Tag Archive | "Philadelphia"

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…and the Eagles don’t suck, either.

Posted on 21 March 2009 by admin

The current mayor of Philadelphia, Michael Nutter, is making some smart decisions in his approach to arts policy in his city.

For one, he re-opened the Office of Arts and Culture just after taking office (former mayor John Street – yeah, the guy whose team was so corrupt the FBI bugged his office – closed it in 2004) and renamed it the Office of Arts, Culture, and the Creative Economy. Note the ‘creative economy’ piece – and though names are pretty meaningless, there are other signs he actually understands the economic role of arts and culture. Check out this AP article:

  • Philadelphia Cultural Fund has an increased budget in this fiscal year from the previous one;
  • Nutter knows the numbers: 40,000 people in the area are employed in arts & culture, which generates more than $1B for Philly’s economy annually; more people visit the Philadelphia Museum of Art every year than attend a season of Eagles games (though the way this is written strikes me as odd – specious to compare an annual activity to attending an entire season’s worth of games)
  • Nutter is also pushing for the creative work in Philadelphia to engage kids:

“If you stay out in the elements too long, you will die from exposure,” he said. “In Philadelphia, part of our challenge is our kids die from lack of exposure, in many instances having no idea what’s going on three blocks around their house.”

Why do we like this statement? Because he’s not speaking directly to arts education – which is crucial, and underfunded, etc, but too often the only way that political leaders understand the connection between the arts and people’s daily lives. He’s talking about accessibility and availability of the art itself to kids. Yes, yes, YES.  Doing a better job connecting the work your city’s groups are making to the other people who live right there is how you build community and creative economy. Though it’s not exclusive to kids. Check out, for a great example, the Classical Theatre of Harlem – a company truly dedicated to creating work of and for its community.

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Soho to L.I.C. to Philly and Back Again

Posted on 15 September 2008 by Andy Horwitz

[I'm tired, I'll try and add links later!]

Okay so Wednesday I headed down to HERE ARTS CENTER to see OH WHAT WAR, Mallory Catlett & Co.’s new multimedia meditation on war from the doughboy’s perspective. The set looks like a WWI trench populated by the ghosts of deserters from every army – purgatory of wraiths, loss and desolation. Dark and moody, with flourishes of humor and song, OH WHAT WAR is surreal, poetic and occasionally oblique. There are some great moments – and the final effect/tableau is really cool. I spaced out a few times – there were some parts that were maybe a little too meditative and at times the text was a little hard to follow – but overall I enjoyed it. The design was really great, the actors did a great job and all-around it was a well-realized production.

Thursday night I headed over to L.I.C. for the Chocolate Factory’s season opener – Mac Wellman’s 1965UU, directed by Stephen Mellor and starring Paul Lazar and friends. (I lost the program but I know Daniel Manley was in it and that girl Heather the singer who did that show NORTH at LaMama.) Funny, surreal kind of sci-fi show about life on an asteroid with no friction and small dimensions. Performances are great, the space looks fantastic and Wellman is in fine form. It was opening night and I ended up closing down the bar across the street (something heuk) filled with free sangria and revelry with a host of downtown all-stars. It was great to see so many folks, meet new folks, catch up on the goings-on and have drunken ranting throw-down good times! But oh the morning after the night before…

Friday, god only knows how, I ended up spending the evening at Desmond’s Tavern on Park Ave. South. Hair of the dog, etc. ’nuff said.

Saturday I slept it off, waking late and catching a bus down to Philadelphia for Week Three of Live Arts. I ran into friends that said the Jan Favre piece was bad, so I don’t feel bad I missed it. I did two shows Saturday night – I saw the Jerome Bel “The Show Must Go On” and I saw Verdensteatret’s Louder.

