Tag Archives: Alexandra Albrecht

AMERICAN REALNESS / COIL — JILLIAN PEÑA: PANOPTICON

(photo by Ian Douglas)

Alexandra Albrecht and Andrew Champlin mirror each other in Jillian Peña’s PANOPTICON (photo by Ian Douglas)

Abrons Arts Center, Experimental Theater
466 Grand St. at Pitt St.
January 9-17, $20
Festival continues through January 17
212-598-0400
www.abronsartscenter.org
www.ps122.org/panopticon

If the title of Jillian Peña’s Panopticon recalls nineteenth-century optical instruments, you’re on the wrong track. It’s French philosopher Michel Foucault who’s the real reference for the Brooklyn-based choreographer’s latest evening-length piece, making its world premiere as a dual presentation of the COIL and American Realness festivals at Abrons Arts Center. In the “Pantopticism” chapter of Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, Foucault wrote, in reference to the arrival of plague in a town, “First, a strict spatial partitioning. . . . It is a segmented, immobile, frozen space. Each individual is fixed in his place. And, if he moves, he does so at the risk of his life, contagion or punishment. Inspection functions ceaselessly. The gaze is alert everywhere.” Foucault goes on to discuss such concepts as observation, surveillance, quarantine, and purification, elements that Peña refers to directly and indirectly in Panopticon, a duet performed by Alexandra Albrecht and Andrew Champlin that can be seen as an extension of their collaboration on Peña’s Polly Pocket, which was part of American Realness in 2014. The Experimental Theater has been arranged so that there is one row of chairs on all four sides of the room. However, on the two short sides, there are an additional ten chairs, organized like bowling pins, with one chair pointing toward the center of the space, followed by rows of two, three, and four seats, creating confining gaps in all four corners. High on the wall in the middle of the two longer sides are slightly tilted boards covered in silver Mylar, offering distorted reflections of what is occurring down below. For nearly an hour, Albrecht and Champlin move in parallel spaces delineated by tape on the floor, as if mirror images of each other, though occasionally touching and breaking that plane, disrupting the effect in disturbing yet beautiful ways. In dry, monotone voices, they discuss happiness, separation, time, and isolation as they perform balletic moves. They get so close to audience members that tiny rips in their slightly different op-art-inspired costumes, designed by Christian Joy, are visible, although the dancers rarely make eye contact with the crowd.

Alexandra Albrecht and Andrew Champlin mirror each other in Jillian Peña’s PANOPTICON (photo by Ian Douglas)

Alexandra Albrecht and Andrew Champlin explore happiness, separation, time, and isolation in Jillian Peña’s PANOPTICON (photo by Ian Douglas)

Even though they are moving in and around some of the viewers, it is as if Albrecht and Champlin are in a world of their own, reciting text by Samuel Beckett and Tom Stoppard as well as original dialogue written by the two dancers and Peña, while subtle, ambient music by Atticus Ros, Brian Eno & Harold Budd, Max Richter, David Bowie, Wendy Carlos, and Rachel Elkind floats in the background. Meanwhile, a man in one corner is filming everything. The show was being promoted as “a solo and a work for 100 dancers,” a “kaleidoscopic” piece with video elements, but instead it’s an intimate, decidedly low-tech exploration of twinning and the relationship between performer and audience. As Foucault explained, “This enclosed, segmented space, observed at every point, in which the individuals are inserted in a fixed place, in which the slightest movements are supervised, in which all events are recorded, in which an uninterrupted work of writing links the centre and periphery, in which power is exercised without division, according to a continuous hierarchical figure, in which each individual is constantly located, examined and distributed among the living beings, the sick and the dead — all this constitutes a compact model of the disciplinary mechanism.” There is a distinct architecture that pervades Panopticon, one that both frees you and holds you captive.

