Kim Brandstrup’s residency at St Hilda’s last week was a rare opportunity to observe part of the process of creating new dances through a series of open workshops and two ‘showings’. When I crept into the Gallery of the Jacqueline du Pré Music Building on Tuesday the atmosphere below was quiet and studious. Brandstrup sat on the edge of the stage. Behind him, dancer Liam Francis was silently stretching, curling and extending his body, waiting his turn, while Simone Damberg Würtz and Tobias Praetorius used the specially-laid dance floor to work on a duet. It gradually became apparent that the dancers, the choreographer and cellist and composer Oliver Coates were collaboratively investigating questions about the relationship between rhythm, music and dance. (more…)
July 2016
July 26, 2016
Exploring the Rhythm: music and dance in the practice of choreography. Kim Brandstrup residency St Hilda’s College Oxford, 19–22 July 2016 – Maggie Watson reports
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Ardeshir Ab, choreographic residency, DANSOX, Domenika Besinska, Isthmus, Jacqueline du Pré Music Building, Kim Brandstrup, Liam Francis, Maggie Watson, Oliver Coates, Professor Susan Jones, Simone Damberg Würtz, St Hilda's College Oxford, Tobias Praetorius |Leave a Comment
July 24, 2016
Women GOLive, Old Fire Station Oxford, 16th July 2016 – Emily May reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Aliki Mbakoyianni, Anja Meinhardt, Arts at The Old Fire Station, Catrin Lewis, Cecilia Macfarlane, Donald Hutera, Emily May, Ffin Dance, Jaqueline Johnson, Julian Lewis, Lorna V, Mara Vivas, My Johansson, Remember to Remember, Roosa Leimu-Brown, Sarah Kent, Sue Lewis, Women GOlive |[2] Comments
The Times dance critic Donald Hutera’s 4-day festival of contemporary dance concludes with an eclectic array of diverse and dynamic performances. The final evening showcases some of the highlights from previous nights of the four-day festival, yet also introduces new works for the audience to experience for the first time in this central Oxford venue.
The show on the mainstage of the Old Fire Station is preluded by informal installation Remember to Remember choreographed by Mara Vivas. As the audience enter the intimate space, they are encouraged by a written sign to “touch, watch, listen, write.” These instructions are somewhat ambiguous, yet the dancers’ (Vivas herself accompanied by My Johansson) perform with an openness that invites spectators to participate. (more…)
July 16, 2016
Women GOLive, Old Fire Station Oxford, 14th & 15th July performances – Maggie Watson reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Aliki Mbakoyianni, Ana Barbour, Anuradha Chaturvedi, Arts at The Old Fire Station, Arunima Kumar, Avid for Ovid, Cecilia Macfarlane, Donald Hutera, Ffin Dance, Hanna Wroblewski, Jacqueline Johnson, Maggie Watson, Malcolm Atkins, Mara Vivas, My Johansson, Salah El-Brogy, Sarah Kent, Susie Crow, Women GOlive |1 Comment
Women GOLive has continued to surprise, excite and entertain Oxford audiences with eclectic but well chosen performances of highly original work. The second and third nights of this four-night run included traditional and experimental South Asian dance from Arunima Kumar and Anuradha Chaturvedi, new contemporary dance works from visiting artist Salah El Brogy and Welsh company Ffin Dance (who bravely gave new takes on iconic music), a fresh work from Hanna Wroblewski, Mara Vivas’ and My Johansson’s interactive performance installation, and humour from Sarah Kent and Aliki Mbakoyianni. A terrific line-up. (more…)
July 16, 2016
Women GOlive, Old Fire Station 14th July 2016 – Barbara Berrington reflects
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Aliki Mbakoyianni, Ana Barbour, Arts at The Old Fire Station, Arunima Kumar, Barbara Berrington, Cecilia Macfarlane, Donald Hutera, Hanna Wroblewski, Jacqueline Johnson, Linda Shanovitch, Salah El-Brogy, Susie Crow, Women GOlive |1 Comment
Another exploratory, innovative and exciting programme of original dance work has just been presented at Oxford’s Old Fire Station Theatre under the aegis of Donald Hutera. Hutera’s remarkable ability to gather together able but neglected choreographic skills and to present them in a continually-changing four-day programme has already been demonstrated at the nearby Burton Taylor Studio. On this latest occasion, however, despite there being no diminution in the range of remarkably distinctive approaches on offer, the overall impact was far more cohesive.
For this three elements seem primarily responsible. The first is the universality of the myth and legend on which much of the work draws; the second is the power – on a bare stage – of the overall visual impact of each of these pieces, and the third is the extraordinary range of emotional intensity evoked by the quality of these performances – drawing chuckles and tears and the long silence of chastened realisation that precedes the best appreciative applause. (more…)
July 14, 2016
Women GOlive, Old Fire Station Oxford, Wednesday 13 July 2016 – Maggie Watson reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Aliki Mbakoyianni, Ana Barbour, Arts at The Old Fire Station, Cecilia Macfarlane, Donald Hutera, Jacqueline Johnson, Jane Connelly, Jemima Foxtrot, Lorna V, Maggie Watson, Richard Chappell, Susan Kempster, Women GOlive |1 Comment
How fitting that on the day that a woman took over at 10 Downing Street, Oxford was celebrating the work of women choreographers and dancers in first night of the Women GOlive programme.
