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Archive for william forsythe

summer days

megan40.jpg | USA_flag | Posted by Megan Kurashige

This is me, saying hello for the first time in ages.

How is everyone? I hope your summers have been a long parade of beautiful, sunshine-full, happy days (cue some Beach Boys music here… “Do You Want to Dance,” maybe?).

My summer has been FANTASTIC, but very, very hard. I’ve just finished ten weeks of a workshop at SFCD. Most of our days were very long, sometimes going from eight in the morning ‘til nine at night, so I’m only now getting to appreciate the gorgeous summer sun. We spent so much time inside that I started getting vampire eyes and had to shield my poor, light-sensitive eyeballs from the sunlight any time I emerged from the studios.

The work was entirely worth it though. For the first six weeks, we concentrated on the choreography, and improvisation techniques that inform the choreography, of two ballets by William Forsythe. Thomas McManus, who is an incredible dancer and a lovely, lovely person, worked with us. On our first day he taught us a long and tricky phrase inexplicably called “tuna”. The movement is difficult and extreme, but really satisfying to work with. As a base phrase, even without any improvisational filters or tasks applied to it, it is full of material to chew on and it’s ridiculously satisfying to simply punch through the whole phrase. It made me feel wonderfully three-dimensional.

Then Thomas asked us to apply different tasks to the movement. “Change your floor,” for example. Or “isometrize the movement” or “extend everything” or “make illogical transitions”. We had a big piece of paper tacked to the wall with, eventually, 22 improvisational tasks we could use to explore the phrases. I’ve always been a little afraid of improvisation. I thought that doing an improvisation-based work would be a little like a nightmare in which you are dropped, naked, into the middle of a play you don’t know in a language you don’t understand. After working with Thomas, I still think improvising is a little frightening, but it’s also fascinating, and I can see how it can be thrilling and how it can nudge you away from getting stuck in the same habits of expression. Thomas described it as “real time choreography.” He said that it gives you the responsibility to create in that moment and that sometimes you might do amazing and wonderful things you could never think of ahead of time (he also said that sometimes you might feel like you’re making the worst choices and mucking everything up, though it might not be apparent to the audience).

We learned and performed excerpts from two pieces: The Questioning of Robert Scott (which was the improv-based piece) and Enemy in the Figure (which is much more set choreography). Robert Scott was really intimidating to me. There’s a set structure and you get phrases of movement to work with (“tuna” and “the hundreds”), but within the structure you have all these choices to make. I also had to read text into a microphone, a loud, belligerent speech that happens just as the music is ramping up. “And then we said, do you know what you are doing? And then we said, I do what works. And then we said, I use what I know.” On and on like that. It was a bit weird getting coached on how to say something, but after I got over being embarrassed about shouting in rehearsal, it was fun.

I loved Enemy as well. After Robert Scott, it seemed much less frightening and more a rollercoaster ride on really amazing, really challenging movement.

We also danced a movement from Jiri Kylian’s Whereabouts Unknown. It’s the allegro movement so it’s like ten minutes of non-stop big jumps at breakneck speed. Glenn Edgerton, who is one of my favourite people in the world, set the choreography on us. He and Thomas are both so generous with their knowledge and clear about how they express it. Actually, all the teachers at the Conservatory are like that, which is part of why it is such a great place.


Glenn and Chi rehearsing Psalms with Cameo, Kyle, and Victoria.

In the second four weeks we learned part of Kylian’s Symphony of Psalms (a ballet which I am in love with) and worked on new pieces with Alex Ketley and Christian Burns. I feel like the four week session helped me absorb all the information we were submersed in for the first six weeks. In particular, Alex made a very free-form piece with one section leading to the next based on cues that we gave each other and I felt much more comfortable and fluent after having done all the Forsythe work. Instead of being worried about what was going to happen next, I actually got excited about seeing how my choice to do such and such might effect someone else’s dancing. For Psalms we got thorough coaching from Glenn, Chiharu Shibata (ballet wonderwoman!), Alex, and Christian. It was interesting to see how much detail there is to carve out of a completely set piece of choreography… Extreme gear shift! As Christian said though, it’s a masterpiece of choreography set to a masterpiece of music, and the experience of dancing something like that is indescribable.

I feel like I’m exhausting my vocabulary of superlatives.

All this choreographic work came on top of very hard ballet classes (Summer’s, I think, were the hardest. By far. There was a combination she gave that had about 64 temps leves on ONE foot. I wanted to cry!). We even had a technique class that lasted three hours. Hard hard hard. By the end of the program, I was definitely tired out. It got so that every time I sat still for more than five minutes, I started to suffer from narcolepsy. But now that it’s over and I recuperated by spending almost a whole day sleeping, I’m already starting to miss it.

