Sunday, May 29, 2011

Moveable Feast: In Retrospect

graphic artist:  marco gallerizzo
photo by:  margo moritz

Project. b.’s first home season was sold out both nights and was featured in the SF Bay Guardian’s Critics’ Pick (Rita Felciano)
In creating and presenting this work, I found that the process was a relatively complex but rewarding experience both for me as the choreographer as well as the dancers and the audience.  
The concept itself proved to be beneficial to me as a choreographer.  It was a different way of working and looking at my movement in several forms.  It allowed me to step back and see what was strong and what needed work.  It allowed me to challenge my dancers and to see their strengths and what roles fit them best.  It also allowed my company to grow as a strong unit because it meant that they needed to help and work together in a way they didn’t work before.  
The visual artists that joined me on this project fed me with a lot to think about and to be inspired with.  I was able to continue working with 2 out of the 3 artists (Margo Moritz and Marco Gallerizzo) that I originally planned on working with and then added a new artist (Michael Sugrue) to the mix.  Both Margo and Marco’s triptychs greeted the audience as they entered the lobby of the Garage.  I felt it created a mood that represented Project. B. well and also helped to carry the concept of Moveable Feast from one art form into another.  Between each section of Moveable Feast, the audience was shown a 30 second video created by Michael Sugrue; again with the concept that he create the same work different ways.  As a whole evening, everyone appreciated these videos, or what I called the palate cleanser, in order to refresh the mind before seeing another dance piece.  
I added another element that I didn’t originally have on my project description.  I was able to collaborate with composer, Jesse Olsen Bay.  By adding his work to the mix, the process became even more inspiring.  Instead of my composition fitting into a recorded piece of music, Jesse and I were able to collaborate.  It was another level to the concept of Moveable Feast.  What at first were just inspirations of sounds from movement, became a marriage between music and movement.  This particular piece had the theme of building and layering.  The movement composition started with a solo that grew to a quartet.  The music composition started with one idea, sound, and instrument that layered into a final piece of music that incorporated all of this from each section.  
During the Q&A portion of the show, many people commented on the process.  The process of the dancers learning different parts.  The process of the dancers changing their perception on how to execute the movement three different ways.  The process of the same piece reconfigured yet creating a mood or an idea that made each piece stand out separately from the one before it.  
The questions that were asked gave me a sense that the audience captured what I wanted to convey in presenting Moveable Feast.  People talked about the work and was excited to give their ideas and share their opinions about each section.  I believe I was able to intrique, satiate, and inspire the audience through this work.  

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Moveable Feast Q&A

Marco Gallerizzo's triptych in the lobby of the Garage

Moveable Feast was sold out again tonight and the glitches that took place on opening night seemed to work itself out this evening.  It was a much more solid show overall and made it even better that the house was filled with dancers, friends, and family.

The Q&A portion of the show was very insightful as to whether or not I was able to execute my concept of Moveable Feast.  I think the best analogy that an audience member made was that "Moveable Feast" was like a favorite food.  Once you know you like something, you begin to search for that same ingredient configured differently.  In this case, he mentioned a section of movement that the dancers executed three times that evening.

Another audience member used the word "nourished"  That as a non-dancer, she felt that seeing three versions of the same movement in different moods nourished her mind and her soul.

So, I am very satisfied with the outcome of Moveable Feast.  I felt that along with the visual artists, collaborating artists, dancers, and I accomplished our goal.  Hopefully, our audience will take what they found profound in this work and use it as a basis to critique dance in the future.

And now on to year two!

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Moveable Feast Opening Night

The time has finally come for the opening night of Moveable Feast.  To be totally honest, tech-ing the piece was kind of a nightmare.  As much as you try to prepare and organize for something, there are just things that are out of your hands.  It's a lesson that I'm sure I will be hit with on a constant basis now that I am running a dance company.

What I was able to control went really well, I thought.  The dancers looked beautiful and of course, very professional.  They were on top of it and they made that part of the tech process so much easier.

The last several days, we transformed the Garage into a space that represented Project. B. well.  Margo Moritz hung her artwork in the lobby and created an ambience that felt very welcoming and visually pleasing.  Marco, also hung his 3 framed posters of Project. B. that greeted the guests as they purchased their tickets and drinks.

Opening night was a little rough because of tech.  The breaker to the lights kept malfunctioning and the lighting board seemed to not cooperate.  Aaaah!  At 7:30 pm the guests were standing outside the doors of the Garage just waiting to enter the space.  Joe let everyone in around 7:40, however, there were still technical difficulties.  Although people were standing shoulder to shoulder in the lobby waiting to enter the house, it was really nice to see that we were SOLD OUT!

All in all, the show went well.  I took a breath when the lighting board decided to erase the last three cues of the last piece and Mike, the lighting designer, had to switch to a manual board.  At that point, the upstage lights cut out!  Luckily, they still had downstage lights that created a box and for the most part, lit the last section of the last piece.  The dancers kept dancing, the music kept playing, and the audience didn't notice the malfunction.

The videos were also a hit.  A couple aaahs and giggles and claps came following each video.

I think people enjoyed the show.  I spoke to a few guests afterwards and was very glad to hear the questions they had for me, the thoughts that were provoked from the whole evening's concept, and that they left thinking and exploring more about my process and about each piece.  That's really what I wanted to accomplish.  I think opening night went well considering all the technical glitches.

Did Moveable Feast give the audience the chance to explore the notion of perception and viewpoint?  Did the audience see what it is that might nurture their minds and feed their souls, and provide them with newfound energy and inspiration?  I think so.  At least the questions I received, the conversations I heard and had with guests afterwards made me believe so.

On to tonight.  We have sold 3/4 of the tickets already.  Let's hope walk-ins will sell out the house again:)

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Central Market Arts Festival Website


Just learned about a photo of my piece Triquetra on the main page of the Central Market Arts Festival website.

Check it out!  www.centralmarketarts.org

FYI, Central Market Arts is dedicated to a common vision of promoting SF's Central Market District as a vital arts district and creating an open forum for dialogue about arts in our community. Central Market Arts' mission is to serve as a unified voice for arts of every discipline through cooperative marketing efforts, government advocacy, and the production of a yearly capstone event.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

San Francisco Bay Guardian Critics' Picks

Rita Felciano, a respected dance critic who has written for the Village Voice, Dance View Times, as well as for many others around the Bay Area has chosen Project. B. as one of the Critics' Picks for the Bay Guardian.  Here's what she had to say:)  It's our first time receiving any press so I am so excited that it was a positive one!

San Francisco Bay Guardian

DANCE
Project.B.
If you have seen Tanya Bello dance — Shift Physical Theater, Robert Moses' Kin, and Janice Garrett + Dancers come to mind — you won't have forgotten her. She probably was the shortest (but also the fastest and fiercest) tearing across the stage. Bello is small but she dances big. Lately she has taken advantage of the Garage's RAW (Resident Artist Workshop) program to hone her choreographic skills. Moveable Feast, her first full-evening work, is plugging into her experience working with choreographers both here and on the East Coast. The idea is to show three versions of one piece in which components — lights, dancers, sets, music — get shuffled around. In the end the audience decides which one worked best.(Felciano)
May 10-11, 8 p.m., $15
Garage
975 Howard, SF
(415) 518 1517 www.brownpapertickets.com 

http://www.sfbg.com/listing/24