PREVIEW: Dobet Gnahoré and Acoustic Africa

Dobet Gnahoré and Acoustic Africa

On Thursday February 21st, Hill Auditorium will present Dobet Gnahoré an Acoustic Africa. An array of musicians from all over Africa, the group will perform rhythms and dance inspired by their native countries. Dobe Gnahoré,  a vocalist, dancer, and percussionist, will be accompanied by bassist/singer Manou Gallo from the Sierra Leone, guitarist/singer/dancer Kareyce Fotso from Cameroon. In addition, the performances will feature Aly Keita on Balafon (from the Ivy Coast),  Wendlavim Zabrone on percussion (from Burkina Faso) and Zoumann Diarra on guitar (from Mali).  The performance will be eclectic and powerful.

In conjunction with the UMMA’s El Anatsui Exhibit, the Center for World Performance Studies is sponsoring the visit of these gorgeous African artists to celebrate their culture and their art. On Wednesday February 20th, there will be a roundtable discussion in 2435 North Quad. My Thesis Advisor Frieda Ekotto will be moderating in both French and Engish. The title of the round table is Music and the Experience of Female Performance. The discussion will be  a great prelude to the fantastic show.

7 pm at Hill. Click here to check out the flier for more details. And click here to watch  a video preview of the kind of performance you will see at Hill.

REVIEW: Silver Linings Playbook

Silver Linings Playbook

For months, the word on everyone’s lips has been “Silver Linings Playbook.” As far back as  Thanksgiving break, my friends had been advising me to see it. I missed my chance because it left theaters, but after the big Oscar buzz struck, the film reappeared on the silver screen and is now playing at The State Theater. For the first time in….decades (?), all four major acting categories draw nods from one film: Best Actor/Actress and Best Supporting Actor/Actress. With that knowledge in mind, I had high expectations for the film. And yes! It absolutely met my expectations, and exceded them.

Its hard to decide who I fell more in love with, JLaw or BCoop, as my celebrity-savvy  housemate might call the duo. Bradley Cooper’s character, Pat,  has recently been released from a mental institution after serving a sentence for reacting violently to his wife unfaithfulness. In the process of recovery, he discovers that he suffers from far more severe personality disorders, which he inherited from his father- a relationship that still challenges him upon his return home. As he re-integrates into his former lifestyle, he struggles to forget his wife, but in the process discovers a love that is far more passionate and whole hearted.

Jennifer Lawrence’s character plays Tiffany, an equally wounded but independent and caring character who helps Pat get back on  his feet by teaching him to dance- literally (and figuratively I suppose). In the process she falls in love with him and waits for him to come around and realize how very much in love he also is with her. The chemistry between them is very natural but also electric. (I will add here that it is, indeed, a great movie date if you are looking for a way to celebrate Valentine’s day. I noticed  a good number of couples in the crowd).

The film did a very refined job of telling an atypical story while maintaing a sense of realism. It was about family, struggle, finding love, letting it go, and keeping it without getting too crazy. These characters were very familiar; it was not a period piece or a computerized fantasy story- often the winners of Oscar awards. The acting was  so real, so believable, and so authentic- that surely  is why this film has garnered so much praise. One particularly touching and truthful scene was when Robert Deniro,  an aging father, opens to his son for the first time about his love for him and his mistakes as a parent. I was moved  and nearly found myself in tears as well!

My favorite part about this movie was that I went by myself. If you’ve ever avoided going to a movie by yourself because you fear it will be uncomfortable and pitiful, the way a solo restauteur sometimes appears, I highly recommend you revamp your opinions. Going to moveis by myself is the most therapeutic alone time I can think of! I was so happy to spend my Monday evening watching this adorable movie. It’s only in Ann Arbor for the week, so get yourself to the theater- with or without a date!

PREVIEW: Ecstasy and Fantasy

Ecstasy and Fantasy

On Friday, February 15th, the School of Music, UM Chamber Choir,  and UMMA collaborate to create an evening of sounds inspired by Alice in Wonderland. Faculty from the school will perform a selection from Iriving Fine’s “Alice in Wonderland” as well as several other composers from the same era as well as a contemporary, visiting composer. The music will be performed alongside Florencia Pita’s “Alice” inspired artwork. The dual representation of imagination, fantasy, mystery, and magic will surely create a dynamic and intriguing performance. 7 pm at the UMMA.

