Jacobi, and Sir Ian McKellen, Lavender Line from 36th St. & Fifth Ave. to Christopher & Greenwich Sts., free, 12 noon

Dance on the Pier, with live performance by Ariana Grande and DJs Wayne G, Ralphi Rosario, and the Cube Guys, Pier 26, Hudson River Park at Laight St., $25-$1,500, 3:00 – 10:00 pm

EIKO: A BODY IN A STATION

RIVER TO RIVER FESTIVAL
Fulton Center
Fulton St. & Broadway
Monday, June 22, 7:00; Tuesday, June 23, 4:00, Wednesday, June 24, 7:00
Festival continues through June 28
lmcc.net
www.eikoandkoma.org
a body in a station slideshow

In our 2011 interview with Eiko Otake about Naked, her dance installation with her husband, Takashi Koma Otake, at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, she described the dynamic of having the audience coming and going as they please. “We were very close to people, which created the sense of intimacy. There was no beginning or end but purely entries and exits of people, which the audience decided themselves. So there was more of an individual act of seeing and feeling on their own accord.” Eiko and Koma followed up Naked with Water/Residue, which took place in the Paul Milstein Pool at Lincoln Center, and The Caravan Project in MoMA’s lobby. All three performances involved agonizingly slow movement that evoked life and death, merging humanity with the natural environment. Eiko, who performed the site-specific Two Women with Tomoe Aihara on Governors Island at last year’s River to River Festival, is now bringing her first solo project, A Body in Places, to the brand-new Fulton Center in Lower Manhattan, where she will be surrounded by thousands of commuters on their way somewhere else as she interacts with the large screens, the unique architecture, and the multitude of passersby. Previously staged in Philadelphia’s 30th Street Station and the Olin Library lobby at Wesleyan, the durational piece will be presented June 22 and 24 at 7:00 and June 23 at 4:00; in the meantime, don’t be surprised if you suddenly see Eiko crawling, grasping, and reaching on the street, as she has been interacting with the city in pop-up pieces in advance of the central performances.

TRISHA BROWN: IN PLAIN SITE, WAGNER PARK, NEW YORK

Who: Trisha Brown Dance Company
What: River to River Festival
Where: Robert F. Wagner Jr. Park, Battery Park City
When: Sunday, June 21, free, 4:00 & 6:00
Why: Last summer, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council paid tribute to Trisha Brown with a series of special events on Governors Island and other locations. This summer TBDC is back to perform In Plain Site, Wagner Park, New York, a site-specific project that will incorporate excerpts from the company’s vast, genre-redefining repertoire, reacting to and with Robert Wagner Park. In Plain Site could feature sections from such previous works as Scallops, Corners, Accumulation, Leaning Duet I, Group Primary Accumulation with Movers, Sticks I, Curl Curve Back Up, Sticks IV, Spanish Dance, and Figure Eight, dating back more than forty years, depending on how each fits in with Wagner Park. “Each performance not only inspired the emergence of new dance ideas based on a cumulatively evolving foundation of artistic principles, brought to fruition through their interaction with new sites of presentation,” TBDC scholar-in-resident Susan Rosenberg notes on the company’s website. “Importantly, Brown also continued to perform existing choreographies, but renewed their meanings and experiences for audiences through her works’ re-siting in new contexts.” It should be fascinating and fun to see the dialogue that they come up with for this beautiful space in the southernmost end of Battery Park City, which boasts sensational views of New Jersey and the Statue of Liberty. The River to River Festival continues through June 28 with such other dance performances as Souleymane Badolo’s Dance My Life, Rachel Tess’s Souvenir Undone, Yanira Castro / a canary torsi’s Court/Garden, Twyla Tharp’s The One Hundreds, Eiko’s A Body in a Station, and Wally Cardona, Jennifer Lacey, and Jonathan Bepler’s The Set Up: Saya Lei.

DRIFTING IN DAYLIGHT: ART IN CENTRAL PARK

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Ragnar Kjartansson’s “S.S. Hangover” sails around Harlem Meer with members of the Metropolis Ensemble (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Central Park
Begin at Charles A. Dana Discovery Center
Enter at 110th St. & Fifth Ave.
Friday, June 19, and Saturday, June 20, free, 12 noon – 6:00 pm
creativetime.org
www.centralparknyc.org
drifting in daylight slideshow

