DANCEbank Fall session
Saturdays, 11am-1pm
class costs $12. cash only, exact change appreciated!
please pay teacher before class starts
Sep 5, 12, 19: Cheng-Chieh Yu
Sept. 26, October 3, 10: Roxanne Steinberg
Oct. 17, 24: Kevin Williamson
Oct. 31st: Hana van der Kolk
November 7, 14, 21: Neil Greenberg
December 5, 12: Sheetal Gandhi
classes are held at
Metabolic Studio/Farmlab
1745 North Spring Street, #4
directions below and at
www.farmlab.org
November 7, 14, 21: Neil
Greenberg
I'm thinking that each class/workshop
will draw from three possible arenas:
§ Working with information from some
of the somatic approaches I've studied, considering body systems in
addition to, and in conjunction with, the prevalent skeletal/muscular
model. Could be called a bodywork approach to movement training.
Warming up will be one goal, here. Call this the "technique"
focus.
§ Directed improvisation, using some
of the ideas from my recent "Really Queer Dance With Harps" as a
springboard, and also working with ideas from my current project:
I've been questioning the notion that speech metaphors-for example,
"what is this dance saying?"-can accurately describe dance
experiences. I'm instead interested in exploring the "isness" of
the performance moment.
§ Working with set material drawn from
my choreography, learning and playing with "phrase-work." Sort of
a mini repertory focus. (This probably a lower priority for me at
present.)
I still feel quite new to L.A., and hope
to continue making work here. I see these workshops as an opportunity
to continue to meet and get to know artists from the L.A. dance
community, and to bring to the table some of the ideas with which
I've been working.
Neil Greenberg moved to
L.A. from N.Y.C. in fall 2007 to join the dance faculty of UC
Riverside. He has been making dances since 1979, and is known
especially for his 1994 work, Not-About-AIDS-Dance, which
employs his signature use of projected supertitles as an alternative
text to the onstage dance action, and a door into the "meanings"
of viewing dance. His work also reflects the influence of innovative
somatic approaches to movement, such as Klein Technique, which he's
studied extensively with Barbara Mahler and Susan Klein, and Body-Mind
Centering, which he's studied with RoseAnne Spradlin. His most
recent work, Really Queer Dance With Harps, continues his
investigation into the nature of meaning-making. RQDWH
premiered at Dance Theater Workshop in NY in June 2008, and was
presented at REDCAT in LA in April 2009. He has received fellowships
from the Guggenheim Foundation, NEA NYFA & the Foundation for
Contemporary Arts, two "Bessies," a Time Out Audience Award, and
grants from the National Dance Project, the Rockefeller Multi-Arts
Production Fund and NYSCA. He has created two commissions for Mikhail
Baryshnikov's White Oak Dance Project. A former dancer with the
Merce Cunningham Dance Company (1979-1986), he has been on the dance
faculty of Purchase College and Sarah Lawrence College, and served as
dance curator at The Kitchen from 1995-1999. For more information:
<www.neilgreenberg.org>.
COMING UP:
December 5, 12: Sheetal
Gandhi
Sheetal is interested in
movement that is gestural, expressive and musically
complex.
She draws on her inspirations
including kathak dance, vocal percussion, popping and waving, modern
dance, classic jazz, Michael Jackson, West African dance, Pilates,
Yoga and Bharatanatyam mudras. This two-part course will use the
complex, precise rhythms of the North Indian classical dance form
Kathak, as a springboard into exploring the musician-dancer body.
Choreographically, we will explore the possibilities within the drum
and dance language, using our voices and dance to create highly
specific movement sequences and soundscapes. All levels and techniques
welcome. The class should warm you up, cool you down, and keep you
groovin' in between!
Sheetal Gandhi is interested
in creating a space that brings the many sides of her personality
together: dramatic, wry, Indian, American, dancer, percussionist,
abstract, chameleon, precise, impulsive, singer and storyteller. She
draws on her strengths and professional successes from the subway
platform to the Broadway stage to create work that blurs cultural and
disciplinary boundaries, promoting intercultural understanding through
artistic excellence. In 1993, Sheetal's passion for rhythm led her
to Ghana, West Africa where she spent a year studying and performing
the traditional music and dances of the region. Sheetal grew up folk
dancing within her own culture and in 1995 moved to India for six
months to further study the North Indian classical dance form
Kathak. As a percussionist, she plays the calabash, or dried
gourd, and the West African xylophone. Sheetal worked as a creator and
performer in Cirque du Soleil'sDralion, and toured with the
international cast from 1999-2001. Her New York credits include:
leading role in the Broadway production of Bombay Dreams,
Stephen Schwartz's Children of Eden at the Paper Mill
Playhouse, and the revival of Hair.
Gandhi was Co-Artistic
Director of the modern dance company California Contemporary Dancers
in San Francisco from 2001-2004 and holds an MFA in Dance/Choreography
from UCLA's Dept. of World Arts and Cultures. Most recently she has
been touring her multi-disciplinary one-woman show, Bahu-Beti-Biwi
(Daughter-in-law, Daughter, Wife), with recent performances in Los
Angeles at the REDCAT NOW Festival and in New York with the National
Asian American Theater Festival. For more info. visit www.sheetalgandhi.com
...about Metabolic
Studio
Derived from the Greek word for change, 'metabolism' is the
process that maintains life. In continuous cycles of creation and
destruction metabolism transforms nutrients into energy and matter.
Working to sustain these cycles, the Metabolic Studio transforms
resources into energy, actions, and objects that nurture life. Led by
artist and philanthropist Lauren Bon, it is a studio for practice at
the intersection of art and philanthropy. The Metabolic Studio
comprises Chora, which supports the intangibles that precede
creativity, and Farmlab, which supports living things in often-hostile
environments.
DIRECTIONS: 1745
North Spring Street, #4, Los Angeles
The building is a warehouse and is literally under the Spring St.
Bridge, and more like it's on Baker @ Aurora.
>From the 110, exit Solano and turn R, go down the hill to
Broadway.
L on Broadway. Cross the bridge. At the intersection of 18th,
Broadway, Pasadena, make a hard right onto North Spring (it should
feel like you are doubling back).
Cross a second bridge. At the end of the bridge make a quick R @
Aurora. You are now next to the warehouse! Walk under the bridge
through the urban planter garden. Metabolic Studios is right
there.
From the 10:
Exit Alameda
take Alameda all the way to China Town
veer R onto Spring St.
Go past the park (to your left) and continue towards the bridge. One
block before the bridge is Baker ST. make a left onto very crumbly
road. Take to end (about 2 blocks). You are now parked behind the
Metabolic Studios. You can walk through the workshop, then the garage
to get to the studio.
--
DANCEbank is a project of Show
Box.
SHOW BOX is a sponsored project of Fractured
Atlas, a non-profit service organization. Did you know you can make a
tax-deductible donation to Show Box online? Support the continuation
of some of your favorite L.A. dance community projects, and invest in
the germination of new ideas.
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