
โ โ โ โ
January 11โ13
The Fruit, Durham
By definition, a cutting edge is a thing in motion; without movement, nothing is cut. A choreographerย or performer’sย proximity to the threshold of discovery can be assessed in each movement, each work, each concert and season: in the degreeย to which they evince curiosity and commitment to exploration and riskย or complacency within the comforts of the known. Inevitably, as artists extend the borders of dance, work that was once on its fringe becomes situated deeper inย the landscape of the art form.
The structures and performance opportunities that support dance artists increasingly face similar scrutiny. In her press release for RAW, a striking showcase for five local dance artists that bowed at The Fruit January 11-13, Renay Aumiller, a choreographer well into her second decade in the regional dance scene, questioned the degree of engagement availableย both in and outside of the dance sceneย for artists who areย โno longer emerging in the Durham dance community.โ If the platforms and programs aiding younger choreographers do not adequately address the needs of those approaching mid-career, Aumiller asks, how can they โgrow and challenge how we make dance?โ
The answers proposed in RAW foregrounded theย immediacy of process. We saw this in a terror of an opening segment, Murielle Elizรฉon’s relentless, sweat-drenchedย Cru, Fragments, and in Tommy Noonanโs deliberate framing ofย Knowing/Half Knowing/Not Knowing as a studio session devoted to generating new material.

Just as critical, though, was the proximity of the audience to the dancers. Closeness was keyย as we followed a trail of pennies to the underground room where Matthew Young performedย Gut Reaction, an idiosyncratic but thorough exploration of a claustrophobic art installation featuring a pristine white toilet filled with pennies, its tank illuminated from within by a turquoise light. Youngโs pensive, probing character charged the work with a curiosity left unsettled, unsatisfied, at its end.
Participation was equally crucial in other works. At points, Noonanโs Knowing overtly cued (and, sometimes, commentedย on) our unanticipated reactions; of the eveningโs quintet of showings, it seemed most organically in touch with the audience. On the decidedly inorganic side, in Aumillerโs humorous Out of the Blue,ย a slightly snarky computer applicationย requested the names of movement qualities andย body parts from the crowd, and then paired those lists in improbable combos like โlanguid/left pinkyโ and โnose/like a rolling storm,โย simultaneously generatingย a bizarre dance score for Aumillerย and interrogating her responses.
Interactivity also factored into Megan Mazarickโs political satire, Boundaries, as her spooky, animatronicย Hillary Clinton glitchedย through a canned greeting before launching into an equally non-spontaneous rap, an edgy send-up of Iggy Azaleaโs โWork.โ

As Mazarickโs character answered various telephones, she handed the receivers to folks in the audience. โPicture this,โ she said. โThe caller is your jilted ex-lover, the Bald Eagle, and you are the American people.โ Mazarick negotiated the resulting maze of intersecting phone cords to the stylings of Electric Light Orchestra, then backed away from us with an expression of disbelief or horror on her face.
Taking the audience into various aspects of the act of creation, emphasizing intimacy and interaction, and foregrounding transparency, commitment, technique, and risk, RAW clearly showed whatย thoughtfully cultivated relationshipsย can look like and achieve, a lesson that even emerging artists could learn from. More, please.ย ย ย


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