REVIEW: Florencia Pita

Florencia Pita

If you’ve passed by the UMMA in the past month, you’ve probably noticed an incredibly curious landscape looking out at you from the windowed, first floor  gallery. Bright reds, spinning blues, swirling shapes and swirling constructions fill the space, drawing the eye in, maintaing mysterious and fantasy  no matter how long the viewer looks. Florencia Pita’s designs are all about organic exaggerations and whimsical, barely  recognizable figures. The Argentine-born artist is trained as an architect but works with furniture, jewelry, graphic design, sculpture, and more. Many of her foliage-like  configurations are inspired by the feminine form. Yet these representations are complex: both her  large scale architecture installations  and her minute scrupulous  jewelry designs often represen the same, flowery  forms. In this way, her work confounds scales and draws the viewer in infinitely.

In an interview with UMMA Academic Coordinator  David Choberka, I learned more about Florencia Pita’s inspirations and styles:

“She makes these cool, whimsical, conceptual, digital designs that are really interesting because of how she plays with scale—her flowery, colorful treelike structures could be anything from buildings to vases, furniture, jewelry or tableware. She makes these large-scale wall hanging appliqués based on children’s stories—one is inspired by Alice in Wonderland. The exhibition features a couple of her installation pieces, as well as models and digital representations of her work. She is developed an original piece for this exhibition, which is exciting. She has won a ton of awards and been featured in exhibitions all over the world. Her work really blurs the boundaries between visual art, architecture, and design, and is definitely worth checking out.”

Click here for more about Florencia Pita and her studio FP/Mod. To read about the exhibit, look at UMMA’s website. The exhibit is open during museum hours until the middle of June.

REVIEW: State of Exception

State of Exception


Just inside the double doors of the Institute for Humanities is a small, discreet passage leading to a far away place  beyond Ann Arbor: the US/Mexican border. I see “gallery” and I  imagine photographs hanging on walls or statues on pedestals- not dizzying videos, dialogue about border control, and images of tactile, human  belongings staring me in the face.

As part of the Race Theme Semester, the Humanities Institute is featuring a striking exhibit about the immigration journey across the Mexico-Arizona border.  Anthropology professor Jason De Léon’s four year old “Undocumented Migration Project” is the organization behind this emotive installation. In collaboration with world renowned photographer Bill Barnes and curator Amanda Krugliak, the two created the ethnographic story of unauthorized migration through dangerous southern  border territory. Using techniques such as forensics and  archeology, the “Project” curated abandoned vestiges of migrant workers, such as backpacks, dirt encrusted toothbrushes, forgotten bottles, salvaging rosaries, Mother Mary’s, orphaned shoes and more.

As you enter the gallery, the space is dark and crowded. Disorienting videos of a rocky pathways project onto the floor as the viewer progresses through a dark tunneled entrance. She  follows the sounds of pensive, recorded voices speaking over each other repeatedly. Once inside, the viewer  sees two video projections playing simultaneously: one of six faces looking into  the camera and speaking their concerns, fears, and curiosities about illegal immigration; one with pastures, rough hills, and jagged fences rushing outside a moving car window. Opposite the running films, a wall of about one hundred crusty, recovered back packs blanket the walls, making the viewer appear  diminutive in their presence.

This instillation is intriguing because of its collaboration between academics and fine arts. The content of the “Project” clearly addresses issues of policy, social (in)justice, and race, while the imagery is skilled, creative, and artfully executed. This combination of disciplines “considers the complexities and ambiguities of found objects and what they may or may not reveal in terms of transition, human experience, culture, violence, and accountability.” The piece did a thorough job of emoting the urgency of these conflicts, especially by incorporating  lost baby shoes and tiny pony tale holders fit for toddler sized children. I wondered about the people who carried  those objects, wondered who struggled against all odds to cross suc treacherous barriers.

