Festival | Performance Space New York

bewilderment and other queer lions

bewilderment and other queer lions
Samita Sinha (USA)

An intimate, immersive experience of voice, sound and image, bewilderment and other queer lions radically transmutes Indian classical, folk and ritual music traditions through the collaboration of composer Samita Sinha with musicians Sunny Jain (of Red Baarat) and Grey Mcmurray.

A world of acoustic and electronic sound created on traditional instruments and found objects accompanies Sinha’s voice, which synthesizes the raw and refined in a single breath. Along with director Ain Gordon, acclaimed visual artist Dani Leventhal and lighting designer Devin Cameron, Sinha digests a wide range of texts and imagery, from South Asian mythology to Freddie Mercury to French novelist Marguerite Duras, meditating on desire and diasporic experience to prophecy a mythic future.

Creator & Composer: Samita Sinha
Director: Ain Gordon
Lighting Designer: Devin Cameron
Visual Designer: Dani Leventhal
Drums and Percussion: Sunny Jain
Guitar and Sound Design: Grey Mcmurray

“Rather than mash-up, she minimalized, delicately teasing her voice and the elements of the raga form through a vast range of musical territories.” – Portland Monthly

80 minutes running time

Commissioned by Performance Space 122
Co-presented by The Invisible Dog Art Center and Performance Space 122

Jan 6 – 7pm
Jan 7 – 8pm
Jan 8 – 7pm
Jan 9 – 9pm
Jan 10 – 3pm

The Invisible Dog Art Center
51 Bergen Street in Brooklyn

$20 / $15 Students & Seniors

#COIL16

▸▸ Pass Holders Log in to redeem

 
 

 

 

Samita Sinha is a composer and vocal artist who combines tradition with experiment to create bold new forms in music and performance. Her vocal art combines visceral energy with a deep grounding in North Indian classical music, embodied practices, and folk and ritual music in several languages. Her performance work combines voice and body, language and text, sound and music, light and visual design to create new experiences of listening, seeing, and meaning.

 

Current projects include her solo staged work Cipher (produced by MAPP International, toured at The Kitchen, Wexner Center for the Arts, PICA, Virginia Tech and REDCAT), as well as Tongues in Trees, a ‘uniquely-aligned trio’ (NPR) with Sunny Jain and Grey Mcmurray, whose debut album Parallel will be released this fall.

 

Sinha has composed/performed scores for Fiona Templeton’s epic theater work The Medead and Preeti Vasudevan’s Veiled Moon and vocal directed E-V-E-R-Y-O-N-E by Daria Fain and Robert Kocik. She toured internationally with Sekou Sundiata’s the 51st (dream) state, worked as a vocalist with Robert Ashley in his 2011 revival of That Morning Thing, and collaborated with jazz pianist Marc Cary (FOCUS Trio, Anatomy). Awards include grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, National Performance Network, Queens Council on the Arts, Urban Arts Initiative and a Fulbright Scholarship; and residencies with Atlas Performing Arts Center (DC), BRICLab (NY), Coleman Center for the Arts (AL), Millay Colony for the Arts (NY), Ohio State University and The Watermill Center (NY).

 

Sinha works extensively as an educator as well as a curator (Movement Research Spring Festival 2015, WedaPeople’s Cabaret at Harlem Stage). Inspired by Sundiata’s call for artists to create new public rituals, Sinha creates forms that extend her practice into communities: she created a Community Coalition Choir bridging racial divisions in York, Alabama; brought social singing rituals (created in collaboration with Stephanie Loveless, Julia Ulehla, and Massimiliano Balduzzi) into various communities throughout NYC; and led Community Sings—events that bring diverse populations together for singing and dialogue—in her own Queens neighborhood as well as in Alabama. She teaches voice and embodiment extensively in New York City and as a visiting artist, with a focus on workshops for young women of color.

