Archive for the ‘dance’ Category

2008’s BEST…

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

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FIVE NEW FILMS
Hunger (Steve McQueen)
There Will Be Blood (Paul Thomas Anderson)
Happy-Go-Lucky (Mike Leigh)
Yeast (Mary Bronstein)
En la ciudad de Sylvia (José Luis Guerin)

FIVE OLD FILMS
Five More Minutes (Karin Wandner & Dena DeCola, 2005)
Tren de Sombras (José Luis Guerin, 1997)
July Trip (Waël Noureddine, 2007)
Killer of Sheep (Charles Burnett, 1977)
Histoire(s) du Cinema (Jean-Luc Godard, 1988-1998)

ONE TV SHOW
The Wire (David Simon)

FIVE LIVE EVENTS
It is better to… (Thomas Lehman/Irish Modern Dance Theatre)
Three Atmospheric Studies (Bill Forsyth), Dublin Dance Festival
Shared Material on Dying (Liz Roche), Dublin Dance Festival
The Funky Seomra alcohol-free dance night
Crispin Glover at the Darklight Festival

FIVE ESSAYS
• “Hope in Common” by David Graeber
• “The Fringe for Obama” by Ran Prieur
• “On the Subject of Regrettable Searching – Body to Body, the Filmed Body” by Nicole Brenez
• “Sheltering the Daydream: Jose Luis Guerin’s In the City of Sylvia
by Tony McKibbin
• “Harun Farocki’s Images of the World” by Christopher Pavsek

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2007’s BEST…

Monday, December 31st, 2007

FIVE LIVE EVENTS
• Joanna Newsom, Olympia Theatre
Lisa Germano, Douglas Hyde Gallery
This Dancing Life, choreographed by Sara Rudner, St Michael and John’s Church
• Ibsen’s Nora, directed by Thomas Ostermeier, the Schaubuehne, Berlin
Jenny Lindfors, Crawdaddy

FIVE EXHIBITIONS
“Zero Degree: The New Image of Thought” curated by Esperanza Collado, Thisisnotashop gallery
• “Beyond Cinema: The Art of Projection (films, videos and installations from 1963 to 2005)” curated by Gabriele Knapstein and Joachim Jäger, Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin
• “Michael Snow: Cinema, Installazioni, Video e Arti Visuali” curated by Vittorio di Fagone, Fondazione Ragghianti, Lucca, Italy
• “Villes/Cities/Städte”, Raymond Depardon, Museum für Fotografie, Berlin
• “Tulsa” and “Teenage Lust”, Larry Clark, Museum für Fotografie, Berlin

FIVE LECTURES
• Pip Chodorov, “Free Radicals: the story of the Avant-Garde”, Lucca Film Festival
• Christopher Doyle, “What I Do When I’m Where I Am”, Kimchi Bar, DEAF
• Brian Winston, closing speech at Documentary in the 21st Century conference, DLIADT
• Dr. Harvey O’Brien, “Electrocuting the Elephant” at Documentary in the 21st Century conference, DLIADT
• Derrick Jensen, “Endgame” (click here and here to listen)

FIVE NEW FILMS
Inland Empire (David Lynch)
Nightshots (Stephen Dwoskin)
Medea (Tonino de Bernardi)
We Own the Night (James Gray)
Into the Wild (Sean Penn)

FIVE OLD FILMS
Le Lit de la Vierge (Philippe Garrel, 1969)
Route One / USA (Robert Kramer, 1989)
Back and Forth (Michael Snow, 1969)
Carpicci (Carmelo Bene, 1969)
Manuel on the Island of Wonders (Raul Ruiz, 1984)

ONE NEW IRISH FILM
Garage (Lenny Abrahamson)

FIVE NEW ALBUMS
Ys, Joanna Newsom
In the Maybe World, Lisa Germano
Into the Wild, Eddie Vedder
Modern Times, Bob Dylan
Kala, M.I.A.

FIVE OLD ALBUMS
The Absent and the Distant, Corrina Repp, 2006
Countless Times, Diane Cluck, 2005
Oh Vanille/Ova Nil, Diane Cluck, 2005
In My Own Time, Karen Dalton, 1971
Transatlanticism, Death Cab for Cutie, 2003

LIST OF OMISSIONS

Monday, December 31st, 2007

“(…And then there are all the lost films.)”