While making my way through the wonderful “Drifting in Daylight” exhibition in Central Park, comprising eight site-specific projects commissioned by the nonprofit arts organization Creative Time and the Central Park Conservancy, I heard some beautiful music coming out of the North Woods. Believing I had found number 5B on the map, which promised “a migratory performance of contemplative movement through the North Woods,” I wandered down a path until I came upon a man and a woman playing Bach on violins. There were a few other people there, so I walked over and started taking some photos and enjoying the performance. “Excuse me,” a young man said to me as the music continued, “this is a private gathering.” Not sure whether he was being serious or that was part of the installation — you can’t always tell with contemporary art, of course — I told him that this was where the map indicated the next stop was. “It’s over there,” he said with a determined annoyance, pointing to the nearby overpass. So off I went, shortly to discover a group of dancers moving silently on the asphalt road and the grass. This time, I was where I was supposed to be, watching Lauri Stallings + Glo’s “And All Directions, I Come to You,” but as I followed them through the trees by the Pool, there were two people rehearsing Shakespeare, members of New York Classical Theatre’s free outdoor production of The Taming of the Shrew. And then two other actors passed by, a man and a woman, re-creating a scene from Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums in which former spouses Royal (Gene Hackman) and Etheline Tenenbaum (Anjelica Huston) discuss how they raised their crazy kids; it is part of David Levine’s “Private Moments,” one of eight such scenes occurring throughout the park, where they were originally filmed. I suddenly didn’t know where to turn, what to see next, surrounded by a surfeit of art, yet wondering what was public and what was private. “Nothing can be written on the subject in which extreme care is not taken to discriminate between what is meant in common use of the words garden, gardening, gardener, and the art which I try to pursue,” Central Park architect Frederick Law Olmsted wrote, and indeed, there is plenty of art to pursue among the gardens in Central Park, whether part of “Drifting in Daylight” or not.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Alicia Framis’s “Cartas al Cielo” gives visitors a chance to send a message to someone not of this earth any longer (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The centerpiece of the Central Park Conservancy’s thirty-fifth anniversary celebration, “Drifting in Daylight,” a kind of art scavenger hunt, begins behind the Charles A. Dana Discovery Center, where Ragnar Kjartansson’s “S.S. Hangover” starts its musical journey around Harlem Meer, its Pegasus flag swirling in the wind, with a brass sextet from the Metropolitan Ensemble on board, playing a dirgelike composition by Kjartan Sveinsson. The 1934 wooden fishing boat has been refashioned into a boat from James Whale’s 1935 film, Remember Last Night?, which was based on the Adam Hobhouse novel The Hangover Murders about a group of characters too drunk to recall a killing. The winding path next leads to Karyn Olivier’s “Here and Now/Glacier, Shard, Rock,” a triptych lenticular billboard that evokes the history of Central Park by shifting between shots of a glacier, a broken piece of pottery from Seneca Village, and rocks, bringing them all together as they appear and disappear. As you approach Conservatory Garden, which is now in beautiful full bloom, you can stop at Spencer Finch’s “Sunset (Central Park),” a solar-powered painted ice-cream truck that offers free soft-serve ice cream that changes colors matching the setting sun. Finch, who also currently has hue-based artworks at the Morgan Library and on the High Line, calls is an “edible monochrome.” But more important, it’s rather soothing on a hot summer’s day.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Lauri Stallings + Glo’s “And All Directions, I Come to You” gracefully and dramatically moves through the north end of Central Park (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

On the south side of Conservatory Garden, Alicia Framis’s “Cartas al Cielo” sits atop a hill, a large, reflective silver orb that glitters in the sunlight. Meaning “letters to the sky,” the participatory sculpture, which is like a doorway to a more ethereal kind of Central Park, invites people to fill out a postcard to someone not on this earth and slip it into one of the globe’s mail slots. You can send a missive to a lost loved one or even an alien, as it boasts otherworldly qualities. Heading toward the Ravine, you’ll soon see nine women — Anicka Zaneta Austin, Kristina Marie Brown, Jennifer Cara Clark, Mary Virginia Coleman, Ashley I Daye, Christina Kelly, Mary Jane Pennington, Cailan Orn, and Katherine Maxwell — performing Atlanta-based choreographer Stallings “And All Directions, I Come to You,” in which the dancers, wearing long dresses of different solid colors forming a unique rainbow, fall on the grass, sit on the path, weave around trees, and invite the audience to join a group circle. Also taking place by the North Woods and the Loch, it’s fast-paced and unpredictable, especially to people who are in the area but have no idea what’s going on, just spending an afternoon in the park. Meanwhile, along North End Drive, three of Nina Katchadourian’s handwoven bird nests, collectively known as “The Lamppost Weavers,” hang from streetlamps, including one consisting of repurposed sneakers that evoke the runners passing by but don’t offer the birds much of a place to set up house. The lampposts are not exactly easy to find; nor are all eight of Levine’s “Private Moments,” which are scattered throughout the park and also feature actors re-creating scenes from Bullets Over Broadway, Symbiopsychotaxiplasm, Six Degrees of Separation, Portrait of Jennie, The Out-of-Towners, Cruel Intentions, and Marathon Man, in which one brave soul spends all afternoon jogging around the Reservoir.

(photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Marc Bamuthi Joseph’s “Black Joy in the Hour of Chaos” provides a powerful conclusion to park project (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

The eighth and final project, Marc Bamuthi Joseph’s “Black Joy in the Hour of Chaos,” is the most powerful. On the Great Hill, taking place on a parachute in colors evoking the flags of Africa and with multiple translations of the phrase “black joy” running around its perimeter, five actors, a violinist, and a cellist, all wearing fatigue pants and red hoodies, mix dance, music, theater, and spoken word as they provide a full-frontal assault on the race war dominating the country, asserting their individual and group identity as they invoke such names as Michael Stewart, Sean Bell, and Freddie Gray. At the end of the riveting performance, people are asked to help lift the parachute, but once it’s raised, it’s dropped again, not remaining up, as we still has quite a way to go before inviting everyone inside the big tent. It’s a compelling experience, and one that puts a provocative cap on a thoroughly engaging exhibition that highlights the diverse nature of Central Park and of New York City and recalls what the Olmsted brothers wrote in 1903 in a report on parks in Portland, Oregon: “All agree that parks not only add to the beauty of a city and to the pleasure of living in it, but are exceedingly important factors in developing the healthfulness, morality, intelligence, and business prosperity of its residents. Indeed it is not too much to say that a liberal provision of parks in a city is one of the surest manifestations of the intelligence, degree of civilization, and progressiveness of its citizens.”

ANYWHERE IN TIME: A CONLON NANCARROW FESTIVAL

(photo courtesy Charles Amirkhanian)

The life and career of one-of-a-kind composer Conlon Nancarrow will be celebrated at twelve-day fest at the new Whitney (photo courtesy Charles Amirkhanian)

Whitney Museum of American Art
Susan and John Hess Family Theater, third floor
99 Gansevoort St.
June 17-28, $22 (includes admission to galleries)
212-570-3600
whitney.org

In a 1981 letter to Charles Amirkhanian, György Ligeti wrote, “This music is the greatest discovery since Webern and Ives . . . something great and important for all music history! His music is so utterly original, enjoyable, perfectly constructed but at the same time emotional . . . for me it’s the best of any composer living today.” Ligeti was referring to the little-known Conlon Nancarrow, an American-born composer who had become a Mexican citizen and had done extraordinary work with the player piano. The recipient of a MacArthur genius grant, Nancarrow, who passed away in 1997 at the age of eighty-four, will be celebrated at the new Whitney Museum of American Art with “Anywhere in Time: A Conlon Nancarrow Festival,” twelve days of special live performances, talks, and films paying tribute to Nancarrow’s influential career. Among those taking the stage in the Susan and John Hess Family Theater will be Steve Coleman and Five Elements, dancers from the Merce Cunningham Trust Fellowship Program performing Crises (1960) (reconstructed and staged by Jennifer Goggans), percussionist Chris Froh, Alarm Will Sound, and Henry Kaiser and Lukas Ligeti with Charles Amirkhanian. Cocurated by Dominic Murcott and Jay Sanders, “Anywhere in Time” also features screenings of James Greeson’s 2012 documentary Conlon Nancarrow: Virtuoso of the Player Piano, the panel discussion “Nancarrow Deconstructed” with Froh and Murcott, and a 1921 Marshall and Wendell Ampico upright player piano on view on the veranda with Nancarrow’s “Study #36” piano roll, which will occasionally play. “Conlon Nancarrow had perhaps the most single-minded career of any great American composer, devoting his life to exploring the rhythmic possibilities of juxtaposing multiple simultaneous tempos,” notes Alarm Will Sound conductor and artistic director Alan Pierson. “The combination of Nancarrow’s catchy materials and the complex way he deals with them puts his work in a sweet spot of immediacy and complexity occupied by much of the music we love. And the challenge of performing music not meant to be played by human beings is a stimulating one.” The festival comes to a close on June 28 with the eight-hour “Complete Studies for Player Piano: A Marathon Concert Event,” presented in numerical order from 11:00 am to 7:00 pm and including appearances by Nancarrow’s wife, Yoko, and their son, Mako. Most of the events require ticketing, and it’s best if you get them in advance; the cost is the same as museum admission, and the ticket gets you into all the galleries.

HUDSON RIVER DANCE FESTIVAL

Paul Taylor Dance is one of three local companies performing at the free, inaugural Hudson Dance Festival this week (photo by Paul B. Goode)

Paul Taylor Dance is one of three local companies performing at the free, inaugural Hudson Dance Festival this week (photo by Paul B. Goode)

Who: Paul Taylor Dance Company, Parsons Dance, Ballet Hispanico
What: Hudson River Dance Festival
Where: Pier 63, Hudson River Park, cross at West 22nd & 24th Sts.
When: Wednesday, June 17, and Thursday, June 18, free, 6:30
Why: The inaugural Hudson River Dance Festival consists of three New York City companies presenting works for free outdoors on Pier 63 in Hudson River Park this week, two nights of modern movement featuring pieces by Paul Taylor Dance Company, Parsons Dance, and Ballet Hispanico. Attendees can bring blankets, but no chairs are allowed on the lawn.