Skimming the guest book near the entrance, I noticed a variety of responses to the exhibit. Most were positive, conveying a sense of appreciation for the severity of the work. Some comments, however, conveyed a less than delighted reaction to the piece. One claimed it was an expression of “white guilt” and did nothing to transcend the issue of race and racism. Perhaps this reaction was because the voices in the film were mostly “white”. That was a very interesting, strategic choice on behalf of the artists to choose white, American voices to address these issues. I wondered whether it was intentional or whether it happened by default. It had a curious affect on the purpose of the piece and left me uncertain about how well  it affected me in the end. You’ll have to see and decide for yourself.

For more on State of Exception, click here. Click here for an LSA review of the event and here to see images and texts from the artists themselves. An most informative of all, click here to see a video of Prof. De Léon describe the details of his project and hear from his students. The gallery is located in the lobby of the Institute for Humanities. It is open 8:00 am to 5:00 pm through the end of Spring Break. Definitely relevant to this semester’s theme-  check it out!

REVIEW: Translation: A Modern Dance Event

Translation: A Modern Dance Event

Last weekend, The Department of Dance performed a stellar evening of movement at The Power Center. Inspired by Fall 2012’s Theme Semester “Translation,” the show shared the title as well as many exciting intellectual and artistic transpositions. The evening was divided into four pieces; the first three were original choreographies by U-M professors and the third was a celebrated  piece by choreographer Bill. T. Jones.

The opening act was entitled “Hath Purest Wit.” Choreographed by Prof. Jessica Fogel, the piece involved a combination of music, poetry, spelling, and puzzle solving. While the audience was still settling into their seats, a dancer dressed in red graceful strutted onto the stage, encircling a pile of large, animated letters wrapped in chicken wire. As more bodies dressed in red entered the stage, the lights began to dim and suddenly it became clear that the show was starting. An robust man appeared, reciting  excerpts from Lewis Carroll and Marcel Danesi about puzzle solving, cognition, and the satisfaction of” figuring it out.” As the dancers whirled and twisted and tossed and played with the with the life-size letters, they revealed a series of words that were all  various permutations of the phrase “Hath Purest Wit.” It was incredible how many different combinations of phrases those few letters could produce! I wish I could recall them now- they’ve escaped my mind-  but it was marvelous to see how versatile the words became and how each combination of letters dictated the quality of movement as the language changed.

The second piece was called “Aria Vitale” and was choreographed by Prof. Sandra Torijano. Also an original piece, this dance was a rhapsodic expression of  the human emotions of vitality yearning, and sadness.  Set to the operatic, orchestral music of Monteverdi, Villa-Lobos, Bach, and Iglesias, the piece seeped with passion and sorrow. The scene opened with a blackened stage punctuated by a drooping white tree branch. A male and female couple waltzed together, performing seamless partnering and acrobatics. With each shift in musical expression and lighting, the tone of the movement changed as well. The dance was fast, with lifts and leaps, and dancers entering and exiting from the wings at top speed. The set grew  complex, incorporating costume changes, fluttering rose pedals, and towering metallic  structures upon which the dancers climbed for the final pose. It was a gorgeous piece! I’ve never seen the Power Center stage become so transportive, etherial, and saturated with passion as I did in  Aria Vitale.

After intermission, the tone of the show changed dramatically. “The Headless Woman” turned to the circus for inspiration. Choreographed by Prof. Amy Chavasse, the piece was translated from a newspaper story of a woman who joined the circus and enacted the freakish role of The Headless Woman. The backdrop of the stage included a video installation showing footage of a county fair. The music was equally  reminiscent of a circus soundscape, with bells, whistles, accordions, and other dizzying sounds that took the audience for a rather wild ride. From glorified, scandalous female figures to gender-bending  roles to tattooed contortionist types, the characters and their exaggerated bodily expressions became a ogle of “captivating misfits.”

Finally, the closing piece choreographed by Bill T. Jones was energetic, acrobatic, and very engaging to watch. In “D-Man in the Waters,” the dancers leapt and fell and dived across the stage, wearing an array of army-green inspired costumes. Because it was choreographed in the 80’s, I imagined the movement might be  inspired by a commentary on the Vietnam War. However, through later reading I learned it was inspired by a friend of the choreographer who was fighting a loosing battle to cancer. The bright smiles on the dancers and the jolly, cooperative motion did not expressly communicate a personal inner battle. Knowing it’s impetus adds dimension to the already dynamic and demanding postures. The level of athleticism that was required of the bodies to perform the choreography was a masterpiece in and of itself.

