DECEMBER 2007 PERFORMANCE
 
 

November 30-December 2 OPENPORT
December 3 & 10 LinkUp Residency Artists at The Chicago Cultural Center
December 7 Julia Mayer, Coffee Dance
December 7-9 Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble, Voices 2007
December 14-16 Asimina Chremos/Silverspace, Red Swan Red Swan
December 21-23 Michael Zerang and Hamid Drake, The 17th Annual Winter Solstice Concerts

 
 
OPENPORT
A Weekend of Realtime Performance, Sound, & Language

Friday-Sunday, November 30-December 2, 7:30pm
$12 ($10 Students, Seniors, Unemployed)

OPENPORT is a convergence of artists from a set of distinct contemporary practices including movement-based live art, experimental sound, performance writing, and electronic poetry. Through the use of the live body and an engagement with realtime composition and machine-processes, artists complicate and re-map notions of language, physicality, space, and time, navigating the hidden terrains of our networked culture. OPENPORT was originally conceived as part of Links Hall’s Artistic Associates program in February 2007 as a month-long international festival. This weekend event includes performances from the festival creators and OPENPORT artists currently based in Chicago.
www.openportchicago.com

Friday November 30

(see november)

Saturday December 1

Karen Christopher US and Mark Jeffery UK
Distance x 2 = a camel caravan on a grain of rice
A performance duet in six parts

Working with live movement, spoken text, and prerecorded video images, the performance is an investigation of the difference in getting from here to there and back again. We have asked each other what about the distance between my feet and my eyes, between your eyes and the back of my head, between my hand and those clouds, between the answer and the question, the solution and the compromise, between green and purple, the sweet and the salty snack, between the quiet and the silent, between the bump and the fall, your thoughts and your prayers?

Lucy Cash UK
Sight Reading. (2007, 8 mins)

Senses and sensations (particularly kinaesthesia, and proprioceptive knowledge) inform Cash’s work. The piece explores a book about early twentieth century experiments in ‘eyeless sight’ - this sense of the body reading and being read, through its skin, in relation to how we read movement through repetition and fragmentation. The soundtrack is a rendition of Erik Satie’s Vexation-a three line piece of music composed to be repeated over 14 or 28 hours by different pianists. Performers: Jo.e Amado, Sebastian Baczkiewicz, Gerard Bell, Geoff McGarry, Marie-Gabrielle Rotie, Frances Scott, Litó Walkey. Cinematographer: Ole Birkeland. Pianist: Timor Frederiksson.

Fiona Wright (UK)
On Lying

See Friday, November 30 for details

Sunday December 2

Judd Morrissey US
Books that Write Me, Books I Write

Part II: Concerning Lasts Made (in the style of twilight)
A text in the shape of a Byzantine dome, a tracing of one author’s pathway through The Last Performance, an online constraint-based collaborative writing and text-visualization project responding to the theme of lastness in relation to architectural forms, acts of building, a final performance, and the interruption (that becomes the promise) of community.

Nathan Butler US and Lori Talley (US)
double-pole, double-throw

See Friday, November 30 for details

Karen Christopher US and Mark Jeffery UK
Distance x 2 = a camel caravan on a grain of rice
A performance duet in six part

See Saturday, December 1 for details

Biographies:

Fiona Wright has been making mostly solo performances since the late 1980s. Her approach is located in physicality, influenced by release-based and somatic practices such as Feldenkrais Method. She also works collaboratively, particularly in an independent dance duet company in the UK with Caroline Bowditch, girl jonah. Recent work includes a series of solo performance lectures titled other versions of an uncertain body, and also several short five minute works made for a solo spectator and repeated over several hours by the performer. She is a freelance University lecturer, a mentor and dramaturg and is currently a Visiting Artist, teaching at The School of the Art Institute for the Fall Semester. In February 07 she presented an early version of her new solo On Lying at Links Hall in the OPENPORT Festival. Supported by the Arts Council of England.

Judd Morrissey is a writer and code artist whose works of electronic literature, performance, and site-based installation have been internationally presented. He is the author of experimental works for web and cd including The Jew’s Daughter (Electronic Literature Collection, 2006), My Name is Captain, Captain (Eastgate Systems, 2002), and The Error Engine, an ongoing experiment in writing and artificial intelligence. He is currently working in collaboration with Goat Island performance group on a community-driven writing, archiving, and text-visualization project, The Last Performance [dot org], for which he was a recipient of the inaugural Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers’ Grant in 2006. Judd is an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Art and Technology Studies and BFA Writing departments at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and is a co-curator of OPENPORT. www.judisdaid.com

Nathan Butler performs with electronic systems that respond to both the vigorous movements of his body and the situation of the live performance environment. He performed in the international sound festival Sonambiente 2006 in Berlin, and recently performed locally at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago as part of the 12x12 series and the Outer Ear Festival. He lives and works in Chicago and is a co-curator of OPENPORT. www.nathanbutler.com

Lori Talley is a sound and digital artist. She teaches in the Sound Department of The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is co-creator of My Name is Captain, Captain. Her sound work has been included in the compilation A Call for Silence and as part of the Overgaden Sound Art Festival. Lori is a co-curator of OPENPORT and Interactive Producer at Cramer-Krasselt.
www.loritalley.com

