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Through the Lens

Through the Lens, an evening of new performance curated by Danielle Ross

There’s been an uptick in performance as a visual art strategy in Portland recently along with some healthy chocolate-in-my-peanut-butter/peanut-butter-in-my-chocolate overlap between performance and visual art spaces. During December is Action Art at Rocksbox Fine Art, among the handful of visual artists who did performance pieces were Sean Joseph Patrick Carney doing “Joaquin Phoenix’s Donner Dance Party” and Michael Reinsch composing a poem of found fragments of speech by using the remote control to change channels on a television in the gallery. Arts collectives Weird Fiction and Oregon Painting Society embrace performance as well as installation (OPS installations employing elements that invite performance…plant synthesizers!). Bethany Ides’ “Approximate L” project was a complex, interlocking series of performances and visual art collaborations culminating in an installation at Worksound. Stephanie Simek’s “Brea(d)th” live international video piece at the Odds and Ends (Karl Lind)-curated Alembic knocked my socks off. The Alembic series at Performance Works Northwest blends performance, dance, music, and visual art while the Half/Dozen + Projects series at Half/Dozen brings performance into the gallery space: it was great seeing so many visual artists at Lucy Yim’s “merriment and a fleet of hooves” at Half/Dozen. And more collaboration between worlds of performance, dance, and visual art can only be to the good. See: Rauschenberg + Cunningham + Cage.

Tuesday night at 9 PM at Valentines (232 SW Ankeny), Through The Lens gathers artists (primarily choreographers and musicians) working around the concept of found performance. Choreographer Danielle Ross, who put the evening together, is interested in the idea of found performance, both in the sense of the artist creating work from the found, and the audience “finding” or participating in performance (she calls it “found opportunity for viewership” which sounds to me like performance in unexpected places). The evening will play with found interaction, found dialogue, found noise/sound. It’s a strong lineup mostly featuring performers coming from contemporary dance with the exception of arts group Future Death Toll. See you there.

Danielle Ross with Jean Paul Jenkins (and performers Keyon Gaskin, Leah Wilmoth, Lillian Rossetti, and Robert Tyree)
Linda Austin
Paige McKinney (and performers Esther LaPointe, Beth Loy, Bonni Stover, Taylor Young)
Tahni Holt with Thomas Thorson
Future Death Toll
Little Friction Dance
Suniti Dernovsek

POSTED: February 8th, 2010 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: dance | TAGS: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Yes, Please, Woolly

Two of three. Here are Katie Arents and Kathleen Keogh of Portland-based dance group, Woolly Mammoth Comes to Dinner. They did “We Are Cats” at the recent opening of Rikki Rothenberg’s exhibition at Nationale (2730 E Burnside). Rothenberg is the third member of Woolly.

Tonight Woolly Mammoth Comes to Dinner is at Valentine’s (232 SW Ankeny) with Oregon Painting Society and Wraith at 9 PM.

The photos, above, are from my new favorite photo blog à la claire fontaine by culture maven/curator/shop owner, May Juliette Barruel, who owns Nationale and curates the Stumptown walls as well.

Perhaps you would like to see Control of the Dreaming Mind, a performance by Oregon Painting Society from their recent exhibition at Fontanelle Gallery (205 SW Pine).

Control of the Dreaming Mind from Oregon Painting Society on Vimeo.

POSTED: June 16th, 2009 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: dance | TAGS: , , , , , , , | No Comments »

Come In Out Of The Cold (And Wet)

Holly Stalder and Linn Olofsdotter at Valentine’s

Lady O and Miss H play records for your auditory pleasure at Valentines (232 SW Ankeny) tonight, Wednesday night beginning at 8 PM.  And as Lady O is artist Linn Olofsdotter and Miss H is designer and co-owner of Seaplane, Holly Stalder, expect something sublime.

POSTED: December 19th, 2007 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: art | TAGS: , | No Comments »