The Invisible Dog Art Center The Invisible Dog Art Center is housed in a three-story former factory building in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn. Built in 1863, our 30,000 square foot facility has been the site of various industrial endeavors – most notably a belt factory that created the famous Walt Disney invisible dog party trick, from which they take their name. The building remained dormant from the mid 1990’s to 2009 when founder, Lucien Zayan, opened The Invisible Dog.
 
The Invisible Dog is dedicated to the integration of forward-thinking innovation with respect for the past. In 2009 the building was restored for safety, and has been maintained over the years, but otherwise preserved in tact from its original 1863 form. The rawness of the space is vital to the space’s cultural identity.
 
The ground floor is used for exhibitions, performances and public events, featuring artists and curators from round the world. This floor also includes a new pop-up shop, designed by artist-in-residence Anne Mourier, conceived as a new home for independent, commercial designers in various fields. The second floor and part of the third floor are divided into over 30 artists’ studios.The third floor, luminous and spacious is used for private events, exhibitions, performances and festivals. Finally, the Glass House is a brand new, seasonal exhibition space dedicated to featuring the work of female-identified artists.

 

The Invisible Dog Art Center is located in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn and is accessible by the F and G subways. This cool and calm region on the northwest side of Brooklyn is home to roughly 20,000 residents. Invisible Dog Art Center sits one block from Dean Street and two blocks from Atlantic Avenue, both boasting a plethora of bars and restaurants.
 
Boerum Hill claims a trendy stretch of Smith Street as its own, and small cafes and stores are dotted throughout the neighborhood’s interior, like the restaurant Building on Bond and the Brooklyn Circus boutique. Some staff picks include: 61 Local, just next door at 61 Bergen Street! Hancos, 85 Bergen St & 134 Smith Street (2 locations); Van Leeuwen, 81 Bergen Street; Bien Cuit, 120 Smith Street; Van Horn Sandwich Shop, 231 Court Street; Ki Sushi, 122 Smith Street.

 
12


Featured image by Dean Moss
 
bewilderment and other queer lions is commissioned by Performance Space 122 with support from the Jerome Foundation. Additional support provided by American Dance Institute and PICA’s Creative Exchange Lab.
 

DISCOTROPIC

Discotropic
niv Acosta (USA)

DISCOTROPIC situates itself between the pragmatic and the fantastical while exploring the relationship between science fiction, disco, astrophysics and the black American experience.

Reflecting on the role of black presence in sci-fi history, inspiration was drawn from 70’s actor Diahann Carroll known for her part in the TV movie Star Wars Holiday Special. Cast by NBC at the behest of donors and audience members, who insisted that a black person appear on the show, Carroll appears only as a holographic fantasy—an illusion that distills the ways in which the black female body has been consumed in mass media: as alien, bodacious, and marginalized. Dominant science fiction narratives are rewritten through engagement with queer politics and Afrofuturism, claiming new imaginary territory rich in possibility.

Director & Choreographer: niv Acosta
Set Designer: Jennifer Sims
Costume Consultant: Charlotte Sims
Performers: Monstah Black, Justin Allen, Ashley Brockington, Dion TygaPaw
Videography: Mehmet Salih Yildirim, Gina Chang.

“queering ‘brown involvement in performance’ in a way that speaks honestly and articulately from the here and now” – Culturebot

90 minutes running time

Commissioned by PS122
Presented by PS122 in partnership with Westbeth Artists Community

Jan 6 – 8pm
Jan 8 – 5pm
Jan 9 – 3pm & 8pm
Jan 10 – 4pm

Westbeth Artists Community
Boxoffice at 155 Bank Street, NY, NY

niv Acosta is an award-winning and nationally-acclaimed multi-medium artist based in Brooklyn. His intersectional identities are transgender, queer, and black-Dominican have continuously inspired his community-based work. niv’s work and thought leadership has been featured in many publications including Performance Journal, VICE, Brooklyn Magazine, Apogee Journal and more. His performance work has been shown at various spaces including The Kimmel Center (Philadelphia), Human Resources (Los Angeles), MoMA PS1, Studio Museum, New York Live Arts, New Museum, Brooklyn Arts Exchange, Danspace Project among others. niv has collaborated with artists such as Deborah Hay, André Singleton, Monstah Black, A.K. Burns, Andrea Geyer, Ralph Lemon, Ishmael Houston-Jones and Larissa Velez Jackson.

