Archive for the ‘Drawing’ Category

Charles Linehan Company at Greenwich Dance

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

One of the final companies to perform in this years Dance Umbrella programme was the Charles Linehan Company at Greenwich Dance, with Inventions for Radio 1964 and The Clearing. The Borough Hall is the same setting that inspired choreographer, Rosemary Lee to make the fabulous Common Dance in 2009 Dance Umbrella.

The soundtrack for Inventions for Radio 1964 is made up of voices recounting their often unnerving dreams of water and drowning “I began to feel very frightened” or finding a dead body in the mud “down and down and down so deep”. The lighting rig is low and tilted so it’s not much higher than the dancers heads reinforcing the feeling of being trapped with no escape, they move in small pools of light.

Charles Linehan Inventions for Radio 1964

The second dance, The Clearing is accompanied by live music. Movement is fluid and intense, danced by two men and two women. The dance is charged with emotion conjuring up the ecstasy and agony of human interaction, relationships forming, pain and confusion of separation and finding new paths to follow.

Linehan 3 Charles Linehan 11

Linehan 5 Linehan 8

The Clearing 

The lighting has been carefully considered and plays an integral role in both works. In The Clearing the lighting rig is raised high, the space opens and the viewer becomes aware of the architecture of this beautiful art deco room. The huge high windows are lit from the outside gradually pouring light into the room, as lights flood the space you become aware of the intricate pattern of the floor boards.

Charles Linehan 8 Linehan 10

The evening felt intimate, strong and highly charged.

 

Rosas – The Song

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

I was looking forward to seeing Belgian choreographer, Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker, company, Rosas perform their new work The Song at Sadler’s Wells, after seeing Rosas – Steve Reich Evening in 2008 and Rosas danst Rosas in 2009, both of which I found fascinating but I found it hard to connect with this dance.

Rosas  Rosas 2

Nine male dancers and two women danced and moved in and to silence, only the sound of their feet beating a rhythm on the floor as they ran and their breath could be heard. The set was stark, a massive roll with the appearance of tin foil above their heads, which occasionally unrolled to produce fabulous reflections on the floor, sometimes like a reflection of a massive spine, sometimes like dappled water. Beautiful interesting images, but the silver shiny material also reflected harsh lights back out at the audience uncomfortably momentarily blinding us. Why do this to your audience?

Rosas 3

Rosas 4

I thought my teeth would erupt when one dancer rubbed her hands on a substance on the floor producing terrible grating, amplified, rhythmic squeaks to accompany part of the dance.

The Song is very fast, a lot of running, ducking and diving. Unusually I sat high up looking down, but was glad of this as I was able from there to enjoy the shifting patterns created by the performers as they moved and changed direction en mass, sometimes the appearance of flock of migrating birds sometimes a silent game of 40-40-home (or it, had, chase, catch, or whatever the kids round your way call it). I came away with interesting images in my head but also a sense of confusion.

Yorke Dance Project perform Americana

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

Choreographer Yolande Yorke-Edgell, of Yorke Dance Project, invited me to draw at the dress rehearsal of Americana at The Bloomsbury Theatre, London, last Monday. Americana consists of four dances: Meta 4, choreography Bella Lewitzky, Post Etiquette and City Limitless by Yolande Yorke-Edgell and Home On The Range by Wendy Houston.

Rehearsal drawings below

Yorke Dance Project 2

Yorke Dance Project 4

Drawings from the evening performance below

yorke Dance Project performance 1

yorke Dance Project performance 2 yorke Dance Project performance 3

I drew Post Etiquette in rehearsal before the tour began, see entry September 24th to see the images. This performance comes mid-way in their tour.

 

 

Secret Frieze After Party

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

On Sunday evening the Secret Frieze After Party was held at the elegant, stylish brasserie Cafe Luc in Marylebone High Street. Dancers from Trinity Laban performed in the restaurant. Two dancers, styled as 1950’s diners sat at one of the tables, then began to dance together and solo threading through and amongst the guests.

Cafe Luc 1 Cafe Luc 4

On the pavement outside the restaurant, two dancers performed Trio A, much to the amazement of shoppers strolling past. Trio A was created by American choreographer Yvonne Rainer in 1965 (like Trisha Brown, a founding member of Judson Dance Theatre).

Cafe Luc 2 Cafe Luc 3

Last year I had a solo exhibition, Chasing Shadows, at neighbouring gallery GV Art Chiltern Street, eight dancers from Laban and musician Ronen Kozokaro performed in response to my paintings, drawings and sculpture. Later in the year I exhibited at Greenwich Theatre again the dancers and musician performed in the exhibition space. This is part of an ongoing collaboration that I have with Trinity Laban and Susan Sentler, senior lecturer and dance technique teacher at Laban, who facilitated the Laban alumni for QEH, the Hayward and Cafe Luc.

Billi Currie, the boutique hairdressing salon, also in neighbouring Chiltern Street is currently showing six framed drawings of mine, Billi is happy for visitors to drop in to see the work.

Trisha Brown Repertory Evening

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

On Saturday morning at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in A Feeling For Practice: Trisha Brown in Focus, dancers from the New York based Trisha Brown Company discussed what had attracted them to join the company, the difference of working on archived material and devising new work and about the artistic practice of their Director. One commented that all dance work in New York was a “bridge leading back to Trisha Brown”, another commented that Brown’s early work held “that wild-child raw energy”. Questions followed,  put to Trisha Brown by the audience.