COIL 2016

(photo by Jorge Lizalde)

Ranters Theatre’s SONG kicks off COIL 2016 festival (photo by Jorge Lizalde)

Multiple venues
January 5-17, $20 unless otherwise noted
www.ps122.org

Every January, New York City is home to a handful of performance festivals that feature cutting-edge and experimental theater, dance, music, and installation art. PS122’s home at 150 First Ave. is scheduled to reopen this summer following a major renovation, but in the meantime you can experience its innovative programming at COIL 2016, taking place at various venues in Brooklyn, Queens, and Manhattan. “COIL 2016 attacks the very concept of boundaries and of limits. The boundaries between ideologies, life and death, the contemporary and historic, human and machine, light and darkness, audience and performer,” PS122 artistic director Vallejo Gantner explains on the event website. “Limitations of time, identity, age, and geography disappear. The work we will see this year deals with evolutionary transformation — personal, social, and artistic.” COIL begins on January 5 with Ranters Theatre’s Song (January 5-8), a sixty-minute immersive sound and visual installation at the New Ohio Theatre in which the audience can sit or lie down on the floor. Composer and vocalist Samita Sinha collaborates with Red Baarat percussionist Sunny Jain, guitarist and sound designer Greg Mcmurray, lighting designer Devin Cameron, visual artist Dani Leventhal, and director Ain Gordon on bewilderment and other queer lions (January 6-10, Invisible Dog Art Center), an intimate investigation of ritual and mythology through music, text, and image. Choreographer Jillian Peña’s Panopticon (January 9-17, Abrons Arts Center), a copresentation with American Realness, uses reflections to give a kaleidoscopic effect to a duet by Alexandra Albrecht and Andrew Champlin.

At the Baryshnikov Arts Center, Australians Helen Herbertson and Ben Cobham team up for Morphia Series (January 12-16), an eighteen-minute phantasmal environment for twelve audience members at a time. Annie Dorsen, whose Magical with Anne Juren was a highlight of COIL 2013, is back with Yesterday Tomorrow (January 13-16, La MaMa), in which Hai-Ting Chinn, Jeffrey Gavett, and Natalie Raybould go on a multimedia musical journey from the Beatles’ “Yesterday” to Annie’s “Tomorrow.” Asia Society will be hosting Xi Ban and Po Huang Club’s one-night only Shanghai / New York: Future Histories 2 (January 13, free with RSVP, 7:00 & 9:30), which melds Peking Opera with southern blues. The festival also includes niv Acosta’s Discotropic (January 6-10, Westbeth Artists Community), Frank Boyd’s The Holler Sessions (January 6-17, Paradise Factory), Kaneza Schaal’s Go Forth (January 7-12, Westbeth), David Neumann’s I Understand Everything Better (January 10-16, the Chocolate Factory), Ranters Theatre’s Intimacy (January 11-16, New Ohio Theatre), Chris Thorpe and Rachel Chavkin’s Confirmation (January 13-17, Invisible Dog), Jonathan Capdevielle’s Adishatz / Adieu (January 15-17, Abrons Arts Center), and Michael Kliën’s Excavation Site: Martha Graham U.S.A. (January 15, Martha Graham Studios, 3:00 – 7:00).

ONTHEFLOOR: REMIX

Liberty Hall at the Ace Hotel
20 West 29th St. at Broadway
Monthly Saturday nights at 8:00, October 11, November 8, December 13, $15-$20
www.thedancecartel.com

For the last few years, the Dance Cartel has been presenting the immersive OntheFloor in the downstairs Liberty Hall at the Ace Hotel, where courageous, uninhibited performers move in and around the crowd as they groove to funky beats with an enticing but controlled abandon. Conceived and choreographed by Ani Taj and codirected with Sam Pinkleton, OntheFloor will be back at the Ace Hotel with Remix, a brand-new edition taking place October 11, November 8, and December 13 back in Liberty Hall. Performers Alexandra Albrecht, Aziza Barnes, Emily Bass, nicHi douglas, Thomas Gibbons, Audrey Hailes, Sunny Hitt, Danika Manso-Brown, Justin Perez, and Taj will be joined by such special guests as Zuzuka Poderosa, Grace McLean, Batala NYC, and DJs Average Jo, Matt Kilmer, and Stefande. Be prepared for things to get wild before, during, and after the ninety-minute show.

THE DANCE CARTEL: ONTHEFLOOR

Liberty Hall at the ACE Hotel
20 West 29th St. at Broadway
Monthly Saturday nights at 9:00 through December 7, $15-$20
www.thedancecartel.com