— the final line of Nicole Brenez’s essay, “Forms 1960-2004: ‘The Critical Faculty Invents Fresh Forms’” in ed. Michael Temple & Michael Witt, The French Cinema Book (BFI, 2004)

The thing that has weighed most on my mind about this blog, since I started writing in it exactly six months ago, is all the cultural events I never got around to writing about. It’s not that I have something brilliant and insightful to say about each and every piece of art I encounter (although I know most critical insights I have had came through writing)—but I have this instinctive feeling I can’t shake: this feeling that writing about art really matters. Not just on a personal level, as a way of working through the experience and helping others work through it; but on a broader level, as part of an ongoing description of and engagement with a cultural scene.

For me, this scene is naturally Dublin, but writing about art I see abroad is just as essential as a way of bringing new perspectives and ideas to bear on my local culture, and my own thinking—and though the art in which I’m actively involved in is film, writing about all kinds of art is even more essential. The segregation of the arts is tiresomely and damagingly prevalent these days, especially when it comes to cinema. It not only creates false double standards for the criticism of different arts (compare the way in which book reviews and film reviews are handled in the Irish Times) but figures a stagnant containment of each form from each other, preventing the insights and perspectives of different forms to infiltrating each and expanding one’s view as either a critic or an artist. And anyway, saying you only like film is no better than being one of those jerks who only likes one kind of music. On top of all this, there’s the baser argument that in our present world, art that’s written about exists “more” (that is has more of a life) than art that isn’t written about.

So, it’s about making links rather than erecting boundaries, and describing and engaging critically with culture in a way that seeks to keep it alive, and make it better. However, despite my ongoing commitment to that endeavour, my ongoing commitment to many other endeavours has meant that I never wrote about the following plays, films, dance shows, exhibitions and gigs. I’m sorry I didn’t, because it would have been worth it, especially in a country where there is very little consistent coverage of art in the media (and even less worth reading), and as a consequent very little engagement, especially across different mediums. I don’t know if we even have any serious blogs dealing with art at all in this country, despite it being the perfect format for such an enterprise. (If you know any and you’re out there, please say hello.)

So here, for posterity, and in the hope that I might someday return to them, is everything that’s been left unsaid:

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BERLIN (June)
Fucking Different New York (various, 2007), the International
• “The Masterpieces of French Painting from The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 1800-1920″, Neue Nationalgalerie

ITALY (September-October)
Dillinger e Morto (Marco Ferreri, 1969)
Medea (Tonino de Bernardi, 2007)
Capricci (Carmelo Bene, 1969)
Stefano Junior (Maurizio Ponzi, 1969)
L’Eau Froide (Olivier Assayas, 1994)
Corpus Callosum (Michael Snow, 2002)
Once Upon a Time (Corinna Schnitt, 2006)
De Sortie (Thomas Salvador, 2005)
You Made Me Love You (Mirando Pennell, 2006)
Pyramids/Skunk (John Smith, 2007)
Twist (Alexia Walther, 2006)

IRELAND (July-December)
John and Jane (Ashim Ahluwalia, 2005), Galway Film Fleadh
Saphir (photography and two-screen projection), Zineb Sedira, Temple Bar Gallery
This Dancing Life, choreographed by Sara Rudner (Irish Modern Dance Theatre), St Michael and John’s Church
• [EM] (jazz trio), with panel discussion: “Regeneration Berlin: jazz in a changing city”, the Sugar Club
• Seomra Spraoi’s weekly film screenings.
The Undertaking (Cathal Black, 2007), Stranger Than Fiction festival
Mosney (Nicky Gogan & Paul Rowley, 2007), Stranger Than Fiction festival
Iraq in Fragments (James Longley, 2007), Stranger Than Fiction festival
Kicking a Dead Horse (Sam Shepard), the Abbey Theatre
• Chekhov’sUncle Vanya, directed by Robin Lefevre, the Gate Theatre
• “Documentary in the 21st Century” National Film School Conference, DLIADT
• Pamelia Kurstin (theremin player), the Ark, DEAF
Featherhead (dance/music collaboration with Gyohei Zatsu, Itaru Oki and Trevor Knight), DEAF
• Jenny Lindfors, Crawdaddy
• Ben Kritikos and the Happy Gang, Bewleys Cafe Theatre
I Can’t Make it Without You, choreographed by Liz Roche (Rex Levitates), Project Arts Centre

(Still image from Guy Debord’s Hurlements en favor de Sade [1952].)