The choreographer also talked about her use of drawing in her creative process, as she spoke she said “It’s easier for me to show you” she leapt from her seat and sunk to the floor, lying on her side she held imaginary charcoal which she pushed in front of her on a huge invisible sheet of paper, using her whole body in the act of mark making (she’s over 70). She said she had filled her house with the 8 foot x 10 foot drawings. In the evening the Company performed four dances. Brown’s drawing is the backdrop to You Can See Us, choreographed in 1995.

Trisha Brown 1 Glacial Decoy, made in 1979. The dancers moved in front of a Robert Rauschenberg designed backdrop of four large screens filling the length and height of the stage, showing a quick succession of black and white close up images.

Trisha Brown 3

L’ Amour au Theatre, choreographed in 2009 

Trisha Brown 3

Opal Loop, choreographed in 1980 

Watching the dancers perform in the evening, after hearing them speak so candidly about their experiences extended my appreciation and understanding of the work. Brown was at the forefront of the choreographers coming from the post modern era, always pushing the boundaries of movement and dance, showing her work with the Judson Dance Theatre in the 1960’s. The every day gestures which she introduced to her movement are accepted in dance as normal today but were radical when she first used them.

Floor of the Forest, celebrating Trisha Brown

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Over the weekend Dance Umbrella‘s celebration of American choreographer, Trisha Brown, took place at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London’s Southbank Centre. Floor of the Forest was first choreographed by Brown in 1970. Using a lattice work of ropes with clothes threaded through and attached to poles about 5 foot off the ground, dancers from Candoco and Laban slowly dressed and undressed themselves moving across the webbed structure like huge spiders stalking their prey.Floor of the Forest

Floor of the Forest

Floor of the Forest

 

Open Studios, a date for your diary

Saturday, October 16th, 2010

Next month I will take part in the Open Studios at 2nd Floor Studios. Over 100 visual and fine artists, craft and design makers will open their studios to the public.

Open Studios

Opening night – Thursday 18th November 5pm -9pm

Saturday 20th November 11am – 6pm

Sunday 21st November 11am -6pm

2nd Floor Studios, Melish Indust Estate, Warspite Road, London, SE18 5NR

My studio is number 17, Unit 0 (the building overlooking the river). I will show life size wire sculpture, framed and unframed charcoal drawings, sketch books (seen in my blog), etchings and oil & acrylic paintings on canvas. Prices range from £25 -£2500. See my website to view more of my work

Candoco, Dance Umbrella Debut, Renditions

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

A triple bill of new works by Candoco Dance Company opened last night for two nights at The Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank Centre, London. Renditions consists of The Hangman by Sarah Michelson, In Translation by Emanuel Gat and Imperfect Storm by Wendy Houston. I was invited by Co-Artistic Directors Pedro Machado and Stine Nilsen to the dress rehearsal to draw The Hangman.candoco Bettina

Betinna Carpi and Chris Owen

Annie HanauerAnnie Hanauer

Bettina and Chris 4 Bettina and Chris 5

Betinna Carpi and Chris Owen

Dancers, Darren AndersonElinor Baker and Dan Shaw are also in The Hangman. See my blog of September 5th to see Candoco in the Liberty Festival. Welly O’Brian and Kate Marsh of Candoco will be performing with Laban students in the installation Floor of The Forest in the QEH foyer on October 15th, 16th and 17th to coincide with Trisha Brown Dance Company’s Repertory Evening. My drawings will be posted for that event.

To see further work inspired by Candoco see painting and sculpture on my website, from past rehearsals I have drawn at.

Ai WeiWei at Tate Modern

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

Last night I was at Tate Modern for the opening of Ai Weiwei‘s Turbine Hall installation. The vast space is covered with what appears from a distance to be little grey stones, the sound as people walk sounds like the comforting crunch of a shingle beach, looking closer you see not little pebbles but a deep carpet of sunflower seeds, scoop up a handful and you discover they are replicas of sunflower seeds in fact made of porcelain, each is handmade and hand painted, they amount to 100 million.

The successful installations at Tate Modern for me are the ones that draw the visitors in to their magic, immerse you and take you somewhere else in your head (Olafur Eliasson’s The Weather Project) connecting you not only with the strangers around you through the experience but with the cries of strangers in a far off country (Doris Salcedo’s Shibboleth). This installation achieves both of these.  The seeds are beautiful to look at, to walk on and to listen to as you and others walk on them. More than that, mount the stairs and look down on the hall, patterns are created of people gently ambling over the porcelain seeds, the visitors become unwitting performers, this is one of the drawings I made last night.

Ai Weiwei

Ai Weiwei wants the public to correspond with him to give feed back and ask questions through twitter and computer terminals are set up in front of the installation to enable you to do so. Ai Weiwei was at the opening last night, quietly charismatic with a strong presence, he spoke to everyone that approached him, he is in this drawing, facing us in the huddle on the left, surrounded.

Stephen Petronio Company at The Barbican

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

I Drink the Air Before Me by the Stephen Petronio Company was the first dance in the month of Dance Umbrella 2010. The title, inspired by the words of Ariel in reply to Prospero in The Tempest, hints at the ferocious speed, verging on mania that the dance creates. As the audience take their seats the dancers dressed in coats and long johns are on stage with a ballet bar warming up. Petronio wandering around the theatre muttering, dressed as an old salty sea dog: sou’wester, fake beard, wig and big boots (designed by Cindy Sherman). On stage too were a small orchestra and at a grand piano, Petronio’s collaborator in this production, composer Nico Muhly. Ropes are strung across the front of the stage to the circle (relieved I’m sitting stage right so not in my eye line).

Petronio 1 Petronio2

Petronio 4 Petronio 6

As the music begins and the dancers move the audience are transported to the sea: dangerous, deep, wind lashing, out of control, man-over-board sea.

Petronio 6

A children’s choir sing at the beginning and at the end.