Every year of college I have attended the annual Power Center-Dance Department performance. After four viewings, I must say that “Translation”was absolutely the best. The movement was infallible: so tight, so well rehearsed, and so technically impressive. I was struck  by the strength and the grace of each dancer; each appeared collected  as they bowed, seemingly unphased by the exertion they had just performed so artfully. I could hardly imagine the amount of effort that went from abstracting an idea for a Translation to presenting it in the Power Center  wanted to hear more about the process of production so I asked inside sources.

About her experience of preparing for her role in Aria Vitale, senior Julia Smith-Eppsteiner (shown above)  said:

Rehearsals started in September and Sandra worked differently every day. One day she would enter the studio and want to talk about a certain poem with the entire cast and the next day she might walk in, pull two people aside and start teaching them a movement phrase without saying anything. It was a lot of her sketching out ideas through improvising in front of us, seeing how that was interpreted in our body without time to practice the exact steps she showed–and then she would proceed in various ways depending on what the dancer presented back to her.

I am not one defined character throughout Aria Vitale but concepts of farewell, compassion, exhaustion, pain, celebration and vitality manipulate their way through a visual poem of relationships. The musical choices and genuine intimate relations between cast members are two aspects that really seemed to bring this work to life and  surmount to its success on the Power Center stage.
This work was more challenging–and more rewarding–than anything I have rehearsed and performed at this University. It was physically difficult, specifically on my left leg, but also was a challenge  in terms of yielding to the storytelling and allowing vulnerability to reign.

Did it resonate with my style as an artist? Not really, as I tend to choreograph and perform work that is more quirky, with sharper qualities, and sometimes text and humor play an important role. But dancing in Aria Vitale has been an incredible experience for me in my senior year that I am so thankful for because I am able to prove to myself and others that, yes, I can do “weird” dancing and that has its place and intrigue … but to perform such timeless, beautiful movement was exhilarating. It made me realize that I would love to professionally tour dance with a simliar quality as Aria Vitale–it allows the performers to indulge in risk and honesty, in every go-around.

And about her role in the Bill T. Jones piece, junior Nola Smith (also shown above) said:

Being a part of the re-staging of “D-Man in the Waters” was one of the most rewarding, fulfilling experiences I have been a part of in my time at Michigan. Germaul Barnes, the former Bill T. Jones dancer who set the work on us, was emphatic from the start of the process that the cast had to go beyond simply mimic-ing the previously choreographed steps– he told us that Bill T. Jones had provided a “framework” which each new cast of dancers could fill with their own interpretations and personalities. Because the piece is so physically demanding and has a lot of partnering, building trust among the dancers was a huge part of learning the dance. Although we only had about two and a half weeks to learn it, Germaul had us spend an entire three-hour rehearsal midway through the process sitting in a circle and telling each other about our experiences with loss and love. Having the opportunity to share our vulnerabilities with our fellow dancers made our support of each other during the dance even stronger. I think this experience also connected us to the conditions within the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company when the work was being made in 1988-89– Bill T. Jones’s life and artistic partner Arnie Zane had just died from AIDS-related illness, and a dancer in the company, Demian Acquavella (to whom the piece is dedicated and named after), was also becoming sick from AIDS. Jones does not include this information in the program, only a quote by word-artist Jenny Holzer: “In a dream you saw a way to survive and you were full of joy.” Each audience member and each dancer can interpret this piece in a unique and personal way. Jones does not force the AIDS connection upon us, and allows the piece’s exuberance and vivaciousness to take hold (heightened, I think, by the incredible Mendelssohn music!). However, I hope that it gives anyone who watches it that “feeling of joy,” of rejoicing in life even when it is an uphill battle, of love and support and community and humanness– all feelings which have filled me up over the course of this beautiful experience.
I wish I could watch these performances again and again. The thing about original choreography is that it is so special, but so ephemeral. You have to be see it to believe it, and you can only catch it once.
(Photography courtesy of Kirk Donaldson)