this week in (live)streaming

RUBIN MUSEUM VIRTUAL BLOCK PARTY: AN ONLINE COMMUNITY CELEBRATION

The Rubin Museum’s annual block party goes virtual this year

Who: Tsherin Sherpa, Sneha Shrestha, Tenzin Phuntsog, Yakpo Collective, Uttam Grandhi, YindaYin Coaching, Day Schildkret, Kate Johnson, Brooklyn Raga Massive, Ajna Dance, Samira Sadeque and the Bangladesh Academy of Fine Arts, more
What: Virtual block party
Where: Rubin Museum online
When: Sunday, September 20, free, noon (available through Setpember 27)
Why: The Rubin Museum chose quite a year to explore the concept of impermanence as the country goes through the Covid-19 crisis, massive wildfires, protests over police brutality, and the loss of too many cultural and political icons. The Rubin, which specializes in the art and culture of the Himalayan regions, is open, but its annual block party is being held online, taking place September 20 beginning at noon, with all events free. The symbol for the 2020 festival is the lotus, which represents purity, fortune, prosperity, rebirth, and spiritual enlightenment, things we can all use these days. The afternoon will feature studio visits with Tsherin Sherpa, Sneha Srethsa, Tenzin Phuntzog, Yakpo Collective, and Uttam Grandhi; mindfulness practices with Kate Johnson, Reimagine, Day Schildkret, and New York Yoga + Life magazine; art-making with YindaYin Coaching; interactive classes with Brooklyn Raga Massive and Ajna Dance; activism and advocacy with India Home; and performances by Sonam Kids and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop. You can also visit the beautiful institution with timed tickets; the current exhibitions include “Masterworks of Himalayan Art,” “The Lotus Effect: A Participatory Installation for Times of Transformation,” “Shahidul Alam: Truth to Power,” “Measure Your Existence,” “Charged with Buddha’s Blessings: Relics from an Ancient Stupa,” and “Gateway to Himalayan Art.”

NATIONAL DANCE DAY: SC7NARIO

Who: Tyler Hanes, Virgil ‘Lil O’ Gadson, Alex Wong, Max Clayton, Ryan Steele, Karla Garcia, Amber Ardolino, Christine Cornish Smith, Terk Lewis, Francesca Granell, Ryan Breslin, Blair Beasley, JJ Butler, Lauren Butler, Damian Chambers, Reanna Comstock, Adam Coy, Alexa De Barr, Joseph Fierberg, Lexi Garcia, David Guzman, Jordan Fife Hunt, Erin Kei, Major King, Katie Laduca, John Manolis, Mateo Melendez, Hamilton Moore, Nicolette Pappas, Whitney Renee, Madeline Rodrigue, Hilary Smith, Katherine Stanas, Ryan VanDenBoom, Richard Westfahl, Gabriella Whiting
What: Livestream premiere of dance film
Where: BroadwayHD
When: Saturday, September 19, free
Why: You can celebrate National Dance Day on September 19 by checking out the premiere of SC7NARIO, an eighteen-minute film choreographed by Banji Aborisade and directed by Aborisade and Moogie Brooks that features more than three dozen performers from Broadway and off Broadway moving and grooving to a score by Mason Bonner. The narrative involves a writer in a cafe working on a new tale that suddenly comes alive around him. The film was shot at Sweetleaf Coffee Roasters in Greenpoint prior to the pandemic; Barton Cortright served as cinematographer and editor, with costumes by Kathryn Bailey. A subscription service, BroadwayHD will also be streaming such shows as An American in Paris, 42nd Street, Cats, Fame, Pippin, the Royal Ballet’s Alice’s Adventure in Wonderland and The Nutcracker, and other productions as part of National Dance Day.

LEANING INTO THE UNKNOWN: AN ARTIST’S RESPONSE TO COVID-19

Who: Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, Mignolo Dance, Christy E. O’Connor, Dimitri Reyes, Lisa Campbell
What: Livestream broadcast
Where: Ramapo College Berrie Center YouTube channel
When: Saturday, September 19 & 26, free (donations accepted for the Contemporary Arts Fund or the Covid-19 Student Emergency Fund through the Ramapo Foundation), 8:00
Why: The New Jersey arts community responds to the pandemic lockdown with “Leaning into the Unknown,“ two evenings of dance, spoken word, and performance art hosted by Ramapo College’s Berrie Center. On September 19 at 8:00, Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company of Fort Lee will perform Ripple Effect, Desk and I, Phase II, Emissary of Light, and Tomorrow, along with poet Marina Carreira of Union and performance artist Christy E. O’Connor of Middletown. The lineup for September 26 features Mignolo Dance of Metuchen, spoken word artist Dimitri Reyes of Kearny, and the Moving Architects of Montclair. Each evening will conclude with a live Q&A with the artists, moderated by Berrie Center director Lisa Campbell. Admission is free, but donations will be accepted for the Contemporary Arts Fund or the Covid-19 Student Emergency Fund through the Ramapo Foundation.

