Performance | Performance Space New York

Span 2015

 
 
SPAN is PS122’s annual discussion series based around theory and practice, the role of criticism and collaborative relationship forming within the ecosystem of the New York City performance industry. The two events of SPAN 2015 will be an Open Space and a Conversation/Mixer.

People from all industry backgrounds and walks of life are invited to participate, debate and relate to one another. Productive conversations are always fueled by libations – there will be plenty on hand.

Span 2015 is curated by Lucy Jackson.

Co-presented with The Invisible Dog Art Center

Jan 12 – 4pm
RSVP
Jan 17 – 3pm
RSVP

The Invisible Dog Art Center:
51 Bergen St., Brooklyn
FREE; Reservations Recommended

#COIL15
 

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Open Space is a collaborative conference that offers the power to the participants. That means that any question you have burning in your heart or digging away in the corner of your mind or can be opened up for debate, discussion and dissection by the hive-mind that is an open space conference.
 
Open Space is a process for supporting people to self-organize and collaborate around any question with opportunities for group discussions on topics proposed and curated by the attendees themselves. Participants are free to move between discussions, debating or spectating as they choose. Open Space as a constructive and inclusive platform was pioneered in the UK by the theater company Improbable. RSVP HERE.

Conversation/Mixer is a two-part event, opening with 20 Questions for a Good Conversation, question and answer session conducted by an unseen, absent curator between a small panel and an audience with provocations ranging from the concrete to the abstract. 20 Questions was created by the founders of Forest Fringe and opens the room up to new forms of artistic debate. The evening culminates with a good old-fashioned mixer with music and wine, fueled by new ideas, new friends and renewed energy.
RSVP HERE.

Jesse Cameron Alick is a poet, playwright, producer and Zen Master. Jesse works as Artistic Associate at the Public Theater. He is also a freelance journalist and essayist. Jesse studied writing with playwright Adrienne Kennedy and taught a theater course at Lewis and Clark College.

Noel Joseph Allain – Artistic Director of the Bushwick Starr
Noel is a New York based actor, educator, and theater producer. Noel is a graduate of Skidmore College and the Juilliard School, and has since performed in various theater, television, and film productions. As Artistic Director of the Bushwick Starr, he has presented over 60 companies in the last 6 years and served hundreds of artists. His curatorial track record is noteworthy, resulting in critically-acclaimed productions by emerging and established performance companies alike. Noel created the Starr’s educational outreach program, Big Green Theater, with Executive Director, Sue Kessler, which works with Bushwick 5th grade students every year to teach playwriting and environmental awareness.

Roberta Maia Pereira is a Tony-nominated Producer at Bisno Productions. Recent productions include the NY premiere of A Red Orchid Theater’s The Opponent at 59E59 Theaters; Tony-nominated Mothers and Sons by Terrence McNally, starring Tyne Daly; the revival of Annie on Broadway; the Olivier award-winning revival of Stephen Sondheim’s Merrily We Roll Along in the West End; the Broadway premiere of Grace, starring Paul Rudd and Michael Shannon; and the Tony-winning smash hit War Horse (Broadway, Toronto and US tour). Roberta is Chair of the Board of Directors of nonprofit theater company Studio 42 and also Managing Editor of Dress Circle Publishing, the premier publisher of theater-themed books. A graduate of Yale School of Drama’s Theater Management program, Roberta is originally from Brazil and currently lives in New York City.

Helen Shaw writes about theater for Time Out New York magazine, and has contributed to Performing Arts Journal, the Village Voice, American Theater and TheatreForum. She also teaches theater studies at NYU, was twice curator of the Prelude Festival, and is working on a book about the diabolical genius of Mac Wellman.

