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Adventurous Women Choreographers: Maguy Marin, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, and Nina Wiener Set the Dance World on End
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13933 |
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THE ARTS
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2 / 1988 |
1,439 Words |
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Karen Onoda Karen Onoda is a New York-based dance critic who contributes
regularly to Dance Magazine. |
Over the past five years, the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) has become the Lincoln Center of modern dance. The dance series of the three-month Next Wave Festival presents the works of choreographers on the forefront of contemporary dance. Past seasons have included Nina Wiener, Pina Bausch, Mark Morris, Trisha Brown, Bill T. Jones, Arnie Zane, and others.
In 1981 the dance series of the Next Wave Festival offered a core of experimental established choreographers familiar to new York audiences: Trish Brown, Laura Dean, and Lucinda Childs. Since then the Next Wave Festival has continued to program New York choreographers with large followings, but has also brought in lesser-known foreign artists such as Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and Carolyn Carlson.
Spectacular Success
There have been spectacular successes at the Next Wave Festival, most recently last season's Rosas Danst Rosas by De Keersmaeker. De Keersmaeker returned this year with Elena's Aria, a ninety-minute work for five women. This stark, minimal piece was by far the most inaccessible of the dance offerings. The choreographer conceded nothing to the audience, did not pander, did not try to entertain. What we saw on stage is purposeful, diligent exploration of space and time, not diversion.
Chairs from kitchenettes of times past line the back of the bare stage; others are scattered along the sides. Like an empty dance hall, the setting suggests nostalgia, history, past loves. Seated at the far side of the stage by the proscenium, a woman reads in halting English from Tolstoy, "I
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