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Event
Triskelion Arts Presents... Split Bill - September 2015
Triskelion Arts Presents... Split Bill
September 24-27, 2015 at 7:30pm
Thursday, September 24: MMDC/Mari Meade & Chris Herde and Dancers Friday, September 25: Chris Herde and Dancers & Marcos Duran Performance Group Saturday, September 26: Elisa Monte Dance & MMDC/Mari Meade Sunday, September 27: Marcos Duran Performance Group & Elisa Monte Dance
Tickets: $16
ABOUT THE ARTISTS
Marcos Duran Performance Group dives into uncharted territory with the creation of "Worlds and Plateaus". Intense imagery and narratives are woven into the embodied histories of the performers and the hauntingly evocative music of Seattle-based composer Adam Lahm. Boundaries are pushed, relationships are challenged, and discovery is imminent in this search for new landscapes.
Tiffany Rea-Fisher, the newly appointed Artistic Director of Elisa Monte Dance, premieres "Because I Am". "Because I Am" consists of solos, duets and trios, and investigates the relationship of one's perceived identity particularly as it relates to the world at large making judgments about us and the boxes and roles in which we are put and expected to stay.
MMDC/Mari Meade premieres "This world is not my home", a series of vignettes, simple to the point of rawness. Each vignette's creation is bound by a set of rules, meant to foster an indelible relationship to the bluegrass/folk/country score and an authentic, human connection to the movement. Meade is interested in repetition and an emotionless, task-oriented approach to movement and how, in spite of these restrictions, both emotion and a dreamlike quality emerge.
Chris Herde and Dancers' "Telephone Home Movies" is a long-form ensemble piece in which four dancers interact through a closed-circuit television system and corresponding projection. An exercise in cinematography as well as performance, the performers have to shape their bodies for the camera rather than the camera adjusting to capture their image, creating a dance that happens in digital space. Intimate, thoughtful and sometimes silly, the work explores the tension between what is seen by the eye of the camera and what is "framed out." How do we edit the effigies we create of ourselves and what happens when we think the camera is off?
More Info: www.triskelionarts.org
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LocationTriskelion Arts' Muriel Schulman Theater (View)
106 Calyer Street
Brooklyn, NY 11222
United States
Categories
Dog Friendly: No |
Non-Smoking: Yes! |
Wheelchair Accessible: Yes! |
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Contact
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