EMILY JOHNSON: THE WAYS WE LOVE AND THE WAYS WE LOVE BETTER — MONUMENTAL MOVEMENT TOWARD BEING FUTURE BEING(S)

Emily Johnson rehearses for site-specific livestreamed performance on Jeffrey Gibson installation at Socrates Sculpture Park (courtesy the artists and Socrates Sculpture Park; photo by Audrey Dimola)

Who: Angel Acuña, Nia-Selassi Clark, Linda La, Denaysha Macklin, Annie Ming-Hao Wang, Angelica Mondol Viana, Ashley Pierre-Louis, Katrina Reid, Kim Savarino, Sasha Smith, Stacy Lynn Smith, Paul Tsao, Kim Velsey, Sugar Vendil, Emily Johnson/Catalyst
What: Livestreamed site-specific performance from Socrates Sculpture Park
Where: Socrates Sculpture Park Facebook and Zoom
When: Wednesday, September 16, free, 6:45
Why: The centerpiece of Socrates Sculpture Park’s “Monuments Now” exhibition, which comes along at a time when statues across the country are being torn down because of the honorees’ real or perceived ties to slavery, racism, misogyny, or colonialism, is Jeffrey Gibson’s Because Once You Enter My House It Becomes Our House, a three-level pyramid-like psychedelic structure of plywood, wheatpaste posters, steel, and LEDs, with pronouncements on all four sides: “The Future Future Future Is Present Present Present,” “Respect Indigenous Land Land Land,” “Numbers Numbers Numbers Too Too Too Big to Ignore,” and, simply and to the point, “Power.” Gibson, a Colorado-born Mississippi Choctaw-Cherokee painter and sculptor who received a 2019 MacArthur Foundation Genius grant and is based in Hudson, New York, incorporates elements of the pre-Columbian Mississippian architecture of the ancient city of Cahokia, queer camp aesthetics, and the Serpent Mound of Ohio in the forty-four-foot-high structure. In addition to the massive work, which can be seen from quite a distance away, Gibson has curated events that activate the sculpture. Violinist and visual artist Laura Ortman (White Mountain Apache) played atop the ziggurat on July 24; on September 16, Bessie Award-winning multidisciplinary artist, land and water protector, social justice activist, and Guggenheim Fellow Emily Johnson will host a special evening that seeks to offer regeneration, renewal, and transformation during these challenging times.

Jeffrey Gibson’s Because Once You Enter My House It Becomes Our House will be the site of a special performance on September 16 (photo courtesy Emily Johnson)

Johnson, who was born in Alaska of Yup’ik descent, creates immersive, interactive works, such as Niicugni, Shore, and The Thank-You Bar, that combine dance with other artistic forms, constructed around a deeply heartfelt connection with the natural environment, civic responsibility, and Indigenous cultures. In August 2017, Johnson presented Then a Cunning Voice and a Night We Spend Gazing at Stars, an overnight gathering on Randall’s Island that included storytelling, dance, discussions, kinstillatory rituals, and the preparing and eating of food. For The Ways We Love and the Ways We Love Better — Monumental Movement Toward Being Future Being(s), taking place September 16 at 6:45 at Socrates Sculpture Park, Johnson is unable to bring together a large, participatory group in person because of the pandemic; the park will be closed to the public during the performance, but it will be livestreamed over Facebook and Zoom, where people can form a virtual community. The event begins at the shore of the East River estuary with words from artist and activist Nataneh River, after which Johnson will walk to Gibson’s installation, where she and Angel Acuña, Nia-Selassi Clark, Linda La, Denaysha Macklin, Annie Ming-Hao Wang, Angelica Mondol Viana, Ashley Pierre-Louis, Katrina Reid, Kim Savarino, Sasha Smith, Stacy Lynn Smith, Paul Tsao, Kim Velsey, and Sugar Vendil will activate the work through storytelling, invocation, movement, and light. The evening concludes with the planting of tobacco in tribute to the land, which was previously known as Lenapehoking, the homeland of the Lenapeyok people. The event is free, but donations can be made to the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women and the White Mountain Apache Tribe Covid-19 Relief Fund in conjunction with the performance.