Lauren Ree Slone received classical dance training from the Academy of Ballet Arts and Pinellas County Center for the Arts in St. Petersburg, Florida. While earning a B.A. in Religious Studies at West Virginia University, she worked archaeological digs in Israel with mentor Dr. Aaron Gale to uncover the first century CE layer of the biblical town Bethsaida. At the time, she was also on faculty at Morgantown Dance, where she created the only pre-professional training and performance mentorship program in North Central West Virginia. Her students have graduated from prestigious programs such as the School of American Ballet, and now perform with major dance companies across the country. Lauren went on to complete an MFA in Dance Performance and Choreography from Florida State University. At FSU Lauren was a Teaching and MANCC Arts Administration Fellow (where she became a disciple of Jennifer Calienes’ artist-centric philosophy), studied Gaga technique in Israel with Ohad Naharin, received grants to conduct choreographic research in Spain and Paris that combined her interests in movement and comparative religious history, and performed in works by Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Dan Wagoner, and Loren Davidson. She currently asserts her own live performances and written ideas into the public space, most recently at Ringling International Arts Festival in Sarasota, the Wassaic Art Festival, Ailey Citigroup Theater, Church of Saint Paul the Apostle in NYC, Movement Research at Judson Church, among others. Lauren is also thrilled to serve the field as MAP Fund’s Program Associate, and ferociously champions the production of other artists’ work through grant writing and project consulting. Beyond her consumption of live events, she loves teaching technique classes, the art of tattooing, graffiti, international pilgrimages, dead languages, vegan cuisine, and Chris Martin paintings.

A Pause in the City That Never Sleeps

A Pause in the City That Never Sleeps
Sebastian Errazuriz (NYC/Chile)

A continuous yawn is projected repeatedly in Times Square. Advertising screens fill with an omnipresent head looking down from the skies, yawning amongst the commercial vibrancy. A contagion of yawns begins, defiantly resisting the epicenter of New York’s constant sensory overload. After some time, the masses disperse, unconsciously continuing to carry with them the infectious message.
 
At midnight each night, join us in spreading an epidemic of yawns throughout the city, finishing each day of the Festival with a moment of communal respite.
 
On the very last night of COIL, Saturday January 17th at 11:45pm, meet us in Duffy Square (Broadway and 46th) for a gathering with the artist. Stay Awake!
 

“Sebastian Errazuriz is half merry prankster, half brooding death-poet. But he’s all artist and all designer.” — Interview Magazine

 
Co-presented with Times Square Arts and the Times Square Advertising Coalition

Jan 1 – 31 – 11:57PM-MIDNIGHT

Gathering – Jan 17 – 11:45PM
(Duffy Square, B’way & 46th St)

Times Square, Manhattan
FREE

 

A Pause in the City that Never Sleeps is the January Midnight Moment, presented by Times Square Advertising Coalition and curated by Times Square Arts, the public art program of the Times Square Alliance.

dataPurge

dataPurge
Ryan Holsopple / 31 Down (NYC)

dataPurge is the first live exploration of PS122’s Virtual programming which investigates how we create live performance digitally, interactively and beyond the stage.

dataPurge is a live, virtual cleansing of one’s digital life. Clients will undergo data dialysis by monitoring the emotions associated with their online identities using body sensors and brain wave monitors during a live-streamed event. Online viewers can influence client outcomes through an interactive platform – a dataPurge version of group therapy. Upon completion, each client leaves with their soul awakened and ready to re-enter the digital world again with a clean slate.

Online viewing and participation from 11am-11am starting January 15th at https://datapurge.me

24 hours durational


 
Commissioned by PS122
Co-presented with Gibney Dance

24-Hour Online Participation/Viewing begins January 15th – 11AM

Opening reception:
Jan 15 from 7-9pm

FREE; Reservations Recommended

Gibney Dance: Agnes Varis Performing Arts Center
280 Broadway , Manhatttan

#COIL15
 
 
 

 

 

 

Ryan Holsopple (31 Down’s Artistic Director/Sound Designer/Programmer) is a creator of performance work and the founder of 31 Down.
 
Recent projects include: Interaction Design for Mallory Catlett’s This Was The End, The Chocolate Factory, (2014 Bessie Award for Visual Design). Played Kenney in Radiohole’s production of Tom Murrin’s Myth (or Maybe Meth), La Mama, 2014 (Bessie Award Nominee). Associate Video Design for Annie Dorsen’s A Piece of Work, BAM Next Wave 2013, On The Boards, Seattle (2013). Interaction Design for Radiohole’s Inflatable Frankenstein, The Kitchen, January 2013. Interaction Design for Mantra Percussion’s performance of Timber, by Michael Gordon, BAM, December 2012. Programming laser pointer audience interaction for Bill Morrison’s Shooting Gallery, premier at BAM’s Next Wave Festival, November 2012; Plant Interaction Design for Jim Findlay’s Botanica (3LD, 2012).
 