NOTES ON DANCE

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

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Before I began this blog, my writing about art I had experienced was extremely sporadic and unfocused. Occasionally I'd feel a strong need to work out on paper my feelings about something I'd seen, but I usually never found the time, or the focus, to do so. But occasionally I did. In June 2006, I had a week of cultural binging in London, during which I caught two dance shows that gave me the impetus to jot down some impressions on an art form I'd become increasingly enrapt with over the previous year or so. I still think it's probably the richest and most important art we have, and as I hope to write a lot more about it on these pages, I wanted to post these notes, my first foray into dance writing, as a sort of starting point. Though the ideas below are in a pretty rough and embryonic state, they're ideas that have been somewhat foundational in my (totally unschooled) thinking around dance.

They will be developed.

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PUSH (pictured above), choreographed by Russell Maliphant, at Sadler’s Wells, was beautiful, lush, elegant, incredibly smooth and technically accomplished—atonishingly acrobatic at times. Yet for all these superlatives (and more—the precisely evocative lighting, the moving music…), I still felt slightly sceptical—like it was all too accomplished, too seamless and too “impressive”—a scepticism exacerbated by the degree to which discussion of the show invariably focused on legendary dancer Sylvie Guillem’s almost miraculous technique, flexibility, athletic prowess, etc. But so what? It’s not Olympic showjumping. What about art, feeling, etc? And OK, there’s some of that here—and perhaps something to be said for the transcendent dreaminess this kind of lushness and seamlessness evokes. But I’m not convinced that the Maliphant’s actual dance compositions had much integrity outside of their general “atmosphere”, and technical virtuosity. In fact, I almost feel that something about their dreamy aura of impressiveness actually tended to defeat a passionate engagement with the dance; that heart-in-your-throat feeling that both the dancer’s and your own emotional future at at stake with every single movement or phrase. Instead, you were just gently lulled by what the programme called the “glamourousness” of the dance.

That said, there was definitely some interesting moments and implications within the dance. The main duet, PUSH [which was preceded by a few shorter solos and duets] seemed to lull even itself into the flowing repetition of its phrases, mostly consisting of Guillem leaning on or being held up by Maliphant in various acrobatic poses. This verged on dullness at times, but there was an interesting sense of an almost self-critical impulse at work in the dance’s structure—a sense of the burden and endlessness of having to support and deal with the amost over-effusive and decadent brilliance of Guillem’s skill. It was this undercurrent that saved the piece for me, and is the reason I was so pleased at the phrase on which the piece ended (which had also emerged several times earlier): Maliphant lifts Guillem high above his head, right up into the air—a pose both physically and imagistically awesome and majestic—but then he falters, and with a whispered grunt drops her a few inches, as if he can barely stand the weight (both physical and imagistic) of the pose. But there was perhaps too few moments of weakness like that. The consequence of this showed in moments when the duo seemed to be striving for a level of conflict and violence in the relationship that it could only really manage to indicate, rather than enact—they were simply too accomplished, too perfect, they worked too well together to really clash.

JAMMY DODGERS (pictured below) by Frauke Requardt, at The Place, was a hell of a contrast. Where Maliphant was lush, smooth, unified and clever, Requardt is edgy, rough, messy, bitty and playful. The result was maybe just as flawed as PUSH but something I felt much more at home at. A live jazz band—loud and wild—perform while four dancers come in and out, and a sound guy dressed like a repairman co-ordinates electronic interludes. The whole thing felt brash and wilfully indefinable—phrases are scattershot, loppy… I’m going to run out of adjectives soon. The most fascinating point for me (in retrospect) was the way the whole enterprise seemed to refuse the relationship metaphor that is so often the almost unavoidable thematic crux of modern dance. Here, movements seem more like shapes—even when those shapes are familiar or even everyday (eg Frauke falling on the ground laughing), they’re somewhat abstracted, exaggerated and decontextualised—both narratively and relationally. When performers dance together, it feels more like collaborative shape-making, in a similarly abstracted vein. If it’s expressive–and I wonder if that word is actually applicable at all here—then it’s expressive not of any worldly relational dynamics, but of a sort of joy of play; which isn’t to say there isn’t plenty of darkness and disturbances, just that they’re part of the—serious—play. This kind of play seems to be a rejection of “play” the noun, as in theatre, and a rejection of its influence on dance. Instead it posits a play in its original sense—a creative use of bodies in space. Light and sound are a part of this too, and one used in an equally playful and screwy (I found another adjective) manner—ambient hums, purple fill lighting, odd SFX, one scene lit by a single flashlight. But no narrative, no characters. Not even the trace or allusion to them.

