Performance | Performance Space New York Spring Gala

Post Plastica

Carmelita Tropicana & Ela Troyano (NYC)
Post Plastica
“Carmelita Tropicana lights up New York’s performance venues with colorful, hilarious, and brain-twisting narratives.” -Time Out New York

Part live performance, part video installation, this piece offers a glimpse into a future in which celebrity culture has pitched a battle between the primacy of virtual and artistic lives; in which revolutionaries keep bees in a secret underground; and in which a half-woman, half-bear scientist has gained the upper hand…

Featuring Becca Blackwell, Erin Markey, and Carmelita Tropicana. Production design by Aliza Shvarts, costumes by Yali Romagoza, and lights by Chris Hudacs. Film photography by Uzi Parnes.

Each evening will be begin at 6pm in El Museo’s El Cafe with complimentary pre-show talks featuring guest experts, curated by the artists. Performances begin in El Museo’s El Teatro at 7:30pm.

  • May 31 in the lobby Exhibit of Stereoscopic Images by Richard Pell from the Center for PostNatural History
  • June 1 in El cafe Meet the Celebrity: Fufurufu (a brown and black toy poodle) & Nao Bustamante give a lecture/demo
  • June 2 in El cafe Urban Beekeeping with Guillermo Fernandez, of NYC Beekeeping / BIRD BRAIN with Jennifer Monson, choreographer & artistic director of interdisciplinary Laboratory for Art Nature and Dance (iLAND )
  • June 3 in El cafe Normal Is Good: Aliza Shvarts interviews Yali Romagoza, an artist who has recently arrived from Havana, Cuba

“Carmelita Tropicana has been lighting up New York performance venues with colorful, hilarious, and brain twisting narratives.” -Time Out

“… this Cuban spitfire cheerfully sticks her spike heels into both Cuban and American eyeballs.” – The Post

“Carmelita Tropicana is a great improviser; that persona always hold the chaos together.” – Village Voice

“This woman is funny… irreverent, spicy… and brilliant” -The Miami Herald

Carmelita Tropicana (a.k.a. Alina Troyano) is a performance artist, playwright, and actor. Troyano burst on New York’s downtown performing arts scene in the eighties with her alter ego, the spitfire Carmelita Tropicana and her counterpart, the irresistible archetypal Latin macho Pingalito Betancourt, followed by performances as Hernando Cortez’s horse and la Cucaracha Martina from her childhood fairytales in Cuba.
In Tropicana’s work, humor and fantasy become subversive tools to rewrite history. Tropicana’s performances plays and videos have been presented at venues such as the Institute of Contemporary Art in London, the Thalia Theater in Hamburg, Centre de Cultura Contemporanea in Barcelona, the Berlin International Film Festival, the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, Dance Theater Workshop, the Mark Taper Forum’s Kirk Douglas Theatre and the Studio Museum of Harlem. Her work has received funding support from the Independent Television Service, the Jerome Foundation, and the Rockefeller Suitcase Fund. She is the recipient of awards and fellowships including the Anonymous Was a Woman Award, The New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowships, the Teddy Bear Award at the Berlin Film Festival, and an Obie for sustained excellence in performance. In 2011 Performance Space 122 honored Carmelita Tropicana for her artistic contributions at its 30th Anniversary Gala.

Ela Troyano is a Cuban-born writer and director based in New York City. Her films, theater and performances have been shown at international venues such as the Museum of Modern Art, the Guggenheim Museum, INTAR Theater, the Arsenal in Berlin, and Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporaneo in Seville. Her half-hour ITVS short, Carmelita Tropicana, won the coveted Teddy Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival as well as the Audience and Critics Award at the San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. Her debut feature film, Latin Boys Go To Hell, remains an online cult hit and was recently broadcasted on Showtime. Both of these films were screened theatrically in the U.S. and at festivals in Europe, Australia and Japan. Troyano has also directed episodic action television for the drama series Reyes y Rey, produced by Stu Segall for Telemundo/Sony, and most recently the documentary La Lupe Queen of Latin Soul for PBS. She has also worked as a theater director on the critically acclaimed Off-Broadway production of A to B by Ricardo Bracho. Select awards include a United States Artist Rockefeller Fellowship, funding from the Ford Foundation, Jerome Foundation, Latino Public Broadcasting, the New York State Council on the Arts and a Screenwriting workshop at Sundance with Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