Featured image by Justin Fulton
 
DISCOTROPIC was commissioned by Performance Space 122 with the support of the Jerome Foundation. Development support provided by The MAP Fund, a program of Creative Capital supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

GO FORTH

GO FORTH
Kaneza Schaal (USA)

Drawing inspiration from the Egyptian Book of the Dead, GO FORTH is a performance and photo installation that considers how we create space in our lives for the presence of the absent. Burial is proposed not as erasure but as offering restitution and performing rites.

The 3,000-year-old funerary text is approached as an ancient performance score: excavating the spells and incantations to create a series of burial vignettes, fragments of translation, memory and imagination. Photographic funerary murals usher the audience into a mythological underground landscape. Galvanized by the intimate relationship between black people and death around the world, GO FORTH paves way for its audience to reflect on their individual and collective mourning processes.

Director: Kaneza Schaal
Designer: Christopher Myers
Sound Artist and Performer: Justin Hicks
Lighting Designer: Ashley Vellano
Producer: Liz Sargent
Stage Manager: Bonnie McHeffey
Dramaturge: Joshua Lubin-Levy
Performers: William Nadylam, David Thomson
Film Performer: April Matthis
Voice Recording: Nate Alston

60 minutes running time

Co-presented by Westbeth Artists Community and Performance Space 122
Commissioned by Performance Space 122

Jan 7 – 7:30pm
Jan 8 – 7:30pm
Jan 9 – 6pm
Jan 10 – 2pm
Jan 11 – 4pm
added show at 8pm!
Jan 12 – 7:30pm

Westbeth Artists Community, Underground
Boxoffice at 155 Bank Street, NY, NY

$20 / $15 Students & Seniors

#COIL16

▸▸ Pass Holders Log in to redeem

 
 
 
 
 
 

After the Saturday, January 9 performance of GO FORTH, Saisha Grayson will lead a conversation with Kaneza Schaal and collaborators about the history of performance and performance of history rooted in bodies, archeology and collaborative process.

 
“As you watch the corpses of your brothers and your sisters pile up around you… when you try to stand up and look the world in the face like you have a right to be here… you have attacked the entire power structure of the Western world.”
— James Baldwin

Kaneza Schaal is a New York City based artist. She came up in the downtown experimental theater community, first working with The Wooster Group, then with other companies and artists including Elevator Repair Service, Richard Maxwell/New York City Players, Claude Wampler, Jay Scheib, Jim Findlay, New York City Opera and National Public Radio. This work brought her to venues including Centre Pompidou, Royal Lyceum Theater Edinburgh, REDCAT, The Whitney Museum, BAM, The Kitchen, St. Ann’s Warehouse and MoMA. Schaal’s new work, GO FORTH was commissioned by Performance Space 122 with support from the Jerome Foundation 50th Anniversary Grant. Schaal was an Artist in Residence at the Baryshnikov Arts Center and received a 2014 Princess Grace Award grant, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Process Space residency, Bogliasco Fellowship and Princess Grace George C. Wolfe Award. She was a member of Kara Walker’s 6-8 Months Space and her video work appeared in Visionaire. Schaal has been invited to speak at New York University, Yale University, the River-to-River Festival and her alma mater Wesleyan University, CT.

Westbeth Artists Housing is a nonprofit housing and commercial complex dedicated to providing affordable living and working space for artists and arts organizations in New York City.

Westbeth Artists Community is located in Greenwich Village, Manhattan and is accessible by the A/C/E subway lines at 14th Street. This famous region on the west side of Manhattan is home to Washington Square Park, New York University, Cooper Union, St. Marks Place and a host of independent film houses and Off-Broadway theaters. Westbeth Artists Community is close to Hudson Street, where audiences can pick from a plethora of restaurants scattered throughout.

