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  1. The Wave

    The Wave Electronic Illuminated Hypertext is a multisensory etext derived from a series of new media performances. The work explores and articulates a collection of meditations on myth, metaphor, and digital embodiment.

    An interactive assemblage of images, videodance, sound, animation, iconography, and text, The Wave creates an electronic architecture of hyper-dimensional poetic language. This electronic architecture expands and redefines the dramatic text as a fluid, animated, interactive infrastructure that exists in a liminal hyperspace between text and performance. The work expands and redefines the dance as dynamic, sensate, experiential process of inner transformation integrating the mind, body, and senses in metaphorical movement.

    Scott Rettberg - 29.01.2013 - 05:50

  2. Etymon / Encarnación

    The opening performance in “Language to Cover a Wall” is about the word made flesh: Glazier reads his poem “Etymon / Encarnación” while a young woman dances to the rhythms of his voice. The words juxtaposed in the title both gesture towards primeval origins of language: etymon refers to the origins of words, while encarnación is about the immaterial gaining a body. And we can’t help but notice the bodies on stage: Glazier sitting in a chair, reading his poem engrossed in the words on the page, gently swaying like José Feliciano. The contrast of a young female dancer in a white dress, interpreting lines of sounded breath with her body, bending her articulations with an agility matched only by the poet’s vocal articulation of the poem.

    Poetry: Loss Pequeño Glazier (“Etymon / Encarnación”)
    Dancer: Sarah Burns

    (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 03.05.2013 - 16:58

  3. The World As Yours

    This performance is about circularity: counterclockwise rotation of letters and words around a central axis on screen, dancers enacting different kinds of spins and gyrating movements focused around a globe. Each concentric line rotates at different speeds, aligning the letters from different lines to generate intriguing combinations. As the performance progresses, the word rotation gradually speeds up until the words become a rapid stream, suggesting an acceleration of time. The dancer’s movements speed up as well, as their playful interactions with the globe become increasingly frantic yet gentle, much like the music by The Kronos Quartet.

    Choreography: Kerry Ring
    Poetry: Loss Pequeño Glazier
    Music: “White Man Sleeps” composed by Kevin Volans,
    Performed by The Kronos Quartet
    Dancers: Julia Tedesco, Ellie Sanna, Meghan Starnes

    (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 03.05.2013 - 17:09

  4. Bindings

    This powerfully expressive nonverbal poem builds on the title, with the dancers’ actions and movements in front of a video produced by Jhave. The first meaning of bindings is clear as the dancers come on stage boung by strips of fabric or are bound by other dancers. This act is portrayed in different ways— forcefully, gently, voluntarily, but never cruelly— yet the soft materials seem very effective in handicapping the dancers, who continue to dance oddly, as if exploring their new bodily conditions. As the piece progresses they are all freed, yet this seems to bring no solace to their bodies, which continue moving awkwardly.

    Choreography: Brianna Jahn
    Poetry: Jhave
    Dancers: Kate Kenyon, Ashley Peters, Holli Simme, Samantha Will

    (Source: Leonardo Flores, I ♥ E-Poetry)

    Hannelen Leirvåg - 03.05.2013 - 17:21