As if it saw my thesis coming, the show has one scene consisting explicitly of relationship dynamics—but in a completely debased and parodic form. The characters mimic making out passionately and fucking in dominant-submissive doggy positions…while wearing huge hairy Santa Claus (or God?) masks. The anarchy kills theatre, and frees dance. Or maybe all this is unnecessary word-weaving, and the jazz band the real tell-tale…

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THE FRINGE

Saturday, November 17th, 2007

Beckett's bodiless theatre

REGARDS THE PLAYS WHICH I DIDN’T GO TO SEE

I’ve gotten into a bit of a routine when it comes to the Dublin Fringe Festival: I always start by going to one play—in this case, the Rep Experiment’s woeful rendition of what was already Chekhov’s worst play, PLATANOV—hating it and sticking to dance shows for the rest of the fortnight. The growing predictability of my disappointment with Irish theatre has not lessened it, and while I could identify many problems with our treatment of this art which has been, to some people at some times, the flagship of our culture—the one worth mentioning above all (next to, though interconected with, the glaring and relentless safe-ness of most of our output) is this: the remarkable lack of engagement with the physical.

Part of this seems to be the legacy of perhaps our most singular playwright, Samuel Beckett, who’s stripping back of movement and emphasis on the word and the monologue prefigured the work of most of our more recent acclaimed playwrights (Brian Friel, Conor McPherson, Enda Walsh, Mark O’Rowe, etc)—some of whose work is undeniably brilliant within that context. Still, Beckett’s minimalist style developed out of an extremely personal existential vision, and his progressive restriction of the spatial and the physical in his work seems to be more a way of opening up theatre to a different kind of contemplative space rather than an overt repression of the physical. (Certainly the double act of Didi and Gogo, and FILM (1965), Beckett’s Buster Keaton movie, wouldn’t fit into that thesis, and even in the later, ultra-minimalist works like ROCKABY there is, despite the almost death-like stillness, a very corporeal sense of decay.) However, when this style of theatre becomes a tradition, becomes in effect the status quo, the expressive limitations can be stifling.

In a world that is increasing de-physicalised, virtualised and mediated through images, we need art that connects to the body, takes place in the body and puts us, as viewers, back in our bodies. Theatre—essentially an art of bodies—is a fine place to do this, but it’s an engagement which Irish narrative theatre is largely missing, and, I think in its own timid and confused way, blindly seeking. I wonder if the bizarre spate of recent theatre adaptations of Danish films is something to do with this. Since Polish company’s Tr Warszawa’s version of Thomas Vinterberg’s FESTEN played here in the 2004 Dublin Theatre Festival, we’ve had our own FESTEN adaption at the Gate, and in the DTF just past, Pan Pan Theatre’s adaptation of Lars Von Trier’s THE IDIOTS. Both films (from a film movement whose manifesto was all about allowing a more direct and intimate experience of reality) see an uptight, repressed and in-denial society subverted by a confrontation with the physical: in FESTEN, by a performative revelation of truths which violates the social rules of a dinner party; in THE IDIOTS, by performances of “spazzing” which violate every social rule imaginable. In each case the rules broken are ones that delineate the physical: when it’s OK to touch, to be sensual, to be intimate.

Anyway… all of this is by way of longwinded preamble to say thank God for Irish dance theatre, a scene which is steadily emerging as the antitode to everything I’ve lamented above. The range of Irish artists working in dance—Rex Levitates, Coiscéim, Daghda and Irish Modern Dance Theatre being the four key names to watch—may not quite match the greatest work being done in dance internationally, but they’re diverse, passionate, daring (and, of course, physical) in a way Irish theatre almost never is.

