Voice of Dance

"Voice Of Dance is the real deal. It is the best dance site on the web..."
Anna Kisselgoff, Former Chief Dance Critic, The New York Times.
Ballet » Ballroom » Hip Hop » Irish » Modern » Salsa » Tap » World Dance » Jazz » Auditions » Diets » TV »
 
Weekly E-Newsletter
Daily Dance Wire
Global Dance Directory
Search Directory:
Search 17,245+ listings!
Add Listing
Features
Email Article to a Friend Rate this Article!

Maximum Exposure in Familiar Territory
Jess Curtis/Gravity
Intercontinental Collaborations 3, The Symmetry Project
CounterPULSE, San Francisco, CA
March 28, 2008

By
ALLAN ULRICH
allan@voiceofdance.com
© VoiceofDance.com 2008


Jess Curtis and Maria Scaroni in The Symmetry Project. Photo by Sven Hagolani.



Jess Curtis is traveling light this year. The dancer-choreographer, who divides his time between San Francisco and Berlin, has returned for his annual performance engagement at San Francisco’s CounterPULSE with a pithy double-bill that requires only four dancers to bring off. Jess Curtis/Gravity opened Thursday (March 27) with Curtis in a leading role for a change. The Symmetry Project, developed here and in Germany, is a one-half astonishing show.



That half comes after intermission, with Curtis and the Italian dancer Maria Francesca Scaroni collaborating in Symmetry Study # 7, the U.S. premiere of a piece completed in Germany. Curtis’ earlier residencies at CounterPULSE have resembled brainy, postmodern cabarets, very loosely drawn around a theme. Last year’s Under the Radar was particularly successful in its mix of disparate episodes of physical comedy, rope climbing, singing and juggling; Scaroni, among her other assignments, served as a bartender.

This year, she and Curtis need no situations, props, or clothing, for that matter. For 40 minutes, the totally undraped pair provide a gripping epic of shape-shifting, abetted only by a spare, recorded, structured improvisational score by double-bassist Klaus Janek and video artist Regina Teichs. The pair begins by posing on opposite sides of the stage. When Curtis doffs his robe like a lizard shedding his skin, you sense you’re in for something special.

He and Scaroni flow from one sculptural entanglement to another. At one moment, with limbs clasped, they’re rolling across the space like a wagon wheel. At another, she’s hoisting him on to her back. They split apart and slowly recombine. Her legs encircle his neck, and then, they’re hopping around like frogs chasing a fly. The piece, in three sections, does not lack for variety. In the middle part, the tempo slightly quickens, while the twosome seems to interact with the kaleidoscopically processed images of themselves on video.

Clothing would be a distraction. The nudity is not particularly shocking; the work may be deemed erotic by some observers, but the dancers certainly do little to encourage that response. They’re inclined, instead, to image making: surely, the curved arms and torso alignments that seemed to replicate those statues of the god Shiva are not coincidental. At one moment, with Curtis standing behind Scaroni, she seems to possess both his genitals and her own.

Yes, Symmetry Study #7 does recall the vintage, Alison Chase era of Pilobolus. And, yes, the work owes much to contact improvisation. But, unlike that discipline, in which an element of risk is omnipresent, this work is tension-free, serene, almost pre-ordained. You really do end up feeling that the man and woman are different aspects of a single organism. In his recent seasons here, Curtis has often been content to play the emcee, the leader of the revels. One had forgotten how resilient, technically fearless and physically eloquent he can still be. And, for somebody who has been on the dance scene for at least a couple of decades, Curtis is still in enviably wonderful shape. Scaroni is everywhere his equal.

I can understand the problem of fitting Symmetry Study #7 into a full evening. And I can understand the irony of preceding this magnificent display of controlled physicality with a duet for a disabled and conventionally abled dancer. Yet, the solution is not satisfying. The world premiere of Asymmetrical Tendencies was directed and choreographed by Curtis and features Rhona Coughlan and Tara Brandel, members of Croi Glan Integrated Dance Company, based in Cork, Ireland. (Croi Glan is Gaelic for "clear heart.")

