this week in dance

koosil-ja/danceKUMIKO

at DTW

Koosil-ja presents her latest technological innovations at DTW

BLOCKS OF CONTINUALITY / BODY, IMAGE, AND ALGORITHM
Dance Theater Workshop
219 West 19th St.
March 3-6, $15, 7:30
212-924-0077
www.dtw.org
www.dancekk.com

Born in Osaka to Korean parents and based in New York City for many years, dancer, composer, and choreographer Koosil-ja has staged such intriguing productions as mech[a]OUTPUT at the Japan Society, DANCE WITHOUT BODIES and memoryscan at the Kitchen, a shadow of forgotten ancestors at SummerStage, deadmandancing EXCESS at the Performing Garage, and deadmandancing HOTEL 2005 in a room at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Tower. Her works incorporate technological innovation with noh elements and cutting-edge music and sound, making every performance unique. “I can listen to my mind. You can see my body,” she writes obsessively on her Web site. Audiences will be able to see her body and more at Dance Theater Workshop, as Koosil-ja and her company, danceKUMIKO, present the New York premiere of BLOCKS OF CONTINUALITY / BODY, IMAGE, AND ALGORITHM, her latest examination of movement and the human body utilizing live processing, interactive computer programming, and 3D imaging, influenced by the conceptual theories of French philosopher and self-described “pure metaphysician” Gilles Deleuze. While that might sound like a lot to take in at one time, it has the potential to be one helluva mind-blowing experience. (The opening-night performance, March 3, will be preceded by a Coffee and Conversation gathering at 6:30, while the March 5 show will be followed by a talk with members of the cast and crew.)

IN THE WORDS OF DURAS

Marguerite Duras, Hall des Roches Noires, Trouville, 1982 (copyright Hélène Bamberger)

Marguerite Duras, Hall des Roches Noires, Trouville, 1982 (copyright Hélène Bamberger)

Cultural Services of the French Embassy, 972 Fifth Ave.
French Institute Alliance Français, 22 East 60th St.
Baryshnikov Arts Center, 450 West 37th St.
Anthology Film Archives, 32 Second Ave.
February 18 – March 18, free – $35
www.fiaf.org
www.frenchculture.org
www.bacnyc.org
www.anthologyfilmarchives.org

Born Marguerite Donnadieu in Indochina in 1914, French writer Marguerite Duras had a long career as a journalist, novelist, playwright, screenwriter, and director. A graduate of the Sorbonne who was raised in extreme poverty, she served in the French Resistance, was expelled from the Communist Party, suffered from alcoholism and hallucinations late in life, and spent her last years with writer Yann Andréa Steiner, who was nearly forty years her junior, before dying of throat cancer in Paris in 1996. Duras’s extraordinary life and work will be celebrated with a month of special events at locations around the city, from documentaries to discussions, avant-garde dance and theater to readings and an intimate photo exhibit. On February 18, the French Institute Alliance Français will host “Meet the Writer…en français,” a discussion with Duras biographer Jean Vallier ($15), followed by “Talk with Jean Vallier: Bringing Duras’s Word to the Stage” in English ($15). On February 26-27, ASTRID BAS DIPTYCH: THE LOVER AND LA MUSICA DEUXIÈME consists of stage productions, with music, of two seminal works by Duras ($35). And on March 6-7, Nicole Ansari, Winsome Brown, Joan Juliet Buck, and Sadie Jemmett star in Irina Brook’s play inspired by Duras’s LA VIE MATÉRIELLE and Virginia Woolf’s A ROOM OF ONE’S OWN ($35).

Astrid Bas presents a Duras diptych at FIAF as part of citywide celebration

Astrid Bas presents a Duras diptych at FIAF as part of citywide celebration

The Baryshnikov Arts Center will be presenting the U.S. premiere of L’HOMME ASSIS DANS LE COULOIR (THE MAN SITTING IN THE CORRIDOR), a dance created by Razerka Ben Sadia-Lavant based on the 1980 novella by Duras, performed by Sarah Crépin and Alexandre Dutronc (February 19-21, $20). From 1980 to 1994, photojournalist Hélène Bamberger and Duras spent summers together in Trouville; Bamberger’s photos of the author, collected as “Marguerite Duras par Hélène Bamberger,” will be on view February 18 – March 18 at the Cultural Services of the French Embassy. The exhibit opens on February 17 with bilingual readings by Kathleen Chalfant and William Nadylam (free but RSVP required at 212-439-1485, duras@frenchculture.org). On March 2, the Cultural Services of the French Embassy will be screening THE LOVER: FANSTASY OF A MOVIE, a documentary with Claude Berri and others about the film adaptation of THE LOVER, along with a discussion with French professor Sophie Bogaert (free, rsvp@frenchculture.org). One of Duras’s most well known works, HIROSHIMA MON AMOUR, will be presented onstage at BAC March 4-6, directed by Christine Letailleur and featuring Valérie Lang, Hiroshi Ota, and Pier Lamandé ($25). Duras was also a unique and experimental filmmaker; her directorial works will be shown in the series “Marguerite Duras on Film” at Anthology Film Archives March 12-18, including screenings of DESTROY, SHE SAID (DÉTRUIRE DIT-ELLE) (1969), NATHALIE GRANCER (1972), LE NAVIRE NIGHT (1979), INDIA SONG (1975), and THE TRUCK (LE CAMION (1977), which stars Duras with Gérard Depardieu. “The best way to fill time is to waste it,” Duras once famously said. You could do a lot worse than wasting plenty of time at this wide-ranging, exciting festival honoring one of the most intriguing literary figures of the twentieth century.

