Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Born Dance Company Presents New Works

Rendering – At the Moment, the Born Dance Company’s current show playing at the Unknown Theater in Hollywood, engages viewers as soon as we step inside the theater lobby. The delightful opening (too much fun to give away) of artistic director Won-sun Choi’s “Rendering III: Tal” blurs boundaries between audience and performers and thereby references its roots; “Rendering III” draws upon the traditions of Tal-chum, a Korean mask dance drama characterized by this kind of active and informal exchange between viewers and performers. In Rendering – At the Moment, the Born choreographic collaborators present five works, four of them premieres, that explore diverse cultural practices and perspectives.

Audience members eventually settle into plush velour seats under the whirring fan of the Unknown’s black box, and Won-sun Choi’s dance continues. A willowy figure with an eerily blank white face performs a floating meditation beneath a cluster of dangling masks, establishing reflective distance from the more traditional masked performance that surfaces elsewhere. Later on, masked dancers in the long white sleeves of buddhist monks strike and stomp gloriously with splayed limbs, their voices occasionally adding a wonderfully human element to the percussive musical score. In a witty and fitting re-interpretation of the socially rebellious Tal-chum practice, one dancer emerges from the shadows wearing several masks – on face, arm, bottom – and playing with the irreverant possibilities.

In Byoung-ju Yoon’s “Yeo” we peek into the private emotional life of a techno queen, fraught with palpable tensions and frustrations and peppered with moments of vulnerability. This dramatic diva slinks along walls, languidly draping limbs then aggressively shooting legs through the cloud of introspection that follows her. It is a mysterious piece – partly because I couldn’t see the image on the sheet of plastic properly – but mostly because the character intrigues with a combination of assured sinuous actions, shakey stumbles, and subtle and sensitive fingerings.

“Sandival’s Story: three chapters,” choreographed by Sue Roginski, is a moving reflection on a real-life encounter with a woman waiting, breathing, fixing her hair, crossing her legs, and sipping water at the downtown Riverside bus terminal. Four women start, halt, gesture, and traverse the space in parallel, populating a lonely world together. Eventually they reach into the audience and tell the story of the movements with their own bodies and voices, breathing a welcome respite of human connection into the work and enacting a soothing ritual of collective remembering.

A highlight of the evening follows intermission, Ji-young Jung’s “Just Look at There.” Dancing a pleading duet with Seong-chul Kim’s film – a stark, skeletal face that turns and nods, alternately prodding and ignoring its partner from an on-stage computer screen – Ji-young Jung falls into spasmodic, twitching ticks; crawls and drags her body in frustration, demanding to be seen; and is pulled toward the unfeeling image by her own robotically swiveling feet. Apparently unconscious moments of unison between Jung and her digital partner, as well as their ability to predict one another’s movements, suggest the depth of knowing and relational closeness that allow us to wound each other with ghastly visciousness. All too soon, Jung draws the work to a beautifully hopeful but not quite emotionally healed conclusion.

I won’t reveal the final sensual treat in “Rendering II: Life Journey v. 2,” a reworking of the original piece, first performed in 2006. Go see the show.

Performances continue this coming weekend (Thursday the 23rd through Saturday the 25th at 8:00 pm, and Sunday the 26th at 6:00 pm). The Unknown Theater is located at 1110 N. Seward St., just off Santa Monica Boulevard. Tickets may be purchased for $18 online at http://www.unknowntheater.com/, or for $24 at the door or by phone (323-466-7781).

Other responses to Rendering - At the Moment:

Reading the Dance

3 comments:

  1. This exerpt is intriguing:

    "Apparently unconscious moments of unison between Jung and her digital partner, as well as their ability to predict one another’s movements, suggest the depth of knowing and relational closeness that allow us to wound each other with ghastly visciousness. All too soon, Jung draws the work to a beautifully hopeful but not quite emotionally healed conclusion."

    Do you think the fact that her partner is digital has significance as well? What are we supposed to feel about such a deep connection between a human character and a digital one? Do you think there is a layer where the relationship is even sadder because of the indifference and distance of a digital, unreal, skeletal face on a screen?

    You mention that the dancer is frustrated, demands to be seen, and is robotically pulled toward the unfeeling image. I picture her as wanting the image's approval or at least its recognition of her existence. I think we've all felt like that - we've danced, crawled, dragged ourselves, finally realizing it was for an indifferent image all along.

    I'd like to see this piece for myself, especially how it resolves. Thanks for the vivid and thoughtful descriptions!

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  2. Anna..
    Thanks for your writing and support.
    Will you be in LA writing about other dance events?
    Sue Roginski
    Riverside CA

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  3. My pleasure, Sue. And yes, after much traveling in the past weeks, I now plan to be around LA catching and writing about as many dance events as possible. Please check back and thank you for your interest! I look forward to seeing more of you work.
    Anna

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