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COIL 2016 Press Round-up

© Photo by Arion Doerr

As the dust has settled on COIL 2016, we wanted to share with you the great responses the COIL artists and their work received from various media sources. There were too many shows to include each outlet for each artist so we just included our favorites.

Ranters TheatreSONG
“While the piece sounds slightly New Age-y, there is something transcendental and beautiful about its simplicity; because we don’t know what to expect, each of us are allowed to turn it into whatever we desire (a feature of truly great art).” – Jose Solis, Stage Buddy

niv AcostaDISCOTROPIC
“There’s always something passed along, voice to voice, body to body. Something Black survives any alteration of form and any displacement of form, from Africa to the Americas, from the Americas to worlds beyond. Black always was and always will be.” – Eva Yaa Asantewaa, Infinite Body Blog

Samita Sinhabewilderment and other queer lions
“If ecstasy and religiosity threw a party in a singer’s throat that might be the closest conceptual parallel to explain the fervent and unexpected sound of Samita Sinha’s
singing and her unusual musical work.”
– Nicole Serratore, Exeunt Magazine

Frank BoydThe Holler Sessions
“But when Ray sits back and lets the music wash over him, there’s dignity in his awe-struck stillness. His raptness makes us want to hear through his ears. And when the theater fades to black, as it does intermittently throughout the show, and we sit in the darkness with the music, sound becomes tactile, and even pop-station babies and longhairs are likely to feel like true believers in the gospel of Ray.” – Ben Brantley, Critics’ Pick for The New York Times

Kaneza SchaalGO FORTH
“This production, part of PS122’s Coil festival, was inspired by Ms. Schaal’s visit to Burundi for her father’s burial in 2010, an experience that led her to reassess the role of ritual in grieving. The resulting seven-scene, four-performer work she has created throbs with the anguished effort of letting go — both for those who die and those who stay behind.” – Ben Brantley, The New York Times

Jillian PeñaPanopticon
“Jillian Peña had good reason to test our patience: chronic suffering was one of her themes. The duet she crafted with stalwart dancers Andrew Champlin and Alexandra Albrecht imagined philosopher-historian Michel Foucault’s all-seeing panopticon in the form of a dance-studio mirror. Each dancer in Peña’s Panopticon (co-presented by Coil and Realness) is the other’s image in an infinite, enervating regress. The doppelgänger-pane does not reflect; he monitors and judges.” – Apollinaire Scherr, Financial Times

David NeumannI Understand Everything Better Now
“Both in the text, written in collaboration with the fine playwright Sibyl Kempson, and through a richly collaged sampler of movement styles that runs from modern American dance to classical Japanese theater, Neumann twins his winningly off-kilter humor with heavier forces.” – Claudia La Rocco, ArtForum

Findlay//Sandsmark + Petterseno’ death
“This sort of wizardry isn’t surprising for the company, the joint product of lauded Norwegian choreographer and performer Marit Sandsmark and American performance-maker and designer Iver Findlay. But if at first blush it seems charming or whimsical, Pål Asle Pettersen’s ominous score quickly dispels any notion that this is a magical fantasia. Rather, from the moment Sandsmark begins her tortured, aggressive, and ultimately despairing movement score, o’ death begins to feel like a miserere, a plea to god for mercy in a merciless world.” – Jeremy M. Barker, CultureBot

Helen Herbertson & Ben CobhamMorphia Series
“You know that odd sensation when a dream feels like a long journey, but probably lasted only a few minutes? In its best moments, ‘Morphia Series’…occurs in that surreal place…” – Gia Kourlas, The New York Times

Annie DorsenYesterday Tomorrow
“But while the piece does indeed rely on a computer algorithm that alters its dynamics at each performance, a pleasing playfulness and an affecting symbolic layer are hard-wired into it, too.” – Charles Isherwood, The New York Times

Chris Thorpe & Rachel ChavkinConfirmation
“With his distinctly Mancunian dialect and mischievous smile, Thorpe brings an affable, conversational feel to the piece as well as a willingness to go off-script (he is the author, after all). At the same time, there’s something menacing about his physicality: He lifts a chair with a sudden jerk and one reflexively recoils, bracing for attack. It’s an unsettling synthesis, causing us to mistrust our initial impressions of everything.” – Zachary Stewart, Theatermania