My friend Miguele took this photo. Our running joke was that I should save time and just sleep in some odd corner at the studios.

Anyway, that is what I have been up to lately. And now I’m going to go catch up on all the Winger activities that I’ve missed reading about.

Recent Posts by megan kurashige

Absence makes the heart grow fonder!

megan40.jpg | USA_flag | Posted by Megan Kurashige

Hullo everyone. I haven’t written anything in a long while, but I have had the chance to get very excited about a few things dancewise in the meantime! First off, I got to see the Forsythe Company, which was completely AMAZING. Three Atmospheric Studies prompted these visceral feelings—horror, discomfort, sadness—and made me think, coming out of the theater, in a way I haven’t for a while. The dancers are so committed and intelligent and active in making choices… It was immensely inspiring and reminded me how important it is to be responsible for your own artistic work. It’s such a huge commitment to work in an exploratory manner all the time; I get frustrated sometimes and am just dying to do something cut, dry, and ready-made, but it really is satisfying to work flat out.

I went to see San Francisco Ballet on Wednesday night. They did Wayne MacGregor’s Eden/Eden, which I had heard much about and seen pictures of odd costumes so I was dying to see the piece. It was the last piece on the program, so the audience came back, all giddy from intermission and waited for the curtain to go up. Which it did, once the music started, on an empty and black stage and… nothing… nothing… technical difficulties! There was an announcement and chattering (meanwhile, I’m sure, someone was running around madly backstage) and then it all started again, this time with full music and the film, which hadn’t worked the first time around, projected onto the stage.


I really liked the piece. It’s a spectacle: extreme, absurd flexibility; bizarre, dehumanizing costumes; film fragments; and constant snippets of dialogue voiced over the music. But it’s a dense and odd spectacle with interesting movement ideas pouring out at insane speed. It also looks really, really hard. Muriel Maffre was spectacular, but all the dancers impressed me. They looked like they were eating the choreography up.

I foundthis interview with Steve Reich (the composer for Eden/Eden). It’s an interesting little NPR bit.Here’s a completely random picture. This car was parked around the corner from the theater, in front of a fancy restaurant. I love that such things still exist!


And that’s it for now. Happy dancing, happy art consumption, happy living and etc!

Recent Posts by megan kurashige

Forsythe’s Three Atmospheric Studies Comes to the US

sloan_thumb USA_flag Posted by Sloan

bows1.jpg
photo by Kate Bordwell

This past October, some of you may remember our London (now Glasgow) contributor, Kate, writing about her experience upon viewing William Forsythe’s “Three Atmospheric Studies” at its premier in London.

Building up the US premier of the piece, a recent article in the NY Times (by Diane Solway) explores the role of politics in dance, with quotes from Forsythe, Baryshnikov and others.

“This evening-length work has played to audiences in Europe, but on Thursday will have its American premiere at the University of California, Berkeley, before arriving at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Feb. 28. To those who question whether dance and politics make good partners, the ever provocative Mr. Forsythe is ready with a question of his own: ‘Since when aren’t artists citizens?’

“…’Artistic dissent is a beautiful lake with very thin ice,’ Mikhail Baryshnikov said recently, pointing out that a number of politically minded works have not risen to the level of enduring art. Still, he added, some have succeeded, and ‘if an artist has enough guts and enough talent to put their personal statement on the floor, I welcome all that.’

“…’There are exceptions,’ said Joseph V. Melillo, the longtime executive producer of the Brooklyn Academy of Music, a leading showcase for progressive art. ‘But the majority of contemporary choreographers in the U.S. today do not think about their place as citizen-artists in response to the political atmosphere. That’s not to say they don’t talk about the war when they’re having a cup of coffee at Dean & Deluca, but they’re not doing that in their art. There’s a disconnect.’

“…’Three Atmospheric Studies’ opened to admiring reviews at its London premiere last fall, though the critics seemed divided about whether to call it dance or theater. Those distinctions don’t interest Mr. Forsythe, who said art forms are too narrowly defined by audiences, critics and sometimes artists themselves. Calling the dance world ‘a bit hermetic,’ he said it is the possibilities of the human body that intrigue him.

“’If dance only does what we assume it can do, it will expire,’ he said. ‘I keep trying to test the limits of what the word choreography means.’ To him it as much about ‘motion organization’ as it is about moving the viewer’s brain around an idea.”

I’ll definitely try to see this when it comes to BAM. I’m intrigued by everything I’m hearing about the piece, and I’ve also never had the opportunity to see Forsythe’s Company in person. For a peak at some of his choreography, here’s a youtube clip of Sylvie Guillem rehearsing and talking about Forsythe’s “In the Middle Somewhere Elevated”.

Recent Posts by kristin sloan