OUTDOOR ART

Red Grooms’s latest monumental sculptures line Midtown walkway (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Red Grooms’s latest monumental sculptures line Midtown walkway (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Marlborough New York
Walkway between Fifth & Sixth Aves. and West 56th & 57th Sts.
Admission: free
212-541-4900
www.marlboroughgallery.com

flickr slideshow

Nearly all Midtown galleries are closed Sundays and Mondays, but there’s a small outdoor venue that never closes and is always worth passing through. In the walkway between Fifth & Sixth Aves. and West 56th & 57th Sts., the Marlborough Gallery (40 West 57th St.) regularly displays sculptures from its collection. Right now is the best mix they’ve had in years, having recently added three colorful nine-foot-tall enamel-on-aluminum sculptures from Red Grooms’s late 2009 “Dancing” show in the gallery.  Grooms’s whimsical nature is more than evident in “Swan Lake,” “Tango Dancers,” and “Charleston,” his monumental works adding color to the otherwise gray alley that also includes Nobu 57. The playfulness continues with Tom Otterness’s “Large Cocqui,” a cute oversized frog staring right at the viewer. Several years ago, Manolo Verdes’s queen series took over Bryant Park; “Reina Mariana” has made the trek uptown, holding court in the alley. And Fernando Botero’s “Rape of Europa” features the Phoenician princess lying atop Zeus the bull. In addition, vertical pieces by Beverly Pepper and Arnald Pomodoro stand tall.

ARMORY SHOW

Brennan Girard and Ryan Kelly examine the military and social history of the Seventh Regiment Armory in site-specific two-night engagement

Brennan Girard and Ryan Kelly examine the military and social history of the Seventh Regiment Armory in site-specific two-night engagement

Park Avenue Armory
643 Park Ave. at 67th St.
February 20-21, $25, 8:00
347-463-5143
www.movingtheater.org
www.armoryonpark.org

Brennan Girard and Ryan Kelly, cofounders of the nonprofit, experimental Moving Theater, complete their stay as the first company-in-residence at the Park Avenue Armory with a multimedia performance in the historic building, designed by Charles Clinton in 1880 to house the Seventh Regiment of the National Guard, volunteer troops known as the Silk Stocking Regiment because of their ritzy members. The site-specific installation, which will take place in the armory’s fascinating period rooms, includes original music by Nathan Davis, Mario Diaz de León, and Du Yun and will be performed by Jonathan Drillet, Davon Rainey, Marlène Saldana, Jose Tena, Anthony Whitehurst, and ICE | International Contemporary Ensemble, incorporating dance, text, and video while commenting on the social and military history of the location and examining various aspects of the male identity. “This work maps our sense of loss at leaving a space we’ve worked in for such an extended period of time,” Gerard and Kelly explained in a statement. “Our attempts at capturing its complex history bring forth our own experience in this incredible building.”

THE YEAR OF THE TIGER: 4708

Chinatown Lunar New Year celebration goes into full swing this weekend (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Chinatown Lunar New Year celebration goes into full swing this weekend (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

LUNAR NEW YEAR CELEBRATION
Museum of Chinese in America (and other locations)
211 Centre St. between Howard & Grand Sts.
Thursday – Monday, $7 (free Thursdays 11:00 am – 9:00 pm)
212-619-4785
www.mocanyc.org