The Cast

Carmelita Tropicana See above for bio

Becca Blackwell recently seen in Young Jean Lee’s UNTITLED FEMINIST SHOW as part of COIL ’12, Becca is a NYC performer known for pushing gender boundaries in their work. Recently worked with Young Jean Lee, Half Straddle, Jennifer Miller’s Circus Amok, Theater of the Two-Headed Calf, Sharon Hayes, Michelle Handelman, and Erin Markey. They are also regulars on the web series JACK IN A BOX and GAY’S ANATOMY.

Erin Markey is a Brooklyn-based writer/performer. She recently starred in the NYC premiere of Tennessee Williams’ Green Eyes at the Hudson Hotel in NYC, and at the Ames Hotel in Boston. She is a series regular on LOGO’s Jeffery and Cole CasseroleTV show. Her solo musical, Puppy Love: A Stripper’s Tail played and extended as part of the SoloNova Festival. She is a company member of Half Straddle and her work in FAMILY was heralded as “the scariest performance of the year” in 2009 by Time Out NY. As a playwright, she was invited to the Lincoln Center Director’s Lab and recently developed her newest work, The Dardy Family Home Movies by Stephen Sondheim by Erin Markey, which premiered at the San Francisco International Film Festival’s Kinotek Series in the Fall of 2011. As a cabaret and performance artist, she regularly presents work at Our Hit Parade with Kenny Mellman, Bridget Everett and Neal Medlyn at Joe’s Pub (The Public).

Photos by Ves Pitts and Uzi Parnes.

PS122 is proud to present our first production in partnership with El Museo del Barrio, New York’s leading Latino cultural institution. A dynamic artistic, cultural, and community gathering place, El Museo is a center of cultural pride on New York’s Museum Mile.

Post Plastica was made possible with commissioning support from Performance Space 122.

WORLD PREMIERE
May 31 – June 3, 2012
Co-presented by Performance Space 122
& El Museo del Barrio

5th Avenue at 104th Street, Manhattan, NY

Strange Cargo

Pavel Zuštiak + Palissimo Company (NYC)
The Painted Bird (Part III): Strange Cargo

“A vivid, often anguished, imagination shines through in work…”
– The New Yorker

In this capstone of the acclaimed The Painted Bird trilogy, choreographer Pavel Zuštiak collaborates with composers Christian Frederickson & Ryan Rumery to plunge into assumptions of refuge and home. The urge to survive is inherent, the feeling of otherness is universal and yet reality shifts the minute the desire to belong is turned inside out.

BASTARD (Part I)
“Bastard is searing.” -Gia Kourlas, The New York Times

“Bastard earns its emotional extremity – with tenderness and quiet.” -Apollinaire Scherr, Financial Times ★★★★

“Bastard had both magic and mystery.” -Leigh Witchel, DanceViewTimes

2010 Time Out New York Honorable Mention


AMIDST (Part II)

“Mr. Zuštiak, a striking performer who projected an exquisite, unknowable vulnerability. There is the sense that, with The Painted Bird, he has found his material, and will be mining it for a long time to come.” -Claudia LaRocco, The New York Times

“And, as always, this artist has chosen forceful performers with the physical skills and courage to follow him into the dark, shuttered spaces of human life.” -Eva Yaa Asantewaa, Dance Magazine

“The most disorienting reminders of the terrors of that war, though, came from the emotional impact of the dance, and the audience’s own foggy path.” -Martha Sherman, DanceViewTimes

“It’s worth losing your bearings for a while in the enigmatic atmosphere of this high-art haunted house.” -Leigh Witchel, New York Post

Pavel Zuštiak is a choreographer, performer and sound designer. 2010 John Simon Guggenheim Fellow, 2009 Princess Grace Foundation Residency Award- and 2007 Princess Grace Award-winner for Choreography. He is the Artistic Director of Palissimo Company, founded and based in New York City since 2004. Zuštiak was named an ambassador of Košice European Capital of Culture 2013, his birth city that was selected together with Marseille as European cultural capitals.
 