 

Aside from untold numbers of shopping and dining options, there are plenty of neighborly activities…for recreation-seekers without memberships to the area’s multiple gyms, the Hudson River and its well-traveled waterside trails are a short walk away. – The New York Times

 
123
 


Featured image by Christopher Myers
 

GO FORTH is commissioned by Performance Space 122 with support from the Jerome Foundation and co-presented by Performance Space 122 and Westbeth Artists Community. GO FORTH was supported by a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Emergency Grant and was developed as part of PS122’s RAMP residency series, Baryshnikov Arts Center residency with support from the Princess Grace Foundation, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Process Space Residency, and a Bogliasco Fellowship. Additional support provided by the Axe-Houghton Foundation.

 

Beer generously donated by Harlem Brewing Company.


Harlem Brewing Company

Panopticon

Panopticon
Jillian Peña (USA)

Panopticon is a duet that is simultaneously a solo and a work for 100 dancers. Through choreographic reflections and multiplications, a kaleidoscopic arena of bodies is created: simultaneously seen as individuals and objects. Inspired by the architectural concept of the panopticon, a structure in which everything is seen at all times, this performance aims to achieve omniscient visibility.

Creator: Jillian Peña
Performers: Alexandra Albrecht, Andrew Champlin

“Young, unquestionably hip and fearless, choreographer and video artist Jillian Peña creates work that is once laughably raw and scarily sophisticated.” – Time Out Chicago

50 minutes running time

Commissioned by PS122 and LMCC
Co-presented by with American Realness

Jan 9 – 4pm
Jan 10 – 5:30pm
Jan 11 – 10pm
Jan 12 – 10pm
Jan 15 – 1pm
Jan 16 – 4pm
Jan 17 – 2:30pm

Abrons Art Center, Experimental Theater
466 Grand Street, Manhattan

$20
Tickets go on sale on November 23rd!

#COIL16

▸▸ Pass Holders Log in to redeem

 
 
 

Jillian Peña is a dance and video artist based in Brooklyn. Her work is primarily concerned with the confusion and desire between self and other, and focuses on the most complicated relationship we all have: that of the self to the self. Her work seeks to explore and expose the politics inherent in bodies; how bodies move and how they relate to each other. Inspired by Russian ballet, psychoanalysis, queer theory, pop media and spirituality, she believes in the power of dance to speak through history and to reveal subtle dimensions of human character, in both the performers and the viewers. She draws from ballet vocabulary, paying careful attention to the history embedded in each movement and letting this subtext inform the content of the work. She makes dances that sometimes include highly skilled dancers, sometimes ask the audience to dance, and sometimes hope that dance does not have to be visible, but can exist in the space between our bodies.

American Realness is a festival of dance and performance founded by tbspMGMT in partnership with the Abrons Arts Center.

1

Abrons Arts Center, located in Manhattan’s Lower East Side, is accessible by the F subway line to Delancey Street or the J/M/Z subway lines to Essex Street. This neighborhood is perhaps best known as once being a center of Jewish culture in the city, which is embodied in the famous Katz’s Delicatessen at 205 East Houston Street. The Lower East Side is also known for its numerous contemporary art galleries and its thriving nightlife.

 

Some staff picks for great restaurants in the area are Benson’s NYC at 181 Essex Street and dirtcandy at 86 Allen Street. Also, the Clinton Street restaurant row sits just west of Abrons Arts Center and is complete with pizzerias, tapas restaurants and local bars.