Earlier this year, in an exclusive twi-ny talk, dancer and choreographer Ani Taj Niemann said about OntheFloor, “We really embrace the idea of making dance happen in unexpected places so that people outside of the usual dance crowd can have access to it. . . . Our MC offers a few simple guidelines at the top of the show, but mostly it’s common sense: If you see a body flying toward you, move; if you like the beat, groove. Part of the fun is that you’re being asked to be aware of your own body in space — as you would at a crowded concert or club.” Conceived by Niemann and codirected with Sam Pinkleton, the Dance Cartel’s OntheFloor is back at the newly renovated downstairs Liberty Hall at the Ace Hotel for monthly shows September 14, October 5, November 2, and December 7. Among the special guests scheduled to join Dance Cartel members Alexandra Albrecht, nicHi douglas, Thomas Gibbons, Audrey Hailes, Sunny Hitt, Danika Manso-Brown, Justin Perez, and Niemann are Reggie Watts, the Mast, Grace McLean, DJ Stefan, DJ Average Jo, BatalaNYC, and others. When we saw the immersive, interactive production last fall, we raved, “After spending about an hour and a half with the Dance Cartel, you might not know exactly quite what hit you, but you are likely to feel energized and exhilarated. . . . Things get fast and furious, the dancers getting right in everyone’s face, eventually leading to a free-for-all finale.” The frenetic show features tantalizing costumes by Soule Golden, lighting by Vadim Ledvin (be careful not to block the spots), and video by Harrison Boyce and Stephen Arnoczy, making sure there is plenty for you to see and do every step of the way.

ONTHEFLOOR WITH THE DANCE CARTEL

Liberty Hall at the ACE Hotel
20 West 29th St. at Broadway
Tuesday nights at 9:00 through December 18 (no show November 20), $15-$20
www.thedancecartel.com

After spending about an hour and a half with the Dance Cartel, you might not know exactly quite what hit you, but you are likely to feel energized and exhilarated. The night opens with short, odd, off-kilter performance pieces but swiftly turns into a whirlwind of exuberant, electrifying movement. Held in the dark basement known as Liberty Hall in the Ace Hotel, OntheFloor begins with a curated series of extremely low-budget pieces of performance art that can range from very silly videos to an awful first-time comedian to an auction of remnants of artworks supposedly gathered off the streets of a Hurricane Sandy–rattled Chelsea. But then the Dance Cartel takes over, a group of costumed men and women who look and move like survivors from Pat Benatar’s “Love Is a Battlefield” video. Alexandra Albrecht, Aziza Barnes, Emily Bass, nicHi Douglas, Josh Palmer, Justin Perez, Ryan Ross, and choreographer and codirector Ani Taj Niemann make their way throughout the space, followed by the audience, as familiar bass-heavy rap, hip-hop, and pop songs vibrate off the walls, courtesy of DJs Max Pearl and Average Jo. Vadim Ledvin’s lighting goes from frenetic and emotional to cool and mysterious as the dancers take center stage, then run off into corners, hump walls, writhe on the ground, and gyrate against one another. MCs Chinaza Uche and Cyndi Perczek rev up the crowd as things get fast and furious, the dancers getting right in everyone’s face, eventually leading to a free-for-all finale. Codirected by Sam Pinkleton, the show also features video by Harrison Boyce and Stephen Arnoczy and live music by Rose Blanshei and BatalaNYC. People are encouraged to come early, stay late, and buy drinks at the bar; they also receive instructions asking them not to stand in front of any lights, to stay off cell phones unless tweeting or texting about the show, to get out of the way of flying bodies, and “If you want to dance, dance. If you want to jump, jump. If you want to sit over there, that’s lame but fine.”

HILARY EASTON + COMPANY: THE CONSTRUCTORS

Hilary Easton celebrates her twentieth anniversary this week with two new shows at BAC

Baryshnikov Arts Center, Howard Gilman Performance Space
450 West 37th St. between Ninth & Tenth Aves.
May 17-20, $20
212-868-4444
www.bacnyc.org
www.hilaryeaston.com

Native New Yorker Hilary Easton is celebrating her company’s twentieth anniversary in style this week at the Baryshnikov Arts Center. The Manhattan-based dancer and choreographer will be presenting the world premiere of the evening-length piece The Constructors, which will be performed by Alexandra Albrecht, Michael Ingle, Joshua Palmer, Emily Pope-Blackman, and Sarah Young, with music by Mike Rugnetta, lighting by Kathy Kaufmann, and costumes by Madeleine Walach. The Constructors delves into the nature of collaboration through a series of kinetic tasks that break down the barrier between audience and performer. In addition, as a special bonus, on Thursday and Friday Easton will be performing a new solo, The Heart Is Like a Toboggan, with a costume by fashion designer Cynthia Rowley. An artists’ dialogue will follow the Sunday matinee, with Easton and her company discussing the making of The Constructors; ticket holders from any of the performances can attend the presentation for free.