Karen Christopher has been a member of Goat Island performance group since 1990. She has created and performed in eight of Goat Island’s works and taught extensively across North America and Europe. The company presented their last work When Will the September Roses Bloom Last Night Was Only a Comedy at the Venice Biennale in 2005. Goat Island is currently making its last performance work The Lastmaker that will tour through and into 2009. Before Goat Island, she was a founding member of the Neo-Futurists. She also edits video for the Center for Communication and Medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. www.goatislandperformance.org

Mark Jeffery has been a member of Goat Island performance group since 1996. He has created and performed in five Goat Island works and taught extensively across North America and Europe. The company presented their last work When Will the September Roses Bloom Last Night Was Only a Comedy at the Venice Biennale in 2005. Goat Island is currently making its last performance work The Lastmaker that will tour through and into 2009. Mark has shown other work in numerous spaces and contexts including SiteUnseen 2006 and 2005 in Chicago, Nottdance in Nottingham, Taxi Gallery in Cambridge, National Review of Live Art in Glasgow, ICA London, Arnolfini Bristol, Firstsite Colchester, Green Room Manchester, Chapter Cardiff, and Expo 94 Nottingham. He curates performance events in Chicago including the international performance, sound, and language festival OPENPORT in February 2007. In 2006 he co–founded The Chicago Performance Network, a 20 member committee of local presenters, artists, and educators to help foster and sustain the Chicago Performance Community and also to develop an annual time arts festival called IN>TIME. He is currently an adjunct associate professor at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago where he teaches in the Performance Department and First year Program. www.goatislandperformance.org

Lucy Cash In 2000, after earning her MA at Lancaster University, Lucy Cash began making films with a BFI/ FilmFour New Directors’ award. Since then she has been making work for television and cinema exhibition as well as artists’ films and site-specific video projects. Lucy’s work has been shown in over ten different countries–predominantly within Europe but also Australia, Japan, Brazil and the USA–on television, in galleries and at major international film festivals. She is currently working on a fourth film with Goat Island.




Karen Christopher and Mark Jeffery self portrait
 
 

LinkUp image of Dan Mohr, self-portrait



LinkUp Residency Artists
at the Dance Studio, Chicago Cultural Center, 77 E. Randolph
Free
Monday December 3, 6pm:
Jonathan Meyer, Angela Gronroos, Kristina Fluty & MarySue Miller

Monday December 10, 6pm:
Dan Mohr, Kairol Rosenthal, Seth Bockley


The LinkUp Residency program at Links Hall annually supports six local-based dance and performance artists/companies for an intensive six-month period. The objective is to foster the development of new creative work in the performing arts, which is carried out through the provision of rehearsal space, a stipend, an on-call mentor list, work-in-progress showings, and a fully produced production at the end of the residency. These two evenings at the Cultural Center showcase the work of Links Hall's 2006/07 Residency artists. The performances range from solo to group work, contemporary dance to experimental performance, and include collaborations in movement, text, and music. Co-presented by the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs.

LinkUp Residency Artists
December 3, 2007
at the Dance Studio, Chicago Cultural Center, 77 E. Randolph
Free

The Opal Door, excerpts from the evening-length work
Khecari Dance Theatre

Choreography: Jonathan Meyer
Dancers: Jeremy Blair, Kendall Loyer, Melissa Mallinson, Krista Hughes, Megan Rhyme, Whitney Cover, Jessica Marasa
With a unique fusion of classical and post-modern dance forms and a world-ranging vocabulary of movement, Khecari Dance Theatre invites you on an epic journey to the present day: frozen and explosive, minute and expansive, tender and violent, grotesquely evocative and startlingly hopeful. www.khecari.org

Forever Dreaming of Cranes
Angela Gronroos, with J’Sun Howard
A majestic journey through the perceived eyes of a great crane; time travel and memory reveal the possibility of escape from peril – to reach the place that is ultimately home.

Little Girl Gone
Kristina Fluty and Marysue Miller, with Carleen Healy
Live Banjo: Ben Wright
A nostalgic movement celebration of childhood, family history, and former loves. Fluty and Miller blend live banjo, vocalizations, and recorded Bluegrass classics to provide a sound score for their memories.

LinkUp Residency Artists
December 10, 2007
at the Dance Studio, Chicago Cultural Center, 77 E. Randolph
Free


Guns, Aloe: The Worldly Observations and Further Breakdown of Andrae Gonzalo
Dan Mohr
Part song cycle, part confessional, part therapy session, part lecture, Mohr explores a hazy perspective on the true nature and purpose of fashion, divined through transcriptions of reality television, beatboxing, runway stomp, and false epiphany.

Intimae
Rosenthal et al.

Choreographer: Kairol Rosenthal
Dancers: Emma Draves and Becca Lemme
Vocalists: Brad Benoit, Tenor and Monica Perdue, Soprano
Tinged with ballet and opera, Intimae studies the states of ecstasy and deeper self that everyday people inhabit when alone in the mundane sanctum of our homes, cars, and the after hours office.