Curator Donald Hutera has brought together an impressively novel and varied selection of works by local, national and international artists, which last night ranged from an intensely focussed Butoh-based solo by Ana Barbour, through Jane Connelly’s liquid contemporary dance style, to the disconcerting humour and provocative wit of Susan Kempster, performance poet Jemima Foxtrot and Aliki Mbakoyianni. (more…)
July 8, 2016
Women GOlive showcase curated by Donald Hutera, Old Fire Station 13th-16th July 2016
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Ana Barbour, Anja Meinhardt, Anuradha Chaturvedi, Arts at The Old Fire Station, Arunima Kumar, Cecilia Macfarlane, Donald Hutera, Hanna Wroblewski, Jane Connelly, Jemima Foxtrot, Lorna V, Mara Vivas, My Johansson, Richard Chappell, Roosa Leimu-Brown, Salah El-Brogy, Sarah Kent, Sue Lewis, Susan Kempster, Susie Crow, Women GOlive |Leave a Comment
Women GOlive is a showcase of dance by female performers – and men are welcome too! Kicking off next Wednesday, 13 July, the mini-festival hosted by Arts at the Old Fire Station features some of the best talent around. Curator and Times dance critic Donald Hutera has assembled a four-day line-up of short works for intimate spaces, cherry-picking four enticingly varied evenings of multi-generational talent from the UK and abroad, mainly but not exclusively the work of a group of fascinating and independent female artists. Local performers Ana Barbour, Susie Crow, Cecilia Macfarlane, Anuradha Chaturvedi, Jane Connelly, Anja Meinhardt and Roosa Leimu-Brown are joined by national and international names such as Jemima Foxtrot and Mara Vivas. Performances will be refreshingly unconventional and always eclectic: expect the unexpected!
Performances: Wednesday 13th – Saturday 16th July 7.30pm
Venue: The Old Fire Station, 40 George Street, Oxford OX1 2AQ
Tickets: £10/£8 from www.ticketsoxford.com or 01865 305305.
Programme:
Wed 13th: Ana Barbour, Jane Connelly (Smidgen Dance Company), Lorna V, Richard Chappell, Susan Kempster, and Jemima Foxtrot
Thurs 14th: Lorna V, Ana Barbour, Arunima Kumar, Susie Crow (Avid for Ovid), Salah El-Brogy, Sarah Kent (Dysfunctional Dance), and Hanna Wroblewski
Fri 15th: Lorna V, Susie Crow, Sarah Kent, Mara Vivas with My Johansson, Anuradha Chaturvedi Seth, and Sue Lewis (Ffin Dance)
Sat 16th: Lorna V, Mara Vivas with My Johansson, Sarah Kent, Sue Lewis (Ffin Dance), Anja Meinhardt (Justice in Motion) with Roosa Leimu-Brown
July 5, 2016
DANSOX presents Choreographic Workshop: Exploring the Rhythm, Jacqueline du Pré Music Building 19th-22nd July
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: choreographic workshop, DANSOX, Dr Susan Jones, Exploring the Rhythm, Jacqueline du Pré Music Building, Joanna MacGregor, Kim Brandstrup, Oliver Coates, St Hilda's College Oxford |Leave a Comment
Another fascinating event from DANSOX who are this month hosting a choreographic workshop with internationally renowned choreographers, musicians, and dancers exploring the relationship between music and dance in the practice of choreography.
Artists in residence this summer at St Hilda’s College, Kim Brandstrup (international choreographer) and Oliver Coates (cellist/composer) joined by renowned pianist Joanna MacGregor, will direct a workshop with professional dancers.
All welcome to drop in at any time to observe, comment, discuss on each day, and come to showings on Wednesday July 20th and Thursday 21st. Do let us know if you want to come. For more information, timetable, and to book a seat at the showings, contact Susan Jones.
Dates: Tuesday 19th July 2016 09:00am to Friday 22nd July 2016 21:00pm
Venue: Jacqueline du Pré Music Building, St Hilda’s College, Oxford, OX4 1DY
July 4, 2016
Natalia Osipova — works by Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui / Russell Maliphant / Arthur Pita. Sadler’s Wells, Thursday 30 June 2016 – Maggie Watson reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Arthur Pita, ballet, contemporary dance, James O’Hara, Jason Kittelberger, Michael Hulls, Natalia Osipova, Qutb, Run Mary Run, Russell Maliphant, Sadler's Wells, Scanner, Sergei Polunin, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, Silent Echo |Leave a Comment
Natalia Osipova’s specially commissioned programme of contemporary dance at Sadler’s Wells was an opportunity to see one of the greatest dancers of her generation in new works by Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, Russell Maliphant and Arthur Pita.
In Cherkaoui’s Qutb (meaning ‘axis’ or ‘pivot’), Osipova, Jason Kittelberger and James O’Hara experimented with ways of moving together, testing the limits of gravity and their contrasting techniques as they used their own weight to support, balance and counterpoise each other. Changes in the music, which included Sufi vocals, gave an episodic structure to a work so packed with possible interpretations that its meaning was ambiguous: suggestions in the programme included, among other ideas, the aftermath of a natural disaster, the interaction of celestial bodies, or a rite of passage. It was sometimes hard to see clearly the complex entwining movement of the dancers on the darkened stage; the work would benefit by being performed in a smaller and more intimate space. (more…)