REGARDS THE DANCE I DID GO SEE

The series of dance triple bills that ran throughout the two-week festival were an inevitably mixed bag, but the chance to see three short works back to back was a wonderful opportunity to try to figure out what works and what doesn’t in different styles of dance theatre.

Dance Triple Bill 1, taking place in the Project Arts Centre, sandwiched one of the worst pieces of live dance I’ve ever seen between two very strong, but very text-based works. Catherine Young’s COMMINGLE mixed traditional African and Irish rhythms and movements into a pretty mindless celebration of multiculturalism that was both intellectually and formally slack. The fact that the entire dance troupe never stopped grinning from ear to ear didn’t help either. CATASTROPHE COMMUNICATION COMBINATORIA, a collaboration between Caroline Hainaut and the performer, Palle Dyrvall, was essentially a very dense, and sometimes funny, lecture accompanied by a rapid choreography that mirrored and informed the text on an almost word by word basis. The ideas (dealing with, for example, how various forms of delocation and marginalisation—whether geographic, historical or imaginative— serve to limit human agency)—were fascinating, but were never really allowed to fully play out in the actor’s body as anything more than a shadow of the words spoken. HANGING IN THERE, Nick Bryson and Damian Punch explored an itinerary of choreographic possibilites while simultaneously describing them in the language and vocabulary of the Good Friday Agreement. Here the problem with the text is the joke, and rather than the movement being a poor shadow of the words, the words are a poor, and at times completely surreal, reflection of the movement.

Dance Triple Bill 2, also in the Project, was another weird sandwich experience: an excellent foreign piece between two ultimately unsuccessful (and again wordy) Irish pieces. Shakram Dance Theatre’s THE ANIMA AND THE ANIMUS, choreographed by Mairead Vaughan, had some strong dynamic phrases and three excellent dancers, but didn’t really hold together in its duration, and the technique of having the dancers chat informally while dancing, while an interesting and humanising complication of our usual relationship with dancers on stage, didn’t help it in terms of cohesion. Coiscéim, testing out a new work-in-progress to fill in for another show that got cancelled, gave us KISSING, an airy, funny piece drawing on the dancers’ personal experiences of kissing. Coiscéim are at the cutting edge (if that term isn’t a misnomer in this context) of using contemporary dance in an engagingly populist way: their brilliance is their ability to connect the Irish theatrical tradition of the storyteller and the monologuist with an explicit and intertwined physicality that is also carefully rooted in the vernacular, often using distilled or stylised versions of everyday movement. This was the undeniable strength of their previous show, KNOTS, which is being revived later this year, and dealt with modern relationships in both psychological and bodily (and at times assaultive) terms. My uneasiness with their project is that while this sounds very good and progressive, poetry and complexity tend to get a little short-circuited in the process—as was awfully clear in KISSING, which, lacking the hard formal and analytic edge of KNOTS, ended up as harmless and lightweight as one of those Channel 4 documentaries on similar subjects, and with a style no less easily digestible.

Canadian company Tiger Princess Dance Project presented a brilliantly crafted mix of elegance and gracelessness to the tune of three Bach pieces in STONE VELVET, choreographed by Tedd Robinson. There was an intricacy and level of actual thinking through dance (rather than words) here that marked it out from everything else in the triple bills. The proliferation of speech in most of the pieces seems to indicate a certain dissatisfaction with pure dance: the talky pieces of the first Dance Triple Bill used words in order to politicise movement (albeit satirically, in Bryson and Punch’s piece); Coisceim and Shakram in the second programme used them to humanise it. In both cases the implication was that the choreography of physical movements by itself is not enough, is not capable of engaging sufficiently in the things that matter to us. Such reliance on words does lead to a greater structural rigour; in the case of Young’s piece, for example, it certainly would have helped tighten her floppy ideals. But Young’s piece was flimsy physically and formally as well as conceptually, and Robinson illustrates that meaning and precision can exist quite spectacularly and in purely non-intellectual terms, if we’re equipped to look for it.