 


Featured image by Maria Baranova
 
Panopticon is co-commissioned by Performance Space 122 with support from the Jerome Foundation and Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Panopticon was developed as part of PS122’s RAMP residency series with support from the Jerome Foundation and LMCC’s Extended Life Dance Development program made possible in part by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

 

I Understand Everything Better

I Understand Everything Better
David Neumann (USA)

I Understand Everything Better is a deeply personal reflection on the consciousness of dying and narratives interrupted by a cataclysmic storm. Combining personal narratives, traditional Japanese Noh theater, along with work by collaborators Tei Blow and Sibyl Kempson, Neumann’s virtuosic movement and humor reveals the shimmer of realms unseen, the concurrence of unrelated events and the body itself as evidence of a will having to let go.

Creator: David Neumann
Sound Design & Lead Collaborator: Tei Blow
Text: Sibyl Kempson
Performers: John Gasper, Jennifer Kidwell
Lighting Design: Chloe Brown, Christine Shallenberg
Set Design: Mimi Lien
Costume Design: Erica Sweany
Project Advisors: Dr. Pamela Barton, Rick Davis
Administration: Amanda Brandes, Meredith Boggia

“By now the line on Mr. Neumann is well established: He is the smart joker of dance. What’s not said as often is how deeply felt and deeply moving his work can be.” – New York Times

Co-presented with The Chocolate Factory Theater
Co-produced with Mabou Mines

Jan 10 – 3pm
Jan 11 – 7pm
Jan 12 – 7pm
Jan 13 – 7pm added
Jan 14 – 2pm
Jan 15 – 2pm
Jan 16 – 5pm

The Chocolate Factory
5-49 49th Avenue in Long Island City, Queens

$20

#COIL16

▸▸ Pass Holders Log in to redeem

 
 
 
 
 

David Neumann‘s work has been presented in New York City at PS122, New York Live Arts, The Whitney Museum, MAD, Danspace and The Kitchen, among others. Neumann performed in the works of Susan Marshall, Jane Comfort, Sally Silvers, Doug Varone, Annie-B Parson & Paul Lazar’s Big Dance Theatre, and club-legend Willi Ninja. He was also an original member of the Doug Elkins Dance Company. He has worked with directors Hal Hartley, Jonathan Demme, Laurie Anderson, Robert Woodruff, Lee Breuer, JoAnn Akalaitis and Sarah Benson in a range of works for the stage. More recently he choreographed An Octoroon at Soho Rep and directed The Object Lesson at BAM. Neumann is on faculty at Sarah Lawrence College and is an independent director and choreographer based in New York.

Since its founding in 2005, The Chocolate Factory Theater has supported the development and presentation of new work by a community of local, national and international artists working in dance, theater, performance, and multimedia. The Chocolate Factory’s programs have drawn many thousands of new visitors to its 5,000 square foot industrial facility in Long Island City, Queens. The organization is currently planning for the purchase and renovation of a permanent facility in the neighborhood.
 
The Chocolate Factory is artist-founded and artist-led. It’s Artistic Director, Brian Rogers, continues to create and present his own work at The Chocolate Factory while providing support to a close-knit community of forward-thinking visiting artists working at all stages of their careers.
 
The Chocolate Factory received an Obie grant in 2009. It’s works have received Bessie and Obie Awards and have toured nationally and internationally.

 

 

The Chocolate Factory is located in Long Island City, at the first stop on both the 7 and G trains into Queens. L.I.C. is a waterfront neighborhood which in recent years has become known for its thriving arts community, and has among the highest concentration of art galleries, art institutions (among them MOMA’s PS1, the Institute of the Moving Image, Socrates Sculpture Park, Isamu Noguchi Museum) and studio space of any neighborhood in New York City.

 


Featured image by Maria Baranova
 
I Understand Everything Better was co-commissioned by The Chocolate Factory Theater and Abrons Art Center, and received its world premiere at the American Dance Institute. This project was made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts. Project support was also provided by Mabou Mines, the David and Leni Moore Foundation and individual donors. Development was supported through residencies at The Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, The Banff Centre Theatre Arts, The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, the BRIClab residency program at BRIC and the Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography at The Florida State University.

All rights reserved by Performance Space New York
Skip to content