WAR GARDEN
Seth Bockley, with Emma Stanton and Lindsey Noel Whiting
A physical and spatial experiment in patriotic agriculture. The piece explores the history of war gardening and an epic conflict waged over Chicago’s borderlands.

 
 


Julia Mayer - Coffee Dance

Friday December 7, 9:30am
Free
BYOC (bring your own coffee)

Since July 2006, Julia Mayer has opened her weekly Friday morning solo movement practice to the public once a month. This successful series of engaged, informal performances continues on the First Friday of every month at 9:30am. Each performance will last approximately 20 minutes, with the opportunity for discussion afterward.

As a mother and full-time worker in her forties, Julia Mayer is exploring new paradigms for performance—places, processes, practices—to stay active and to activate audiences to join her in experiencing unique moments of the body moving. In sharing her highly personal movement adventures, Julia invites audience members to contemplate their own creative impulses.

In its first year, CoffeeDance attracted curious, insightful audiences who valued the opportunity to start their day investigating dance and the act of performance in an intimate setting, flooded by daylight. Thanks in part to the rigor and success of this inquiry, Julia has received a prestigious Chicago Dancemakers Forum Lab Artist grant for 2007.

[her] movement is refreshingly off the map - Chicago Reader
a delicately luminous, inquisitive stage presence - TimeOut Chicago



Photo by William Frederking
 
 


Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble
Voices 2007: Chicago

Friday & Saturday, December 7 & 8, 8pm
Sunday, December 9, 7pm
$15 ($10 students)

Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble is a multi-disciplinary arts organization originally founded in 2001 as Adler Danztheatre Project. Inspired by the German Expressionist movement Tanztheater, this collaborative group creates socially conscious works by fusing elements of world literature and traditional western theatre with contemporary dance, visual art, and multimedia to tell original and compelling narratives. Voices 2007: Chicago has at its core true stories collected by Chicagoans; these pieces reflect the diversity, strength, and warmth that is the backbone of our city’s culture. Created and directed by Ellyzabeth Adler, Morgan Christianson, Lindsey Marks, and Beth Czechanski.
www.danztheatre.org

Artistic Director Ellyzabeth Adler received a BFA in Performing Arts from Roosevelt University in 1997. She received a MA in Directing and Movement from UIC in 2000, focusing on movement-based theatre; especially Pina Bausch, Anne Bogart, Martha Clarke, the Wooster Group, and Goat Island. In 2000, she founded Project Danztheatre Company and later reorganized the company into Adler Danztheatre Project (ADP) and Kids Project. In the fall of 2006, ADP started The Voices Project, with an emphasis on sociopolitical theatre. Recently ADP became Chicago Danztheatre Ensemble, which better reflects the company’s mission and collaborative methodology.

The imagination and industry invested...by director Ellyzabeth Adler and Danztheatre Project are impressive - Mary Shen Barnidge, Chicago Reader

 
 


Asimina Chremos/Silverspace
Red Swan Red Swan

Friday & Saturday, December 14 & 15, 8pm
Sunday December 16, 7pm
$10

Red Swan Red Swan is a new evening-length solo by Asimina Chremos that frames the dancer’s body as a meeting place between sensual and ethereal qualities. The work is inspired, in part, by the biography of legendary ballerina Margot Fonteyn, particularly the artistic renaissance late in her career that came about through her partnership with Rudolph Nureyev. Red Swan researches how the practice and performance of dance can bridle, efface, liberate or transform desire.

Asimina Chremos had intensive early training in classical ballet and later forayed into studies with postmodernists such as Simone Forti and Ishmael Houston-Jones. Recent influences on Chremos’ practice include regular practice of vinyasa-style yoga, Klein/Mahler Technique and contact improvisation. www.asiminachremosdance.net

A strong, elegant, long-limbed dancer who moves with a sense of stark drama and genuine lyricism - Chicago Sun-Times



Asimina Photo by William Frederking


 
 

Drake/Zerang image by Mark Pokempner


Hamid Drake & Michael Zerang
Seventeenth Annual Winter Solstice Percussion Concerts

Friday-Sunday, December 21-23, 6am
$15 Advance tickets from BOOKWORKS,
3444 N. Clark St. Chicago, IL 60657 (773) 871-5318

Hamid Drake and Michael Zerang present the Seventeenth Annual Winter Solstice Percussion Concerts, an hour-long ritual performance that utilizes a wide array of percussion instruments from North Africa, the Middle East, and East India, as well as western orchestral instruments. Drake and Zerang also use the Frame Drum that has its origin in ancient Mesopotamia, and a variety of hand drums, including the dumbek, tabla, rukk, conga, djimbe, and tambourine, concentrating on long rhythmic cycles and structured improvisations. Both are veterans of Chicago’s world music, new music, and jazz scenes and have performed together nationally and internationally for the past 17 years. The Winter Solstice Percussion Concerts have grown in popularity over the years, from a single show in 1990 to three annual shows for the last several years.

[Drake and Zerang have] an extraordinary understanding of one another—the sort of working friendship in which music has created a deeper kind of communication than conversation ever could- Chicago Reader

 



 














































































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