Christian Frederickson is a violist, composer, and sound designer living in Brooklyn, NY.
He received his MM in viola from The Juilliard School. He is a founding member of the critically acclaimed alternative indie-rock band Rachel’s and a founder of The Young Scamels with Jason Noble and Greg King. Frederickson has collaborated with a number of theater directors and choreographers, developing a signature style as a musical improviser and composer for the stage.
 
Performed by Giulia Carotenuto, Lindsey Dietz-Marchant, Luke Murphy, Denisa Musilova and Jeremy Xido.

Live music by Frederickson and Ryan Rumery. Lights by Joe Levasseur, set by Peter Ksander, costumes by Asta Hostetter, and video design by Keith Skretch and Manny Pallad.

Learn more about the Palissimo Company and the The Painted Bird Trilogy Project

Photo © David Kumerman

PS122 is proud to present our first production at Synod Hall at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine. The world’s largest Gothic cathedral – and headquarters of the Episcopal Diocese of New York – dominates Morningside Heights, just south of Columbia University. Synod Hall is a beautiful building located on the Cathedral’s southern grounds.

A Long Table on Migration & Displacement
Lead by Masha Pyshkina

Saturday, May 5 at 5:30pm

at Synod Hall (NE corner of Amsterdam at 110th)

FREE and open to the public.
Limited capacity – reservations strongly encouraged. Reserve online
Light refreshments to be provided, including sweets from the Hungarian Pastry Shop.

The Long Table is an experimental public forum originally developed by performance artist Lois Weaver. The Long Table experiments with participation and public engagement by re-appropriating a dinner table atmosphere as a public forum, and encouraging informal conversations on serious topics. It is literally a very long table set up with chairs and refreshments where anyone and everyone is welcome to come to the table, ask questions, make statements, leave comments, or simply sit, listen and watch.

This Long Table is held in concurrence with Palissimo’s Strange Cargo. Performances are May 3 – 13 Thursday – Sunday at Synod Hall and presented by Performance Space 122 in conjunction with The Cathedral Church of St. John’s the Divine.

After eight years as Program Director at CEC ArtsLink, Masha Pyshkina continues to work on international arts projects as an independent producer and consultant. Originally from St. Petersburg, Russia, she has over fifteen years of experience administering international programs. She holds a Masters Degree in Arts Administration from New York’s Columbia University, and BA degrees from State Pedagogical University in St.Petersburg (English, German and Art History) and from Grinnell College (Economics).


Strange Cargo (Part III) was created with commissioning support from Performance Space 122 and Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University and made possible, in part, by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and additional funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the MetLife Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional support and commissioning funds for this program have been provided by The Jerome Foundation and New Music USA’s Live Music for Dance program and additional project support was provided by Greenwall Foundation and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Strange Cargo was developed and supported during residency at the Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography (Tallahassee, FL), Baryshnikov Arts Center, Abrons Arts Center and also made possible by Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Swing Space program through a real estate donation from Capstone Equities.

This presentation is supported, in part, by the Harkness Foundation for Dance, the Jerome Robbins Foundation and the Mertz Gilmore Foundation.

WORLD PREMIERE
Presented by Performance Space 122 in conjunction with The Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine
Synod Hall
at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine
Amsterdam Ave. at 110th Street, Manhattan, NY
May 3 – 13, 2012
Thursday 8pm
Friday, Saturday 8pm & 9:30pm
Sunday 8pm
Note: There is no late seating for Strange Cargo


Opening night hospitality sponsor: Veselka & Veselka Bowery

The Spring Gala 2012

show-gala2012

Honorary chairs Mikhail Baryshnikov, Jo Andres & Steve Buscemi, John Leguizamo, Yvonne Rainer, Gala chair East Village Community Coalition, and the PS122 Board of Directors invite you to

