X-on @ Kaaitheater

Ivo Dimchev / Franz West
X-on
Kaaitheater
14, 15, 16/10 – 20:30
±1h 15min
€12 / €10

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The Austrian artist Franz West was recently awarded the Golden Lion for his whole oeuvre at the Venice Biennale. In the early seventies, West made his first portable sculptures or adaptives. He encased everyday objects in gauze and plaster so that the public could pick them up and walk around with them.

Last year, West asked the Bulgarian performer Ivo Dimchev to make two videos using his adaptives as examples of what is possible for the visitors to his exhibitions. In his turn, Dimchev asked if he could create a performance using the sculptures. This resulted in the solo I-on and has now led to a group production for four performers on which Dimchev and West will collaborate closely. West will make some new and larger adaptives with which several bodies can enter into a relationship. Just as in I-on, music will play a major part in this unique relationship between bodies and art objects.

The Bulgarian artist Ivo Dimchev has lived in Brussels since 2009. His work excels in inimitable weird fantasies and an impressive physical idiom and use of the voice. He is himself the director, choreographer, writer, singer and performer of all his pieces. His solo Som Faves was selected for the 2010 Theaterfestival. Last year he both opened and closed the Performatik festival, with I-on and we.art.dog.com.

by Ivo Dimchev, in collaboration with Franz West | performers Ivo Dimchev, Yen Yi-tzu, Christian Bakalov, Veronika Zot | assistant Michael Helland  | music Ivo Dimchev, Philipp Quehenberger | lighting design Giacomo Gorini | co-production Kaaitheater (Brussels), Impulstanz (Vienna), Frascati (Amsterdam) | support Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie, Vlaamse Gemeenschap

Faye Driscoll Group: MAD IN ME @ DTW

There is so much mad in me @ Dance Theater Workshop
March 31st – April 3rd, 7:30pm

IMAGE

There is so much mad in me - VIDEO TEASER on Vimeo
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There is so much mad in me investigates the physical and theatrical narratives that drive our misplaced need to be seen. Driscoll, with her company of dancers, ask who we are and how we connect in this time of over stimulation and look at me distraction. Working from images seen in the media of people in extreme states, from torture to religious rapture, There is so much mad in me examines the similarities between polar extremes. What are the fine lines between the abject and the sublime, voyeurism and empathy, entertainment and reality? From creating facades to seeking the divine to committing violent acts and falling in love, There is so much mad in me explores shifting states of consciousness as choreography while investigating how we process information.

Performance: Lindsay Clark, Lily Gold, Michael Helland, Tony Orrico, Jennie MaryTai Liu, Jacob Slominski, Adaku Utah, Jesse Zaritt and Nikki Zialcita

Design: Machine Dazzle, Amanda K. Ringger, Sara C. Walsh and Brandon Wolcott

Above Image: Christy Pessagno

Faye Driscoll Group: 837 VENICE BLVD @ HERE

a show about blaming the world for your problems

837 VENICE BLVD
directed and choreographed by FAYE DRISCOLL

with    Michael Helland    Celia Rowlson-Hall    Nikki Zialcita

NOV 13-22 7:30pm  $20
NOV 13 Opening Night Benefit $50 Tickets Includes Reception
NOV 19 Post-Performance Discussion Identity and Authenticity

“Ms. Driscoll’s rigorous exploration of this physical – and, it seems, mental – manipulation feels startlingly original in its peculiar configuration of slapstick and darkness.” – The New York Times

Faye Driscoll, hailed as “1 of 25 to watch out for in 2008″ by Dance Magazine, choreographs rigorous dance works that edge into performance art and theater. She takes gesture and spasm to new levels of physicality in her raw, under-the-skin and often hysterical work. Using physical manipulation and humor, 837 Venice Boulevard paints the lonesome emotional landscape of a neglected kid left to her own fantasies and fears, while exploring universal themes of identity, blame, and how exhausting it is to have to “be somebody” all the time.

View a Video Preview
http://www.here.org/2008/2008-08-07-production/20081014-a4877.mov

Lighting Design: Amanda K. Ringger
Set Design: Sara C. Walsh
Sound Design: Matt Tennie
Costume Design: Normandy Sherwood

HERE Arts Center
145 6th Ave.
between spring and broome enter on dominick

To Buy Tickets:
https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/66032
or call 212.352.3101

For More Info:
http://www.here.org