All of this links in nicely with the final, longest dance show I caught at the festival: INCARNAT (pictured above), choreographed by Lia Rodriques with her Brazil-based company. While Rodrigues claims the origins of INCARNAT were literary (Susan Sontag’s book REGARDING THE PAIN OF OTHERS was allegedly the primary influence), its performance is obsessively focused on phenomenon originating in the body. After a spare but dazzling introduction (in which the group of eight dancers, four men and four women, circle the stage and each other, negotiating the space in shifting, ritualistic patterns), the bulk of the show consisted of various minimalist sketches, usually only involving between one and three of the dancers (usually nude), each exploring different physical manifestations of pain, violence and desire: a man slowly contorting his face into various extremes of anguish until he begins to seem almost deformed; a woman screaming at the top of her lungs; two men tearing clothes off a bloodied, unconscious woman with their teeth. Blood (liberally simulated with ketchup), and, at one untypically tender and crucial moment, milk, were the only props employed throughout.

IMDT choreographer John Scott told me someone wrote a paper recently contrasting INCARNAT with his work CLOSE-UPS (which premiered at the Dance Festival last year). It’s a comparison which is instructive. Scott’s piece, performed by a mix of professional dancers and African refugees, is full of paroxysms of rage, hysteria and pain: a man asserting “I don’t want to die yet” before desperately choking to death, or the collective body of dancers laughing between a dance phrase, then mime-vomiting after the next one. The defining differences between Scott’s and Rodrigues’ approaches are 1) that Scott’s physical extremes are part of an overwhelming, uncontainable and excessive whole (CLOSE UPS is site-specific, taking place in a building rather than a theatre and with dancers interspersed amongst the audience so that one’s gaze is always dispersed and participatory) while Rodrigues’ are pared back and utterly focused (just one or two dancers, well lit, in the centre of a black stage), and 2) although the expressions in both works are removed from any traditional narrative context, there is a stronger sense of an implicit root and source to the pain in Scott (a sense related both to a knowledge of the dancers’ history—most of the refugees performing are torture survivors—and also the immediate, in-your-face and off-the-cuff nature of the performance’s context, abandoning the traditional spectator-performer paradigm). In Rodrigues, on the other hand (and this is one of the show’s most interesting qualities) the expressions feel completely removed not only from any causal context but from the actual experience of those sensations themselves—a schism perfectly epitomised by the pervasive smell of ketchup that gradually emerges as the show progresses.

The at times horrific, at times beautiful, tableaus of death and injury depicted (frequently alluding to those of Goya), for all their efficacy are nevertheless always, obviously, just tomato—just as we know the naked woman moaning slowly again and again at the front of the stage, is just moaning, just making the sounds that have been choreographed, even though for us they inescapably conjure powerful (and in a public, theatrical context, uncomfortable) notions and emotions of sexual pleasure. What we witness on the stage is merely the shell, the external signs, of bodily experiences whose only internal actualisation is (potentially) in our reaction to it.

Rodrigues treats the theatre, and the theatrical body, as a laboratory, not for exploring the extremes of physical experience, but for exploring the signs and effects generated by that experience, and the impact that has on the spectator. This notional/emotional provocation, and the confrontation with and reflection on our own reactions that the show’s gradual and unwaveringly measured pace encourages, is the biggest and most touching dividend of a style that otherwise seems defined by a systematic detachment (from context, from narrative, from history, from personality…). The simplicity and, in a way, hollowness of the performance forces us towards a recognition of our own complex relationship with it; of the mixture of engagement, detachment, empathy and prejudice with which we interact with it (a relationship which, from what I’ve heard, is the kernel of Sontag’s book). Like Dejan Garbos’s REALITY SHOW, the very presentation of a naked body on stage is utilised here as inevitably and immensely complex; never really “naked” but layered in the histories and ideologies of our lives and our societies.

The weakness to this entire plan is that some of these provocative set-ups, and their implications, are just too easy: too easy to set up and too easy to imply. I still can’t decide whether certain elements—like the moment where two of the men, at the climax of a primal, ape-like show of rage, storm out of the theatre’s fire exits and onto the streets, howling all the way—are thrilling subversive expansions of theatrical possibility or just cheap thrills. Nonetheless, the faith of Rodrigues and her company in theatre’s power as an art (and laboratory) of the body, of its signs, affects and our relationship to it both personally and as spectators, was wonderfully refreshing—and the fact that it took place in the Samuel Beckett Theatre couldn’t have been more appropriate.

3 WEEKS IN BERLIN pt. 5: CODA

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

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I went to this party in Berlin that a guy called Doug Fender was having.

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It was happening in the basement of an apartment building in Kreuzberg, in a space called the “Boom Boom Theatre”.