Jerome Bel is GOD. I *loved* this show so much. I don’t know what it was like when it was at DTW a few years ago, but in Philly the crowd was totally into it and pretty active. As you may know, the show is basically regular people dancing to pop songs played on CDs. the whole lionel richie “ballerina” thing was beautiful, and you haven’t lived until you’ve been in a completely dark theater listening to a full audience sing along with John Lennon’s Imagine while waving their lighted cell phone screens in the air like candles. I should have taken notes – it was so stunningly beautiful and original. Bel can do more with non-dancers doing simple, natural movements than some people can do with the best dancers in the world. Unlike some choreographers who embrace the current trend of hostility and contempt directed at the audience, deliberate – and often pointless – opacity and off-puttingly snobbish cynicism about the possibilities of movement to inspire and transcend, Bel embraces the audience. He is hyper-aware of the theatrical context and conventions, he not only calls attention to it but completely inverts it and erases the line between audience and performer, between performance and life, we are all together in this “Yellow Submarine” this extraordinary place of heightened awareness and community. It is almost like pure democracy.

One could argue, I suppose, that some contemporary dance is fascistic in that it forcefully subjugates the audience to the choreographer’s will. Deliberately obtuse and oppositional, aggressively (and selfishly) denying access to meaning or interpretation, the choreographer imposes an impenetrable language and defies us to make sense of it. 

But Bel is so assured of his own art and ideas that he needn’t impose his will. He invites us in and uses the raw material of pedestrian movement -and everyday people – to reveal something much bigger and broader and transcendent.  JEROME BEL ROCKS!!! I will never miss another show of his ever again.

Verdensteatret’s Louder was really cool too. I was just blown away when they came to PS122 in 2005 with Concert for Greenland. I had never seen anything like it before in my life – they create these fantastic, otherworldly multimedia environments that are really difficult to describe. It is like demented object theater with noise and gizmos and robots and video and dudes with laptops… and it is freaking LOUD! To use a stupid rock analogy it is kind of like a Grateful Dead Space Jam from the late 60′s or early Pink Floyd (pre-1971) but without the songs. Just a whole bunch of crazy noise and feedback and digitally modulated squawking from dozens of speakers using digital triggers…. mind-blowing and incredible. But with robots and puppet-y things and a really big mechanical spider sculpture that moves. This show is “about” their trip to Vietnam – insofar as it is about anything.

They’ll be at PS122 the same week as PRELUDE so spark up and go see LOUDER before or between all the great PRELUDE stuff….

Monday night I’m headed to the Kitchen for Radiohole’s benefit and then who knows what the rest of the week will bring!?

Hope to see you about and about!!

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Philly Weekend Two

Posted on 06 September 2008 by Andy Horwitz

This is a quick trip. Last night I got into town and saw Jerome Bel’s Pichet Klunchun and Myself which I didn’t get to see in NYC. It was just a wonderful and everyone said, really fantastic. And it was in a relatively intimate space so it felt very immediate and personal. Then I raced over to the oh-so-sweltering Christ Church for Dada Von Bzdulow Theatre’s Factor T which is a crazy dance/theater piece from Poland that will be at Danspace Project in October. So you can see for yourself, I won’t give anything away.

today I was going to see the 1PM showing of bodies in urban spaces by austrian choreographer Willi Dorner but thanks to Hurricane Hanna the performance was cancelled. I am very upset because I had heard good things about it.  tonight i’m going to see Rodrigo Garcia’s ACCIDENS (matar para comer), the infamous “lobster show” that caused such a stir when it was performed at the Segal Center a few months ago. Immediately afterward I’ll head back to NYC to dig back into PRELUDE!!!

Seeya ’round the quad!

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Philly Live Arts – Week One

Posted on 01 September 2008 by Andy Horwitz

Friday I headed down to Philly to see a few shows at the Live Arts festival. I’m feeling kinda lazy on this  Monday holiday, so forgive the lack of linkage. You’ll have to use a little more of your google-y skills.

First up was Sweet By-and-By, a collaboration between Pig Iron Theatre and Teater Slava. I had seen a very rough workshop version about a year and a half ago, so it was great to see the finished work. It is a solo show intertwining the story of legendary union organizer Joe Hill with letters home from a Swedish immigrant in the late 1800s/early 20th century. The show was an interesting blend of folk music concert, history lesson and performance art. I found it a little difficult to follow at times, but Daniel Rudholm is a very engaging performer and both stories – Joe Hill and the Swedish immigrant – were fascinating.  Accompanied by some great animation and a spare but beautiful set, the show was enjoyable and informative – go check it out.