“Monuments Now” continues through the end of the month with Paul Ramírez Jonas’s communal grill Eternal Flame and Xaviera Simmons’s word-based The structure the labor the foundation the escape the pause as well as Nona Faustine’s cancel-culture billboard In Praise of Famous Men No More, with the second and third parts of the exhibit, “Call and Response” and “The Next Generation,” arriving in October; you can see a slideshow of the current works here. Johnson’s next Kinstillatory Mappings in Light and Dark Matter outdoor ceremonial fires at Abrons Arts Center are scheduled for October 8, November 12, and December 10 at 7:00.

#MetLiveArts: OUR LABYRINTH

Our Labyrinth will be livestreamed from the Met on three successive Wednesdays in September

Who: Lee Mingwei, Bill T. Jones
What: Site-specific performances of Our Labyrinth at the Met
Where: #MetLiveArts YouTube
When: Wednesday, September 16, 23, 30, free, noon – 4:30
Why: The Metropolitan Museum of Art is open again, but the programming is still taking place primarily online. Its latest livestream makes use of the galleries in a unique way. On September 16, 23, and 30, Taiwanese-American artist Lee Mingwei will team up with legendary dancer-choreographer and New York Live Arts artistic director Bill T. Jones for the durational performance piece Our Labyrinth. The work was inspired by a trip Mingwei took to Myanmar, where he visited religious sites and was overtaken by the gesture of removing one’s shoes before entering and the care volunteers took to keep the sacred space immaculate. Mingwei, who lives and works in Paris and New York City, debuted Our Labyrinth in 2015 at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum and has brought further versions to the eleventh Shanghai Biennale, Centre Pompidou in Paris, Museum MACAN in Jakarta, and Gropius Bau in Berlin. At the Met, each performance will feature a different dancer, sweeping rice with a broom into an improvised path, joined by a trio of experimental vocalists and musicians; the participants are listed below.

In a statement, Mingwei explained, “I conceived Our Labyrinth as an embrace between creation and destruction. The current iteration, enriched and empowered by Bill’s gift, is an offering to those who ever lived on this sacred land known as Mannahatta, as well as to every artist who collectively and unknowingly created the Metropolitan Museum, Spirit House of Mannahatta.” Jones added, “The work does not really need my intervention. However, there is profound meaning in doing this work at this particular moment in New York, which has experienced tremendous loss and social upheaval, oscillating between devastation and hope for the future. I am trying to understand what makes this series of performances distinctly New York, and what makes it distinctly New York now.” Of course, Our Labyrinth was created to be performed with an audience physically and spiritually connecting with it, so we’re curious to see how that transforms to online viewing, which cannot offer the same kind of immersion.

Wednesday, September 16
I-Ling Liu, Raggamuffin (Jesse White), David Thomson, with Holland Andrews, the Great Hall

Wednesday, September 23
Nayaa Opong, Brian “HallowDreamz” Henry, Huiwang Zhang, with Justin Hicks, Gallery 206, Asian Art

Wednesday, September 30
Sara Mearns, Linda LaBeija, DeAngelo Blanchard, Linda LaBeija, with Alicia Hall Moran, Gallery 700, the Charles Engelhard Court, the American Wing

STEADY, CALM, AND BRAVE: VIRTUAL BOOK LAUNCH PARTY WITH KIMBERLY BROWN

Who: Kimberly Brown
What: Virtual book launch party
Where: Zoom
When: Monday, September 14, free with RSVP, 7:00
Why: In her new book, Steady, Calm, and Brave: 25 Practices of Resilience and Wisdom in a Crisis (Publishing with Heart, July 2020, $12.95), New York City meditation teacher Kimberly J. Brown offers advice on how to deal with the current pandemic and the protests raging across the country. “Our delusions about being independent from other people, or separate from those we don’t like or don’t know, are revealed as dangerous and demonstrably false in any time of crisis,” she writes in the preface. Later, in the chapter “When It’s Us Against Them,” she explains, “Divisive thinking is a root cause of racism and so many other social problems throughout the world. The idea that we can separate ourselves from others is a type of delusion that Buddhism calls a ‘wrong view.’ Right view is the scientific fact that all humans — all living beings — are profoundly connected. We live together on the same planet, breathe the same air, share the resources of our ecosystem, and all of our actions affect one another. There is no us and them — only us.”