Jonathan CapdevielleAdishatz/Adieu
“For performer/ventriloquist Jonathan Capdevielle, mouth, breath, and voice are the instruments on which he composes an aural self-portrait in his entrancing and eerie solo piece, ‘Adischatz/Adieu’. Simmering just below the surface are questions about what it means to realize oneself in the light and in the shadow of others—about which aspects of ourselves are created in imitation, and which are received as inheritance.” – Jennifer Kransinski, ArtForum

Michael KliënExcavation Site: Martha Graham U.S.A
“To Michael Kliën, choreography is more than a dance on a stage, but something akin to an archaeological dig. In “Excavation Site: Martha Graham U.S.A.,” that Austrian choreographer, with the dramaturge Steve Valk, organized a one-time event as part of the Coil festival in which 24 dancers — all but one associated with the Martha Graham Dance Company — investigated their shared bond with that luminary of modern dance.” – Gia Kourlas, The New York Times

Xi Ban & Pi Huang ClubShanghai / New York: Future Histories 2
“Last night at the Asia Society, the bandleader and his eight-piece ensemble brought those commonalities into sharp focus, throughout a set that began by making terse Western horizontal music out of ancient Chinese themes and ended with dissociative, distantly menacing, air-conditioned psychedelia. In between songs – and a slowly crescendoing, stormy live film soundtrack – the guitarist carefully and colorfully articulated his mission as both an advocate for the music of his home country and its infinite possibilities.” – Delarue, New York Music Daily

Michael Kliën Interview with New Museum

On January 16th from 3-7pm Performance Space 122, Martha Graham Dance Company and the New Museum will be co-presenting Excavation Site: Martha Graham U.S.A. at the Martha Graham Studios.

In this one-time-only dance event, a multigenerational group of performers from the Martha Graham Dance Company’s past, present and future will excavate their relationships to Graham and the underlying “movement forces” that bind them to one another, to Graham and to the Company.

Organized by Austrian choreographer and artist Michael Kliën, this piece bypasses the institutionalized social structures of the Company to uncover new paths of organization and potential between its participants. The work utilizes strategies of social choreography developed in collaboration with dramaturge Steve Valk, who has organized a complementary discursive component that will unfold alongside the performance in adjacent spaces.

Michael Kliën recently sat down to discuss his methodology, as well as this piece in particular:

“Excavation Site is creating these spaces and realms in which you can experience your own reality, your own situatedness vis-à-vis the other, and with yourself in the world, where you can give time and space to experience that and to unravel…things happen in this unravelling: how much flexibility can be achieved and how much this project can contribute to releasing some of the tension within an institution.”

Click below to hear the full interview. Be sure to wear headphones as the interview is quiet.

Click here for tickets and more information on Excavation Site: Martha Graham U.S.A.

Red + White Party 2016 Highlights

Last night was our annual Red + White Party and it was surely a memorable one. Lighting, projected graphics, Australian dance legends and karaoke combined to create an unforgettable experience. We live tweeted the event, so check out these snapshots to relive the night or catch up on what you missed.

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Engage with the January Festivals

PFORM is a free companion app tailored to the festivals held every January in New York City. PFORM includes top festivals such as Prototype, Under the Radar, Special Effects and of course, our very own COIL 2016.

So what can you do with this free app to make your COIL 2016 experience even better?

*See a compete listing of performances and add shows to your personal or public calendars
*Like and post your attendance of specific performances to Facebook and Twitter accounts
*See a map of venues, get directions and check-in with Foursquare
*Watch videos related to performances and festivals
*Follow a Twitter feed aggregate of all of the festivals and their related hashtags
*Network with other people attending the festivals though the app’s integrated social network
*Discover new voices and visions on the embedded Contemporary Performance Almanac 2015

pform-app

January 9 Talkback with Kaneza Schaal

“As you watch the corpses of your brothers and your sisters pile up around you… when you try to stand up and look the world in the face like you have a right to be here… you have attacked the entire power structure of the Western world.” — James Baldwin

After the Saturday, January 9 performance of GO FORTH, Saisha Grayson will lead a conversation with Kaneza Schaal and collaborators about the history of performance and performance of history rooted in bodies, archeology and collaborative process. Saisha Grayson is assistant curator at Brooklyn Museum’s Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art.

GO FORTH, Kaneza Schaal’s premiere work draws inspiration from the Egyptian Book of the Dead. This performance and photo installation considers how we create space in our lives for the presence of the absent. Burial is proposed not as erasure, but as offering restitution and performing rites. GO FORTH paves way for its audience to reflect on their individual and collective mourning processes.

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