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It had a kitchen, a garden and a big room with a piano.

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There was food, wine, dancing…

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…singing, joking, talking…

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…Or maybe it wasn’t a party.

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Maybe it was a show.

THAT MORNING…

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I slept on a bridge.

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On a mattress.

ART OF SUMMER pt. 4: Have U Met Nosti? and other events

Monday, October 15th, 2007

HAVE YOU MET NOSTI?

Back in Dublin and also in July, “Have U Met Nosti?” was a rich and unusual five-day performance art festival organised by Sascha Perfect and the Balkan Irish Arts Forum and focusing on new works (mostly) from the Balkan countries, with works ranging from cabaret to modern dance to more conceptually driven performance art. Overall, the programme was refreshingly uninterested in culturally specific novelties (unlike the Multicultural-with-a-capital-M celebration that is our Festival of World Cultures)—focusing instead on smart, passionate dance and performance, as innovative and theoretically engaged as you’d find anywhere. The standouts for me were REALITY SHOW (Dejan Garbos, Serbia), OUCH COUCH (Iskra Sukarova, Macedonia) and THE AUCTION (Katerina Mojzisova, Slovakia).

It’s hard not to make REALITY SHOW sound like the ultimate performance art cliche, and in its basic concept—two women make out and take all their clothes off while reading a theoretical text on the media-saturated, post-modern body—it….sort of is. But the mixture of flesh and theory is actually strangely effective—seriously—and Garbos’ central argument that even if a body is “naked”, perceptually it’s still wrapped in layer upon layer of cultural, intellectual and sexual prejudice and distortion, manages to be made equally forcefully through the text and the various acts of the performers (although, I’ll concede, squirting lotion on the ground so that one woman could spin the other around in it was a bit much).

Taking place across the creaky floorboards of the Back Loft in the Liberties (where the festival’s final performances and closing party took place), OUCH COUCH was a sharp and witty power-play duet in the dance-as-relationship tradition, using an inflatable couch as the pivot of the dancers’ (Sukarova and Darija Andovska) passive-agressive exchanges. The performance took place in the round, with the audience sitting against the wall, at times perilously close to the action; one little girl watching actually tried to reach out and touch the dancers when they came near her, probably the best expression of the power of this kind of intimate off-stage dance theatre than anything I could put into words here.

Mojzisova’s THE AUCTION was a very funny attempt to economically quantify and commercially redeem dance: the choreographer and dancer performed short excerpts from her own work and then put them up for auction. But at the same time this wasn’t really a joke: the highest bidder really did have to fork over cash for possession of the dance (unfortunately no-one went for the final piece she performed, which she opened bidding for at 30,000 euro.)

The closing party and consequent drinking session was also pretty culturally edifying (most important lesson learnt: Macedonian moonshine is lethal). The Bubble has an episode on “Have U Met Nosti?” that you can watch here, and in which myself and the legendary Benjy Gogan randomly feature at the end.

AND OTHER EVENTS

So what else? There was Mary Dempsey’s WHAT HAPPENED, an audio installation that took place in Meeting House Square in August. There’s not much to say about this intriguing work that Fergus Daly hasn’t already said very eloquently, so I’ll just direct you to his essay on the piece.

There was Electric Picnic, which I caught the final day of: a so-so lineup, overall, apart from the rock-and-roll event that was Iggy Pop’s headlining gig (really more of an interactive performance experiment than a concert), but so rich and innovative in terms of all the extra-musical spectacles and spaces on offer, that it’s still the best camping festival in the country.

Oh, and I almost forgot: probably the most significant dance event in Ireland of the year was Irish Modern Dance Theatre’s production of THIS DANCING LIFE, a joyous and celebratory four-hour show by New York choreographer Sara Rudner. It’s also the first dance I’ve ever really had the chance to study in detail, as I was hired by Irish Modern Dance Theatre to film the show, and I’m currently turning that twelve hours of footage (we had three cameras filming) into a two-DVD, four-hour version of the show. Once that’s completed, I may return to write more about it, perhaps with the illustration of clips….

There was the Fringe Festival, one of Dublin’s biggest and best cultural events, which deserves (and will eventually receive) a post of its own.

And…yeah, I think that was about it.

In other words: it was a good summer.