This is another of those talky movement essays during which the performers (Brandel and Coughlan in a wheelchair) soliloquize about fantasies and reality, while navigating through the space. The dancers’ lilting brogue is attractive, but the bitter ironies of thwarted aspirations are hammered home with a kind of heroic sentimentality, and you can almost predict the moves, as Coughlan’s upper body strength allows her to lift and manipulate her partner. Hovering throughout the 25-minute piece is an aura of self-pity, which, I suspect, is not the impression Curtis was attempting to convey here.

Asymmetrical Tendencies is all the more disappointing when one recalls how imaginatively Curtis has deployed and integrated disabled dancers in his earlier productions. And any program with AXIS Dance Company will provide a more satisfying demonstration of how to transform a disability into an asset. Brandel and Coughlan may possess clear hearts, but watching them bleed is not particularly edifying.

Jess Curtis/Gravity performs through Sunday and April 3-6 at 8 p.m. CounterPULSE, 1310 Mission St., San Francisco. www.counterpulse.org (415) 626-2060.



For more information:
  • Read more about Jess Curtis/Gravity
  • Did you see this show? Have something to say? Talk back to the critics in our new forum!
  • Read Allan Ulrich's Bio and archives

    *Disclaimer: The views of Allan Ulrich are not necessarily the views of Voice of Dance*


    Comments



Must See
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival

Paid Advertisement
Twitter Followers
N A V A T O R dotCOM Carolina Ballet Illinois Theatrical Dawn Sandomeno Huy Ton Linda Wolfe Kim Spiteri Benjamin Figueroa winnie Meta Belly Dance Santa Clara Ballet thinkbigradio Didi Fontenelle Dance Kids onlinesalsa YNS Culver City niellemc keltiecolleen Helios Center Blossom A michelle donaldson Foster Ming BoomKatDanceTheatre Michael~Mishay Bridget Jackson Raz Conway Angela Franco Rainbow Fletcher Tammy Stanwood Kelli Burke Katy Hilary Gainey MarQe Entertainment Terica Adams Trine K.J Sean Bogaers Zilda Decker Tye Love Andrew N Carpenter Big Papa Oh Annette Dubow Shaw Khanty Ky'mwalla Lydia Harmon cashool Marion-Marie Shaw DJ J'n'R Kristina Lawrence Jennifer Rogers angela prince MyBollywoodStudio Steve Jacobs Irish Modern Dance T DamaDe' francois m Jacob's Pillow Dance Dancestogo.com Melanie Anderson Knight Nicholas Alex Lee Graziella Murdocca Celeste Delgado Ginny Marion Grace Bacsain alexander dill Dancin'fools Ajay Chauhan Tyler D Katya Mitchell sytycd.ca Akane Designs @ Etsy VAI Music BLUE HERRON PROPERTY Ballroom Jewelry SYTYCD Canada Pulse Studio Lacey Althouse ragamala dance Rosie Dancer Amanya SamoneP Salsa-Amt.de Jon DeMott shalonda knight Galin Georgiev Kira Ruth aclaudiapaixao Kyla Watson Abby Bella Dance Show Business Tori Closson Kristen Mugnier hila keren Mari Takahashi I Wish I Was An Ast Hyde School of Dance Yves Neron
Follow Us!
National Dance Calendar

Jan 4 - Dec 20
Los Angeles, CA
The Fountain Theatre Forever Flamenco!


May 22 - May 24
New York, NY
Ballet Academy East BAE's 2009 Spring Performance


Jun 21 - Aug 16
New York, NY
The Marvelous Wonderettes The Marvelous Wonderettes Dance Party Package


Jun 23 - Sep 6
Santa Fe, NM
Juan Siddi Flamenco Theatre Company 2009 Summer Season in Santa Fe, New Mexico


Jul 1 - Jul 5
Becket, MA
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival Radio and Juliet by Ballet Maribor


Jul 1 - Jul 5
Becket, MA
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival LAFA & Artists


Jul 6
San Jose, ca
Dance Theatre International Summer Intensive Workshop

View Calendar
Add Your Event