Rambert's latest programme offers us a trio of works by North American choreographers, and, while unrelated, these combine to tell us a fourth story: that of the progress of abstract dance over the ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by DANCE By Anna Kisselgoff New York Times subscribers* enjoy full access to TimesMachine—view over 150 years of New York Times journalism, as it ...
Seattle choreographer Kate Wallich reverts to pure, abstract dance in her new piece, “Dream Dances” — and that’s a big relief. In recent projects, including “Industrial Ballet” (billed as “‘Black Swan ...
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Images of wreckage come to mind and newspapers when a natural calamity strikes. What could be rebuilt from the rubble left behind? The question gets explored when three dancers from different cultural ...
Riener wanted the dancing and the music to remain separate so the students could focus on pure movement with no other distractions. “We rehearsed with a stopwatch to make sure things are the same ...
When we watch dance, what do we "see?" Do we just see moving bodies, shapes, and a constantly changing visual scene? Or do we also interpret these things based on our previous knowledge and our ...