ART OF SUMMER pt. 2: LONDON

Monday, October 15th, 2007

From Berlin, my travels took me to London, where questions of space, both imaginative and physical seemed central to most of the art I encountered. The degree shows of Chelsea College of Art and Design, one of London’s foremost art schools, seem to be a pretty good gauge of the present and immediate future of British fine art—and the overwhelming impression I got from the work on show is that, whether due to fashion, educational trends or simply natural progression, contemporary artists are obsessed with context and completely bored with content. In other words, most of the works shown here are much more interested in creating an environment for you to be in than giving you something to look at—as if the possibilities of invention within the confines of a canvas or art-object have been so exhausted that the only area of creation left to explore is the exhibition space itself, and our relation to it. While certainly this is fertile ground for artistic exploration, it’s still just one of many grounds, and the unanimity of this shift in focus seems to have left a lot of artists floundering, with many 2D artists struggling to extract some environmental impact out of their work beyond just paint on a canvas, and many 3D artists just taking the piss with purposeless environmental ideas (the giant woodshed in which there was nothing but a neon sign reading “Lumen” deserves special mention in this regard). And, at the risk of sounding old-fashioned, one wonders if or where the idea of personal expression can exist in these limited terms—a question another London exhibition brought into focus for me.

Further along the South Bank, the Hayward Gallery was showcasing the work of one of the acclaimed masters of environmental art: Antony Gormley. Gormley’s work is all about creating a space for the spectator to navigate, and his sculptures tend to be less sculpted objects of contemplation than means of sculpting the space in which you walk, in fact almost a way of sculpting the way you walk within it—that contorted figure hanging from the ceiling is there less to be looked at than to make you look up. The centrepiece of the Hayward exhibition was Gormley’s new work, “Blind Light” (pictured above), a brightly lit glass room of white fog so dense you can barely see the end of your hand, in which your only points of orientation are your fellow museum-goers. If one accepts this environmental focus as a normative principle in contemporary art, then “Blind Light” is probably a masterpiece; a brilliantly simple combination of solid conceptualisation and accessible and engaging physicality—but it’s also thoroughly impersonal, more the product of an architectural engineer than a creative artist. And I wonder if, as open as this fine art world may seem (”anything” can be used to design an environment), it isn’t actually a very limiting restriction for new artists and, from an expressive point of view, a pretty castrating one.

Anyway, the real reason I was in London was for the National Film Theatre’s two retrospectives, of Roberto Rossellini and John Cassavetes. The cinema of these two geniuses creates new kinds of spaces too—especially when you see almost half a dozen of their films within a few days. I caught five of Rossellini’s late historical made-for-TV works (BLAISE PASCAL [1972], CARTESIUS [1974], AUGUSTINE OF HIPPO [1972], ACTS OF THE APOSTLES [1969] and ITALY: YEAR ONE [1974]): an incredible and fascinatingly difficult series of works that manage to be both plodding and thrilling, expositional and disorientating all at the same time. One finds one never knowing quite where one is in these films despite characters constantly explaining their positions. This isn’t to denigrate the films, however, because they do put you inside of a historical and intellectual space with extraordinary directness and efficacy, making physically palpable the profound claustrophobia of Descartes’ philosophical life in CARTESIUS, or the totally pervasive (and from a modern perspective thoroughly alien) atmosphere of belief and possibility among Christ’s followers in ACTS OF THE APOSTLES. Their difficulty is undeniably part of what makes them work.

However, after living in those spaces almost continuously for a few days, it was like a gust of fresh air kicking back with Cassavetes’s FACES (1968), A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE (1974) and OPENING NIGHT (1997), films who’s spaces are open, performative, theatrical and present-tense—and, I think, more so than many films, fundamentally different experiences when you see them in the cinema.

Finally in London, my Talent Campus friend, Taiwanese actor/director Chen Chia-Kuei, took me to see the Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan at Sadler’s Wells. Their show, WILD CURSIVE, the final part of a trilogy of “cursive” works, was kind of like a flip side to this whole environmental-art thing. Choreographer Lin Hwai-Min takes an art that is one of the most space-based by nature, and treats it like a flat surface. Using the principles of calligoraphy as his basis, Lin’s dancer’s become graphic material fluidly “written” across the stage. While the contemporary art world may be aghast at such blatant “regressive” practice, it was stunning to watch.