The 2012 Spring Gala honoring Lucy Sexton

Nowhere to go but everywhere

Shining Star Award presented to Phil Hartman
Hosted by Mx Justin Vivian Bond
Performances by Anne Iobst as The Naked Lady / Sarah Michelson & Mike Iveson / Julie Atlas Muz / Bob Holman
Short film by Stephen Daldry
Excerpt from Spalding Gray: Stories Left to Tell performed by Jonathan Ames / Eric Bogosian / Michael Cunningham / Ain Gordon
Excerpt from Turning a new film by Charles Atlas featuring Antony and the Johnsons
Live Auction with Isaac Mizrahi / Richard Move as Martha Graham

Platinum Sponsors
East Village Community Coalition
The Friedman Foundation
Heather Thomas & Chet Kerr

Gold Sponsors
Nathan Gill
Patty Adams Martinez & Ivan Martinez
Howard Spector
Jason C. Tsou
Naomi Usher
Kate Larkworthy Artist Representation
St. Ann’s Warehouse
TheaterMania
Westside Fragrances

Silver Sponsors
The 13th Step
CBRE
The Lower East Side Girls Club
Natalie & David Johnsonius Neubert
Rosie O’Donnell
Katherine Profeta & Steve Bodow
Joan & Dick Sexton

Event Sponsors
ArtCat
Flavorpill
The Jackie Factory
Mercy
Monsieur Touton
Terra Fossil
Brown-Forman
beer lovingly provided by Brooklyn Brewery

Gala Committee Chair Kambiz Shekdar

Gala Committee Andreas Argyrides, Gabriel Beaton, Steve Bodow & Katherine Profeta, Sarah Bromley, John M. Burns, Dominique Camacho, Enrico Ciotti, Gillian Fallon, Rosalind Grush, John Hoffman, Marin Ireland, David Leslie, Caro Llewellyn, Helena Martinez, Salley May, Annabelle Meunier, Tom Murrin, David & Natalie Johnsonius Neubert, Jeffrey Robinson, Eli Scheier, Cheryl A. Young.

$25,000 Nowhere to Go but Everywhere Sponsorship

  • 14 front and center premium seats beside honoree and performers
  • Roundtrip airfare for 2 to an international arts festival with PS122 Artistic Director Vallejo Gantner
  • Portrait with a select gala performer
  • Listing as a 2012 Season Sponsor on all PS122 materials and complimentary season passes for you and and your guests to our 2012-2013 Season
  • Full-page advertisement or acknowledgment in the PS122 Gala program and Season Programs, a contribution listing in Gala invitation, program and on PS122 website
  • Entry to the pre-show reception & post-show party

$10,000 Platinum Sponsorship

  • 10 premium seats
  • Portrait with a select gala performer
  • Complimentary season passes for you and and your guests to our 2012-2013 Season
  • Full-page advertisement or acknowledgment in the PS122 Gala program, a contribution listing in Gala invitation, program and on PS122 website
  • Entry to the pre-show reception & post-show party

$5,000 Gold Sponsorship

  • 8 seats
  • Complimentary PS122 Passports for you and your guests to Spring 2012 performances
  • Half-page advertisement or acknowledgment in the PS122 Gala program, a contribution listing in Gala invitation, program and on PS122 website
  • Entry to the pre-show reception & post-show party

$1,500 Silver Sponsorship

  • 4 seats
  • Entry to the pre-show reception & post-show party
  • Business card size advertisement or acknowledgment in the PS122 Gala program, and a contribution listing in Gala invitation, program and on PS122 website

$350 Single Ticket

  • 1 seat
  • Entry to the pre-show reception & post-show party

When:
Thursday, March 15, 2012

  • 6PM Cocktails & hors d’oeuvres with DJ JOHNNY DYNELL
  • 7:30PM Performance
  • 9PM Dessert & silent auction
  • 10:30PM Afterparty at SUPERFINE


Where:

St. Ann’s Warehouse
38 Water St., Brooklyn, NY

Preview highlights from the auction

Super Nature


Super Nature
The BodyCartography Project & Zeena Parkins (USA)

Born out of the restless imaginations of Olive Bieringa & Otto Ramstad, this radical ecological melodrama is replete with artifice and animal appetites. The dance/performance/installation duo engages the wild and civilized aspects of human nature with idiosyncratic movement drawn from bodily impulses and social interactions. Bessie Award–winning composer Zeena Parkins performs a live score within a scenic installation by visual artist Emmett Ramstad.
 