Ryan was nominated for the 2011 Hewes Design Award for sound design of 31 Down’s Here At Home, presented by the Bushwick Starr. 31 Down was awarded a Best Of New York 2007 by the Village Voice for their interactive telephone murder mystery set in the New York Subway system called Canal Street Station, co-produced by free103point9 Transmission Arts.
 
Ryan has performed and designed sound for all of 31 Down’s performances including: Here At Home (Bushwick Starr), Red Over Red (Incubator Arts Project), The Assembler Dilator (PS122), That’s Not How Mahler Died (Ontological Theater).
 
Ryan has taught radio communication at the College of Staten Island and is a graduate of NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program.
 
31 Down is an experimental theater company based in Brooklyn, New York. 31 Down’s work is darkly themed performance with a heavy emphasis on complex sound design, imagery and mood. Custom interactive systems are developed to create and control the performances. Works have been produced in various parts of the performance spectrum, from the stage and location-based shows, to the virtual arena including Internet based work that uses live streaming, chat-rooms, networked surveillance cameras, public telephones and radio transmissions. Works have been presented by The Bushwick Starr, Performance Space 122, the Incubator Arts Project and free103point9 Transmission Arts.

 

 

About Gibney Dance
Gibney Dance brings the possibility of movement where it otherwise would not exist. Through three interrelated fields of action—Center, Company, and Community Action—Gibney Dance is “Making Space for Dance” in studios, on stages, and in underserved shelters and schools.
 
Center
Gibney Dance Centers are a powerhouse of cultural support for the performing arts community and the City itself. In 1991, Gibney Dance began leasing a studio in the historic 890 Broadway building to house Company rehearsals, and by 2011 the organization’s presence at that location had expanded to comprise an expansive eight-studio creative center. Today, with the addition of 280 Broadway, the organization directs a performing arts complex with two facilities: the Choreographic Center at 890 Broadway and Performing Arts Center at 280 Broadway. These remarkable spaces enable a robust roster of events designed to meet the needs of the dance field by fostering the creative process, encouraging dialogue, and providing professional development opportunities.
 
Company
Gibney Dance Company is the Centers’ acclaimed resident dance ensemble, led by choreographer Gina Gibney. Since its founding in 1991, the Company has developed a repertory of over thirty works that have been performed throughout the US and abroad. Gibney is known for using weighted, spiraling phrases to craft interpersonal dynamics between the dancers. These carefully calibrated relationships reflect the dancers’ experiences as community activists. As observed by writer Deborah Jowitt: “(t)hat Gibney’s troupe has long worked for the empowerment of battered women is reflected in the dancers’ struggles, their uncommon resilience, the support one readily offers another.” Highly sought-after by a wide range of performing arts institutions, the Company has been featured in recent years at Danspace Project (New York), White Bird (Oregon) the Yale Repertory Theater (Connecticut), L’Agora de la Danse (Montreal, Canada), and Internationale Tanzmesse (Dusseldorf, Germany).
 
Community Action
Gibney Dance Community Action provides New York City domestic violence shelters with over 500 free movement workshops each year. At these workshops Company members share activities that draw from artistic practices to address issues of choice and self-expression. Community Action was initiated in 2000 in collaboration with Sanctuary for Families and Safe Horizon, two of the country’s most prominent domestic violence organizations. Widely regarded as a model in the field, Community Action’s methods for integrating arts and social action are distributed nationally—via our Institute for Community Action intensive that annually hosts dancers from across the US—and internationally—through Global Community Action Residencies, most recently in Cape Town, South Africa.

 
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Coming Soon!

 

dataPurge has been commissioned by PS122 with an exploration grant from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation for the Building Demand for the Performing Arts Program and is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts. Art Works.

Shanghai / New York: Future Histories

Shanghai / New York: Future Histories
Sam Wu, Qin Yi and Zulan (China)

In our fractured times, it is more important than ever that artists and audiences are brought together to share their work and ideas. Performance Space 122, Asia Society, and the China Shanghai International Arts Festival (CSIAF) have begun an unprecedented institutional collaboration with these ideals in mind. Sam Wu, Qin Yi and Zulan come together in a music focused, multidisciplinary evening. These three emerging artists are articulating new forms – locally sourced but distinct in their engagement with the larger, international audience.
Please join us after the 5PM performance for a dialogue with the artists.