After that I went up to the Ice Box Projects Space for Sebastienne Mundheim’s Sea of Birds. The opening of the show was really magical – a shadow play of birds in flight giving way to a sculpted garden underneath a canopy/dome of oblong fabric panels with projections and soundscape. The story was, loosely, about the narrator’s mother’s childhood in Latvia, about monsters under the bed, imagination and fantasy. I loved the stagecraft and the music – it was beautiful to watch and listen to and the performers were all great.  And while I liked the effect of the narration – the action was voiced over by Ms. Mundheim – I wasn’t crazy about the text. I just wanted the text to remain more abstract and elliptical, less tethered to “the real”, in keeping with the fanciful, elegant dreamlike presentational aesthetic. But that’s just me and I haven’t had a chance to talk to the artist or anyone else. Feel free to comment below.

Saturday afternoon I went to the Mutter Museum, which I had been meaning to visit for years. It was really fascinating – its a medical museum showing the history of pathology and medical curiousities. A very enlightening glimpse into the past and the history of the medical professions.

After a nap I headed over to the Last Drop Coffeehouse to do rotozaza’s etiquette which i somehow managed to miss when it was at Veselka in January. Since I was by myself I invited a random stranger to do the show with me, which added a fun layer of mystery to the proceedings. It was an interesting experiment in forced – and faux – intimacy. I wonder what Ant and Sylvia and the rest of the rotozaza crew are up to next? Looking forward to it.

Saturday night was my most anticipated event of the weekend – Jo Stromgren Kompani’s The European Lesson. I have seen three of his other pieces and LOVED them. He explores small group dynamics in enclosed spaces, creating fake languages inspired by specific places/cultures and blending movement with drama and an almost painterly compositional approach to staging. Inevitably each piece starts with a delicate balance of routine and agreed-upon behavioral conventions which breaks down into brutality and chaos over the course of the show.

At first I was resistant to the new piece. The European Lesson is The Live Arts Festival’s first international commission and for it they brought Stromgren to Philadelphia for a residency to build the new piece with local actors and I wasn’t sure what to expect. The show opens with an American, speaking in English, who is an “amateur anthropologist”. He has been touring the midwest with an actual European family – in this case Slovakians – and displaying them in local communities as a living example of “europaneity”. It is a pretty funny idea, but what I had always liked about Stromgren’s work was that it was so fanciful and surreal, it was grounded in the everyday but was just uncanny enough to be constantly surprising.

My resistance quickly gave way as I realized how Stromgren had managed to both incorporate an American aesthetic and slyly comment on it. Making a piece in America, about American relations with the rest of the world at the end of the Bush era, it had to start in English, it had to be anthropological to create a sense of otherness and distance. Stromgren gets under the skin, attacking notions of cultural authenticity as he digs into the brutality of small group interpersonal relationships. What starts out as hilarious soon becomes dark and disturbing, the Slovakian “family” is gradually revealed to be nothing of the sort – neither Slovakian nor a family – and the resentments, frustrations and conflicts come to the surface. The power dynamic shifts as the “Europeans” exert their autonomy from the Amateur Anthropologist. I don’t want to give too much away, but it is really amazing how Stromgren -and, I assume, the ensemble – make the transition feel surprising, gradual and not-at-all heavy-handed. When the Anthropologist finds himself bloodied and alone, sitting on a lawn chair and cracking open a can of Schlitz, it feels sad, not obvious. When one of the “Slovakians” comes up to the Anthropologist before leaving the stage and recites, in Norwegian, Nora’s last line from A Doll House (I think, I didn’t have any Norwegian speakers or Ibsen scholars with me at the time) it is haunting.*

And I definitely don’t want to give any more away, but the final tableau is beautiful, bittersweet and portentous.

This show is probably sold out, but if it isn’t – or if they add more performances – hie thee hither and get your ass down to Philly to check it out. It is yet another triumph from one of today’s important makers of contemporary theater. Oh and all the actors are FANTASTIC!

Kudos to Nick Stuccio and everyone at Live Arts, to the funders, actors and Norwegians for making this collaboration possible.

*Interesting footnote – rotozaza’s etiquette also uses extensive dialogue from Ibsen’s Doll House. Hmmm. Discuss.

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