“Sneaky-smart…demands patience but it yields many rewards”
Minneapolis Star Tribune
 
75 minutes


Commissioned by PS122, co-presented with tbspMGMT as part of the 4th edition of American Realness

Abrons Arts Center: 466 Grand St., Manhattan

Jan 14-17 8:30pm

$20
Purchase Tickets
Abronsartscenter.org

#COIL13

▸▸ Pass Holders Log in to redeem

As co-directors of the BodyCartography Project Olive Bieringa and Otto Ramstad have created numerous performance works, short films and installations which have been presented in theaters and site specific locations across the USA, Canada, New Zealand, Japan, Europe, Russia and South America. Presenters include Performance Space 122, Dance Theater Workshop, Movement Research, Dance on Camera Festival, NYC; Philadelphia Dance Project; Anti-Festival, Finland; Stromereien Festival, Zurich; Lyon Opera Ballet, Les Subsistances, Lyon; South East Dance, Cheshire Dance, UK; NZ International Film Festival; Cinedans, Amsterdam; Polish Public Television; Bryant Lake Bowl, Walker Art Center, Southern Theater, Minneapolis International Film Festival, and Minnesota Public Television. Their work has been supported by residencies at the Walker Art Center, Bell Museum of Natural History, Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography, Headlands Center for the Arts, K3 in Hamburg and Les Subsistances, amongst others.
 

Award winning composer/performer Zeena Parkins inspired multi-instrumentalist/composer/improviser, pioneer of contemporary harp practice and performance, reimagines the instrument as a “sound machine of limitless capacity.” Parkins has built three versions of her one-of-a-kind electric harp and has extended the language of the acoustic harp with the inventive use of unusual playing techniques, preparations, and layers of electronic processing. Parkins is releasing a new Tzadik CD with renowned laptop artist, Ikue Mori and Phantom Orchard Orchestra, Trouble in Paradise, to be released in November 2012.
 
The BodyCartography Project has appeared at PS122 with Symptom as a part of COIL 2011, ½ Life in 2010, and Holiday House as a part of COIL 2009.

 

The Abrons Arts Center is the performing and visual arts program of Henry Street Settlement. The Abrons supports the presentation of innovative, multi-disciplinary work; cultivates artists in all stages of their creative development through educational programs, commissions, and residencies; and serves as an intersection of cultural engagement for local, national, and international audiences and arts-workers.
 
Each year the Abrons offers over 250 performances, 12 gallery exhibitions, 20 residencies for performing and studio artists, and 100 different classes in dance, music, theater, and visual art. The Abrons also provides New York City public schools with teaching artists, introducing more than 3,000 students to the arts.
 
Some of the most adventurous artists of the past century have trained, taught, or performed at Henry Street, including John Cage, Aaron Copland, Dizzy Gillespie, Martha Graham, Alicia Keyes, Alwin Nikolais, Jackson Pollock, Denzel Washington, and Orson Welles.
Recent artists to appear on the Abrons’ stages include Laurie Anderson, Joey Arias, Justin Vivian Bond, Philippe Petit, Rufus Wainwright, and John Zorn.
 
Henry Street Settlement, founded in 1893, serves 50,000 New Yorkers each year with social service, arts and health care programs from 17 program sites on Manhattanís Lower East Side.
 
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Abrons Art Center is located on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and is accessible by the F, J, M, B, and D subways. This well-known region is home to the Tenement Museum and the New Museum of Contemporary Art. Abrons Art Center sits four blocks from Essex Street, just south of the Williamsburg Bridge. The Clinton Street restaurant row is only three blocks northeast of the theater and is complete with pizzerias, tapas restaurants, and local bars.
 
