The church was silent. The rustles and settling of the audience were allowed to calm. In silence and in low light we took in the gentle movement of light white cloth softly rippling and billowing. Giving time to arrive, to notice our breathing. Eventually two figures slowly appeared bearing accordians. Breathing accordians, the opening and closing of the bellows connecting with our breathing and encouraging us to expand our breath into our lungs, my ribs opening as the concertina. An old man balancing a beautiful long and twisted driftwood branch on his shoulder slowly and carefully entered, the light behind him casting shadows of the fragile balancing act. The stick left the man’s shoulder to find a home leaning against the strong stone pillar. (more…)
March 3, 2015
Drawing Breath – Rachel Gildea reviews The Pneȗma Project, St. John the Evangelist Church, 25th-26th February
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Cai Tomos, Dancin' Oxford 2015, David Ward, Eeva Maria Mutka, Jonah Brody, Miranda Tufnell, Rachel Gildea, Sylvia Hallett, The Pneȗma Project, Tim Rubidge |Leave a Comment
I have come alone tonight and I notice that I feel particularly at ease in my own company. I enjoy my separateness to others. As if in response to this, the effect of the performance was to make me conscious of my singularity. It allowed me to turn in on myself and to notice my embodied being: the skin I am encased in, the breath inside me. At the same time, it evoked a sense of an expansive world around us: far-away places and open space. The Pneȗma Project mimicked the act of breathing: drawing us in to ourselves and sending us out to the unknown. (more…)
February 19, 2015
The Pneûma Project, St John the Evangelist, 25th & 26th February 2015
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Cai Tomos, Dancin' Oxford 2015, David Ward, Eeva Maria Mutka, immersive performance, Jonah Brody, Miranda Tufnell, St John the Evangelist, Sylvia Hallett, The Pneûma Project, Tim Rubidge |Leave a Comment
For the first time the beautiful church of St John the Evangelist, now a stunning concert venue, joins the Dancin’ Oxford venue line-up. The Pneûma Project is a collaboration by dance artist Miranda Tufnell, visual artist David Ward and musician Sylvia Hallett. This engaging exploration of breath offers its audience a beautiful and immersive performance, in which movement, sound, light and visual imagery combine to evoke the poetics of breath. Moment by moment we draw on the invisible air, catch scents, sounds, messages and signals. Our lives are suffused with myths and folklore images of the life-giving potency of breath – of breath lost and regained.
Pneûma: nju ma, noun, Philosophy, Greek = wind, breath,spirit, that which is blown or breathed
The performance features dance artists Cai Tomos, Eeva Maria Mutka, Tim Rubidge and musician Jonah Brody.
“The combination of excellent dancing and extraordinary music was intensely moving. I can’t wait to see the full realisation of this idea.” Orlando Gough, composer
Performances: Wednesday 25th and Thursday 26th February, 7.30pm
Venue: St John the Evangelist, Iffley Road, Oxford OX4 1EH
Running time: 50 minute, no interval. Suitable for all ages.
Tickets: £12, £10 concessions.
Box Office Telephone: 01865 305305
or book online via Tickets Oxford here
October 23, 2014
Pneûma at the Breath Festival, Museum of Natural History 1st November
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: David Ward, Miranda Tufnell, Museum of Natural History Oxford, Sylvia Hallett, The Breath Festival, The Pneûma Project |Leave a Comment
The Breath Festival presents a wealth of displays, performances, tours, talks, events and childern’s activities around breath and breathing which will take place across the University museums in Oxford. Its facinating programme includes a welcome opportunity to see work by a much respected dance artist resident in Oxfordshire. The Pneûma Project is a collaboration between visual artist David Ward, musician Sylvia Hallett and movement artist Miranda Tufnell that explores breath in all its aspects. For the Breath Festival they will share a section from their full length work Pneûma (Greek for wind, breath, spirit, that which is blown or breathed). Pneûma will create a dialogue between two dancers and two musicians and the stunning display of mammal skeletons that has such a dramatic presence in the museum. The performance in movement and sound will evoke aspects and stories of breath, amongst the epic procession of mammals, themselves once living, breathing creatures.
Performance: Saturday 1st November 2014, 4.15-4.45pm
The Great Hall, Museum of Natural History, Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3PW
Further information about The Breath Festival here