Dance
Reviews
DanceBrazil at the Joyce Theater
DanceBrazil presented its 27th season at the Joyce Theater (April and May) with two electrifying programs. Flawlessly fusing the rich rhythm and brisk buoyancy of Afro-Brazilian dance with the fierce ease of Capoeira movements, artistic director Jelon Vieira and guest artist/choreographer Matias Santiago offered audiences a contemporary lesson in Afro-Brazilian culture which involved the ramifications of four centuries of miscegenation, the racial and social struggles that have shaped modern Brazil, and the ultimate liberation of Afro-Brazilian culture. In Anjo de Rua (premiere), the company communicated the danger, victimization and hopeful fantasies that stain the women who work the streets. Here, duets were loaded with violent gestures and optimistic leaps. Eleuther (2001), a solo created and performed by Matias Santiago, whispered a soothing song of the forest. Embodying an Eleutherodactylus Coqui, which is a unique tree frog believed to be the mascot of Puerto Rico, Santiago spread the pads of his fingers and jolted his limbs with such precision and speed that his transitions seem imaginary. But it’s Missao (2003)—a full company work that seamlessly knits Afro-Brazilian and Capoeira movements together—which expresses the heart of Afro-Brazilian culture. It is bursting with refreshing floor patterns and tight ensemble work and explores the transculturation that abounds throughout Brazil.
Maki Morinoue, Mina Nishimura, Bryon Carr and Geraldine Cardiel at Joyce SoHo
Joyce SoHo Presents offered a night of fresh faces and cool movements. In Successions, choreographed by Maki Morinoue and Esse Aficionado, shiny silver boards painted with flowing black lines decorated the back wall. Three women in simple black costumes performed solid, isolated movements and straight-legged walks across the stage. The music—urban and minimalist—ferried the industrial mood of the piece as the dancers robotically shifted weight, resembling black herons with jagged wings. Bosabosa, a solo created and performed by Mina Nishimura, explored the struggles of adolescence. In a school girl uniform and sneakers, Nishimura giggled sheepishly, posed eloquently and flailed her long limbs through voluptuous puppet-like movements. In Bryon Carr’s Link, three dancers weaved in and out of unison and linear formations, their arms swinging like pendulums to the melodious sounds of ticking clocks. Although very lucid, the piece could have used a bit more drive and variation. Geraldine Cardiel’s A Walk in the Park couldn’t be more literal. Depicting proud joggers and their eager admirers, stretching routines and lingering insecure pauses, the work elicited laughs from the audience, but required much more depth in order to really say anything. However, the Jose Limon-esque movements sprinkled throughout each phrase were refreshing.
Splitstream at DTW
Dance Theater Workshop presented emerging artists Antonio Ramos, Ann Liv Young and Jonathon Berger in Splitstream (April and May), a performance that began with a bang and developed into a vague three-ring circus. Ramos’ Me, Me, Me opened the night with a very humorous spectacle which explored identity through painful memories, social pressures, and with the help of such oppressive cultural icons/ideals as the Barbie Doll and ballerina. Ramos and his dancers have great comedic timing and stage presence; they float in and out of simple, yet appropriate dance phrases and character portrayals (sporting tee-shirts stating "Jesus is my homeboy" and Afro wigs). Young’s Melissa is a Bitch was nothing new. Stripping the stage of its back-drop and wings and keeping the blaring glare of the house lights on during the entire scene, a woman forcefully wiggled in a green bikini until her breasts fell out. Next, two naked women perched on wooden swings, screamed about trust funds and loving dykes, changing positions and dropping their ice cream cones to Young’s directional cue "Go!". Yet another naked woman simulated masturbation with two tiny plastic turtles named "I love you" and "I love you, Michael." It was at this point that the man seated next to me stormed out of the theater. Perhaps Young would have loved this occurrence as it proves that yes, her work is confrontational, offensive, and in-your-face, but, it’s also been done before. Berger, an "object maker and situation creator," finished the night with souvenir, a formless incoherent piece of performance art. souvenir featured two men donned in artic-expedition wear who slid down the sloped aisle stairs of the theater. Elfish characters in pointy winter hats, smoking pipes controlled the sound board and stabbed a stuffed ten-foot bear. Also present was a tent that resembled something out of MASH. The press release (which I needed to figure this one out) stated that this performance tracks disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle, the Alaskan Tundra and the continent of Atlantis. Ok, maybe the Alaskan Tundra—the performers were toting an antique sled—but the other two I just couldn’t see. In short, perhaps Berger should stick to making objects, not necessarily situations.
RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

Michael Magees Close to Home
By Tom DeignanMAY 2023 | Books
It so happens Magees much-hyped novelsee the glowing write-ups not just in The Guardian but also Kirkus Reviews and Publishers Weeklyis coming out just in time for the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday agreements, which brought to the North a fragile calm, if not promised prosperity.
40. 1937-1973, Egypt
By Raphael RubinsteinFEB 2023 | The Miraculous
On the first Thursday of every month for nearly 40 years, a singers live performances, often lasting five hours or more, are broadcast throughout the Middle East. These programs become so popular that during them streets empty, stores and restaurants close, and politicians avoid scheduling any speeches or press conferences.
R.I.P. Germain: Jesus Died for Us, We Will Die for Dudus!
By Alicia GladstonMAY 2023 | ArtSeen
R.I.P. Germains exhibition Jesus Died for Us, We Will Die for Dudus! confronts power dynamics with multi-layered tact, transporting visitors through subjectively loaded underground and publicly visible spaces. Dudus is Christopher Coke, the now imprisoned leader of the Jamaican drug gang the Shower Posse. Coke lived the precarity of hustle culture and gang violence while also using proceeds from the production of drugs to set up community programs and support locals in his home neighbourhood of Tivoli Gardens, West Kingston. Cokes impact on the neighbourhood was such that police could not enter without community consent.

margins…
By Lubbock Scapes CollectiveDEC 22–JAN 23 | Editor's Message
The Lubbock Scapes Collective is an interdisciplinary group of university faculty from programs in cultural studies, media and communications, poetry and translation, linguistics, Spanish literature, landscape, art, and architecture. Its purpose is to break through the boundaries of disciplines by creating holistic projects that problematize questions of landscapes through scholarly collaborations that seek to understand, define, evaluate, and represent spaces people inhabit.