“The community keeps reinventing itself,” said Susan Fleminger, director of visual arts and arts education at the Henry Street Settlement, whose main house is at 265 Henry Street, near Montgomery Street. ”Just when you think it’s over, it revives itself.” Henry Street is one of six century- old settlement houses that continue to help new immigrants, providing day care and programs for the young and old, as well as cultural activities in Henry Street’s Abrons Arts Center. The New York Times
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Community Class taught by Olive Bieringa on January 17th from noon – 2pm at Abrons Art Center on the Playhouse stage.
 
Tickets are $10
 
Super Nature Workshop Description
This workshop will investigate movement states that are raw, intuitive, transparent and primal. These qualities will be generated from the contents and sensations of the body, the amplification of body impulses and material elicited from social interactions. Humans are animals and like most higher primates, humans are social animals. We want to explore the animal underbelly of how social groups operate, with their capacity to embrace and exclude. With all of these elements we will create a very distinctive choreographic language with movement invention that is behavioural, reflexive and personal and apply that to performance.
 
Note: COIL passes do not apply to this event.

Conceived and directed by Olive Bieringa and Otto Ramstad
Composer Zeena Parkins
Set Design Emmett Ramstad and Olive Bieringa
Costume Design Emmett Ramstad
Light Design Heidi Eckwall
Performers Emily Johnson, Justin Jones, Francesca Mattavelli, Otto Ramstad, Eneka Bordato Riano, Anna Marie Shogren, Timmy Wagner and special guests.


Super Nature is a co-commission of the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Performance Space 122, NYC; and PadlWest, San Diego through the National Performance Network Creation Fund. Additional support comes from the MAP Fund, Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, American Dancers Abroad, CEC Arts Link, Impulstanz Festival, Lily Springs, Studio 206,the McKnight Foundation and is underwritten by the American Composers Forum’s Live Music for Dance Minnesota program in partnership with New Music USA, with funds provided by the McKnight Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts in cooperation with the New England Foundation for the Arts through the National Dance Project. Major support for NDP is provided by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the Community Connections Fund of the MetLife Foundation. Support from the NEA provides funding for choreographers in the early stages of their careers. Additional presentation support from Merz Gilmore Foundation, Harkness Foundation for Dance and Jerome Robbins Foundation.

newyorkland

newyorkland
Temporary Distortion (NY)
Newyorkland (NY Premiere)

“Theater-artist Kenneth Collins and filmmaker William Cusick—just keep elevating their game.” – Time Out New York

“Seamless and gorgeous… a dreamy, poetic, abstracted and sometimes scary meditation.”
– The Stranger

“Newyorkland is a fascinating window into a cop’s often isolating experiences.”
– The Seattle Times

“A compelling, self-contained world from which it’s impossible to avert one’s eyes… an original and important evening of theater.”
– Crosscut

” hypnotic and sumptuous theatrical presentation… wonderful palliative for those who need a break from the tyranny of straightforward narrative storytelling.”
– Seattlest

“Mind-blowing video images and theatrical tension.”
– The New York Times

An intertextual assemblage, Newyorkland combines popular cop movies and TV police procedurals with first-person accounts from real-life police officers. Acclaimed director Kenneth Collins and prominent video artist William Cusick merge visual and performance art, documentary realism, cinéma vérité, and pure fiction as they follow four police officers struggling with the high costs of working within the demanding, dangerous, and secretive society of the NYPD.


Newyorkland is commissioned with support from Performance Space 122 and the Jerome Foundation. Newyorkland is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. Additional support provided by the Arts Collaboration Lab, a partnership between Columbia University School of the Arts and Performance Space 122 in July 2011, and The Greenwall Foundation.

temporarydistortion.com

Presented as part of the
7th Annual COIL Festival
Baryshnikov Arts Center’s
Howard Gilman Performance Space

450 West 37th St., Manhattan, NY
January 12 – Feb 4
Jan 12 at 7pm;
Jan 13, 14, 17-21, 24-28 at 7:30pm;
Jan 15 at 6pm


All rights reserved by Performance Space New York
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