The Museum of Chinese in America will be celebrating the Year of the Tiger, 4708, in its beautiful new space on Centre St., honoring the animal that represents courage and bravery. Tonight, Brooklyn-based Chinese Taiwanese American spoken-word artist Kelly Tsai will host an open-mic event dedicated to Valentine’s Day and the Lunar New Year, both of which occur on Sunday, two holidays bathed in beautiful red colors. For the next two Saturdays, MOCA is holding walking tours entitled “Prepare for the New Year in Chinatown.” The Lunar New Year Flower Festival takes place in Sara D. Roosevelt Park on February 12-13, featuring a bevy of cultural programs and traditional festivities, while on Sunday the annual New Year’s Day Firecracker Ceremony and Festival will light off an estimated 600,000 rounds in the park. On February 18, as part of the Free Fridays program at MOCA, the museum will be screening CHINESE ODYSSEY 2002 (Jeffrey Lau, 2002) at 6:30. If you’ve never been to Chinatown in Flushing, the fourteenth annual Lunar New Year Parade and Festival offers an excellent opportunity to check out that growing neighborhood, February 21 beginning at 11:00 am. And the weeklong partying comes to a close that same day with the eleventh annual Lunar New Year Parade and Festival starting in Little Italy at 11:30 am, with Lion Dancers going in and out of local stores and restaurants to bring good luck and prosperity in the coming year. Be sure to stop off for some dumplings, moon cakes, and other festive food, even if you’re not exactly sure what it is. Gung Hey Fat Choy!

1/2 LIFE

The BodyCartography Project will go nuclear at P.S. 122

The BodyCartography Project will go nuclear at P.S. 122

THE BODYCARTOGRAPHY PROJECT
Performance Space 122
150 First Ave. at Ninth St.
February 10-14, $20
www.ps122.org

Codirectors Otto Ramstad and Olive Bieringa examine the effects of nuclear power on the state of the human body in the New York premiere of 1/2 LIFE. Their BodyCartography Project, which “questions the space between the real materials of the body, the architecture, and the hyper real designed materials of video, light, sound and new technologies,” is joined by electronic music artist Zeena Parkins, artist and physicist Bryce Beverlin II, guest dancer Takemi Kitamura, and installation artist / performer / writer / set designer / costumer Emmett Ramstad in a multimedia look at survival through scientific research, data, and physics via dance, video, and music.

With a bumpy sheet of graying plastic “clouds” hanging from the ceiling, three survivors walk Butoh-slow across the stage, representing nuclear superpower America (Otto Ramstad), atomic bomb victim Japan (Kitamura), and nuclear-free New Zealand (Bieringa), showing that nobody is safe from nuclear winter. Twelve door-shaped light pieces of wood in the back soon come to life, erecting barriers for the three performers, welcoming them and shutting them out. After they put the boards away, the dancers behind them, representing critical mass, emerge and one by one circle each of the protagonists, as if infecting them with radiation. Ultimately, the trio find themselves in a Joseph Cornell-like box, erecting different poses as they are spun around and, in the end, one of them might have found a way out. The seventy-minute program ranges from the boring and mundane to the captivating and exciting; the beginning sequence goes on too long, and some of the solos, especially when Ramstad, Kitamura, and Bieringa keep falling to the floor, are repetitive and difficult to decipher. But the final third, involving the moving box and possible survival, is simply thrilling. The February 11 performance will include a Thursday Night Social, while the February 12 show will be followed by a Talkback with Clarinda Mac Low. Because of the snowstorm, tickets for opening night, February 10, were reduced to $10 and came with free beer for those intrepid folks who made their way despite the weather conditions.

TRISHA BROWN DANCE COMPANY 40th ANNIVERSARY LECTURE SERIES

Dance Theater Workshop
219 West 19th St. between Seventh & Eighth Aves.
January 13 – May 23, suggested donation $10, 7:30 or 3:00
212-924-0077
www.dancetheaterworkshop.org
www.trishabrowncompany.org

Visual artist, dancer, choreographer, and opera director Trisha Brown is celebrating the fortieth anniversary of the Trisha Brown Dance Company with a series of lectures at Dance Theater Workshop as well as other special event in the city and beyond. Beginning with the Judson Dance Theater in the 1960s and then with TBDC starting in 1970, Brown developed a reputation for creating experimental dance pieces in alternative spaces, working with the likes of Robert Rauschenberg, Laurie Anderson, Lina Wertmuller, Terry Winters, and Kenjiro Okazaki. This year, the Nijinsky Award winner will be taking her company to the Netherlands, Greece, and France in addition to holding technique and repertory workshops and the lecture series. For the inaugural DTW event, on January 13 at 7:30, longtime dancers Diane Madden (now choreographic assistant) and Carolyn Lucas (rehearsal director) will discuss the TBDC creative process with moderator Wendy Perron, editor in chief of Dance magazine. Future lectures will include Madden, Julie Martin, and Trisha Brown herself on February 16 discussing the 1980 premiere of OPAL LOOP, which has been brought back for the 2009-2010 season; a March 22 lecture to be announced; Susan Rosenberg, Peter Eleey, and Guillaume Bernardi on April 11; and former TBDC dancers Eva Karczag, Lisa Kraus, Stacy Spence, Keith Thompson, Stephen Petronio, and Vicky Shick on May 23. The Trisha Brown Dance Company will also be performing early works at Dia:Beacon on February 13-14 and May 1 ($35) as part of its yearlong residency there.