Co-curated with Rachel Cooper.

90 minutes

Co-presented with Asia Society and China Shanghai International Arts Festival

Jan 135PM & 8:30PM

Asia Society
725 Park Avenue, Manhattan
FREE; Reservations Recommended

#COIL15

 

Sam Wu is a self taught 18-year old wunderkind whose award-winning chamber music compositions have been described as “warm, sincere, and characteristic of a compassionate 21st-century metropolitan youth.” His chamber composition dolphin song is a lamentation on the recent extinction of Yangtze River “baiji” White Dolphins, and played by the violin, the viola, the cello, the piano, the bamboo flute and the percussion.

Mirror Mind, composed by a pioneer of Chinese contemporary electronic music Qin Yi, is a cross-over experiment combining dramatic performance, live percussion, interactive multi-channel electronic music and new-media visual arts. Mirror Mind explores the multi-layered nature of human existence with a “pan-acoustic” narrative approach.

Internationally recognized composer, Zulan, creates a special new music piece based on the Nobel Literature Prize Winning play Death and the Maiden using music to describe the ‘Six Desires of a Human Being’ – a Buddhism concept, which describes the six sensory pleasures derived from the eyes, ears, nose, body and mind.

Asia Society is the leading educational organization dedicated to promoting mutual understanding and strengthening partnerships among peoples, leaders and institutions of Asia and the United States in a global context. Across the fields of arts, business, culture, education, and policy, the Society provides insight, generates ideas, and promotes collaboration to address present challenges and create a shared future.

Founded in 1956 by John D. Rockefeller 3rd, Asia Society is a nonpartisan, nonprofit educational institution with offices in Hong Kong, Houston, Los Angeles, Manila, Mumbai, New York, San Francisco, Seoul, Sydney and Washington, DC. For more information visit AsiaSociety.org.

China Shanghai International Arts Festival (CSIAF), which is hosted by the Ministry of Culture of the People’s Republic of China and organized by Shanghai Municipal People’s Government, is the only states-level International Arts Festival in China. Since 1999, driven by the concept of “innovation and development” with the emphasis on brand-effect development, CSIAF has grown into a flagship project for cultural exchange as well as one of the most influential festivals in the international art circles.

The China Shanghai International Arts Festival is held from Mid-October to Mid-November every year. The Festival consists of several sections, including stage performances, exhibitions, the Arts Space performance Series, performing arts fair, forums and seminars, public cultural activities, festivals in the Festival, and the Young Talents Program called “R.A.W.!”(Rising Artists’ Works). With a Galaxy of artistic classics an well as a dazzling display of original works and creative cultures, the arts festival will consistently present the most fabulous and splendid art feast to the audience from home and abroad.

Many masters and superstars have presented their excellent programs on the stage including the great conductors Zubin Mehta, the pianist Lang Lang, the cellists Mischa Maisky and Yo-Yo Ma, the violinist Itzak Perlman, the choreographer Alvin Ailey, etc. Plenty of world-renowned orchestras and ballet companies including Berliner Philharmoniker, The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Nederlands Dans Theater, Bejart Ballet Lausanne, etc. have left their classical charms on the festival stage.

Asia Society is located in the Manhattan neighborhood of the Upper East Side, which is host to some of the most famous museums in the world including the Met and Guggenheim.

Shanghai / New York: Future Histories is a major arts project of Shanghai Municipal Government sponsored by Shanghai Cultural Development Foundation. All participating artists are within RAW (Rising Artists Works), a new series of the CSIAF and a platform that develops new ideas and emerging artists from across China.

From A to B via C

From A to B via C
Alexandra Bachzetsis (Switzerland)

Swiss choreographer Alexandra Bachzetsis has been exploring the various provinces and domains of ‘mainstream’ popular culture – hip-hop, fashion, strip-tease, movies – and extracted the signature vignettes and ensemble pieces from it that have come to define her choreographic, performative practice.
 