Brown teaches guided meditation and mind-body therapy at the Rubin Museum, the Interdependence Project, the Shantideva Center (“Metta for [Self]Compassion” on Thursday nights), and other institutions as well as privately; in addition, her “Wisdom and Healing for the World” class takes place every Sunday morning at 10:00. On September 14 at 7:00, she will be hosting a virtual book launch party for Steady, Calm, and Brave, which includes such chapters as “Harm and Healing,” “Grief and Loss,” “When Your Family Is Making You Crazy,” “When You’re Mad at the World,” “When Others Behave Badly,” and “When You’re Keeping Your Distance.” The book also features extensive back matter with blessings and resources, and Brown offers numerous types of meditation practices (five-minute, virtual, safety) for experienced meditators as well as beginners. The book is as warm and lovely as she is — I’ve known her for about ten years — so you can expect a warm and lovely event, much-needed healing during these intense times of stress and pressure coming at us from all sides.

ROCHESTER FRINGE FESTIVAL: COLLECTED STORIES

Annemarie Hagenaars and Judy Rosenblatt star in Donald Margulies’s Collected Stories at the Rochester Fringe Festival this month

Who: Judy Rosenblatt, Annemarie Hagenaars, Austin Pendleton
What: Livestreamed play as part of the Rochester Fringe Festival
Where: Rochester Fringe Festival online
When: September 15, 5:30, September 19, 5:30, September 21, 6:30, September 24, 7:30 (festival runs September 15-26), $5
Why: You didn’t really think a little ol’ thing like a pandemic lockdown would stop Austin Pendleton, did you? The ubiquitous eighty-year-old writer-actor-director-teacher extraordinaire has kept working throughout the Covid-19 crisis, starring in the Guild Hall benefit livestream of Joe Beck’s one-man show James Joyce: A Short Night’s Odyssey from No to Yes on Bloomsday; appearing in a short new one-man play by Craig Lucas, directed by Pam McKinnon, for the Homebound Project benefit series for No Kid Hungry; and directing and performing in a radio adaptation of Arthur Miller’s The American Clock for Steppenwolf.

Next up for Pendleton is directing Donald Margulies’s Pulitzer Prize finalist Collected Stories at the Rochester Fringe Festival. The two-character play debuted in 1996 at South Coast Rep and opened on Broadway in 2010. For the fringe, which is taking place virtually September 15-26 and consists of more than 170 presentations, Judy Rosenblatt will portray teacher and short story writer Ruth Steiner, and Annemarie Hagenaars will be her ambitious twenty-six-year-old student and protégée Lisa Morrison. “I am so grateful and lucky that I get to work with Austin and Judy,” Hagenaars told me via email. “I met them both online back in March at HB Studio. I haven’t met them both in real life yet. Isn’t that strange? Our whole relationship that we have built up over the past months happened solely on Zoom.”

Among the prestigious pairs who have previously played Steiner and Morrison are Kandis Chappell and Suzanne Cryer, Maria Tucci and Debra Messing, Uta Hagen and Lorca Simons, Linda Lavin and Samantha Mathis, Helen Mirren and Anne-Marie Duff, and Lavin and Sarah Paulson.

“I’m so excited to be working with Judy on this play,” Hagenaars, a Dutch actress who also has an MSc in physics and a BSc in astronomy, said about Rosenblatt (Woman Before a Glass, There or Here), who has studied and acted with Pendleton. All three live in New York City but have not been able to get together in person. “We have been meeting on Zoom and rehearsing for the past five months and we have gotten to know each other really well. Not only each other, but also our characters. Donald Margulies wrote a marvelous play and it’s a real treat to be working on these characters. Judy and I work very well together. We both have a Meisner background and we like exploring every single beat in the script. We are a great match.”

I let Hagenaars (Girl Gone: Or Before A League of Their Own, CasablancaBox) know that last summer I rode the Third Ave. bus a short way with Pendleton and we had a lovely chat about theater. I did not tell him that the bus kiosk where we met featured an ad for his play at the time, Aaron Posner’s brilliant Uncle Vanya reimagining Life Sucks, and that the rave at the top of the ad was mine.

“Austin is a fantastic director,“ Hagenaars explained. “He is very kind and he knows exactly how to work with actors and give them notes and feedback on their work. I guess because he also has a lot of experience as an actor he knows how he likes to be directed and reflects that in his work. He is always very supportive of our work but gives the necessary adjustments to us to guide us in a different direction. And his directions are truly enlightening for me. I can’t wait to meet him in real life and give him a big hug.”

The play will be streamed live September 15 and 19 at 5:30, September 21 at 6:30, and September 24 at 7:30; tickets are a mere five bucks.

“I’m having a blast and I feel so fortunate with Judy and Austin,” Hagenaars concluded. “This whole process has been totally worth it and we haven’t even gotten to the first performance yet, but I’m gonna enjoy every single minute.”