Inspired by Diego Velázquez’s seminal rendition of Venus at her Mirror (1599-1600), From A to B via C opens with three bodies moving from and towards each other, acting as each other’s mirror image – mediated and unsynchronized. Complex scenes of nudity, gazing and instructional scores reflect on our common desire to communicate our own identity through the identities of others.
 
Choreographer: Alexandra Bachzetsis
Dancers: Alexandra Bachzetsis, Anne Pajunen and Gabriel Schenker
Research Curator: Hendrik Folkerts
Costume Design: Cosima Gadient
Sound Design: Tobias Koch and Dan Solbach

“In her new work, the Swiss choreographer turns the stage into a training and instruction room … where the levels shift as constantly as the linguistic forms.” – Der Sonntag (Vienna)

60 minutes


 

Performances:
Jan 11 – 5pm SOLD OUT
Wait list for 5pm – click here
Jan 14 – 7pm

Media Installation:
Jan 12-13 – 12-6pm

Swiss Institute / CONTEMPORARY ART
18 Wooster St, Manhattan
FREE; Reservations Recommended

#COIL15
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

Alexandra Bachzetsis is an artist, performer and choreographer based in Basel and Zurich. Her professional background includes a wide range of disciplines: theatre, dance and visual arts. She studied and graduated at the Zürcher Kunstgymnasium (CH), the Dimitrischule in 
Verscio (CH) and the Performance Education Program at the STUK arts centre in 
Leuven (BE). She then continued to post-graduate level at Das Arts, the Advanced Research in Theatre and 
Dance Studies centre in Amsterdam (NL). During her training years, she began to work as a dancer in contemporary dance and performance 
context, collaborating among others with Sasha Waltz & Guests in Berlin (D) and 
with Les Ballets C. de la B. in Gent (BE), where she worked with Christine De Smedt and Koen Augustijnen. Since 2001, she has been working independently, producing and presenting her own work in theaters and contemporary art venues.
 
Her work constitutes an inquiry into genres of performing arts, techniques of choreography and forms of scenic behavior. Bachzetsis’ main interest lies in codes that govern gestures, both in everyday life and on stage. Her choreography scrutinises the mutual influence between the use of gesture and movement in the ‘low’, ‘commercial’ genres – such as romantic comedy, TV soap, or hip-hop video-clip – and in ‘arts’, such as ballet, modern dance and performance. Bachzetsis arrives at new ideas in dance performance inducing a productive crossing and translation between the hitherto isolated or even mutually exclusive cultural fields. In her performances, Bachzetsis takes on stereotyped modes of representation of female body in contemporary popular culture, show business and sex industry. She diverts clichés of commodified femininity and idolized masculinity to use them as building blocks in a new, consistent formal language that becomes tool of self-reflection and means to empowerment.
 
 

Founded in 1986, Swiss Institute (SI) is one of New York’s key non-profit institutions for contemporary art. Open to the public free of charge, it provides a significant forum for contemporary cultural dialogue between Europe and the United States. Swiss Institute produces four exhibitions per year along with a series of public programs including lectures, performances, and screenings. Recent highlights include solo or duo exhibitions of emerging artists including Allyson Vieira, Pamela Rosenkranz, Nikolas Gambaroff, and Nicolas Party; shows presenting specific bodies of work by celebrated artists such as John Armleder and Roman Signer; as well as rediscoveries of overlooked figures including Karlheinz Weinberger and Heidi Bucher. Swiss Institute’s artistic program is supported by institutional and corporate sponsors as well as the generosity of individuals.

 
Swiss Institute Logo
 

 

The Swiss Institute is located in the downtown Manhattan neighborhood of SoHo, which in recent history came to the public’s attention for being the location of many artists’ lofts and art galleries, but is now more noted for its variety of shops ranging from trendy upscale boutiques to national and international chain store outlets.
 
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From A to B via C was commissioned and developed in collaboration with Tate Modern, London, Biennale of Moving Images, Geneva and Fundatión Jumex Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City. Co-produced with Kaserne Basel and Theaterhaus Gessnerallee, Zürich. Swiss Institute programming is made possible with public funds from Pro Helvetia, Swiss Arts Council. PS122 presentation support provided by Mertz Gilmore Foundation, Harkness Foundation for Dance and Jerome Robbins Foundation.

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