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Be Like Water

Success, as so many artists know, can be a devilishly mixed blessing. On the San Francisco Bay Area’s aerial dance scene, which counts site-specific innovators Joanna Haigood and Jo Kreiter among its many notables, the company formerly known as Project Bandaloop has long attracted national attention for dances that scale Seattle’s Space Needle, or rappel down a 2500-foot-high rock face in Yosemite. As founder Amelia Rudolph joked to me recently, “Go ahead and try to kill Bandaloop—you can’t, because we built such a strong brand.” Last year, the 35-year-old company—based in Oakland and now called just Bandaloop—even rigged and choreographed a Broadway musical.

Performance

ARMA/Amelia Rudolph: “Water Moves”

Place

Joe Goode Annex, San Francisco, California, May 7, 2026

Words

Rachel Howard

B Dean and Kriss Rulifson in “Water Moves” by Amelia Rudolph. Photograph by Brooke Anderson, Movement Photography

But Rudolph tired of the popular demand. With eighty percent of Bandloop’s funding coming from earned-income corporate gigs or museum openings, the group was repeatedly tasked with delivering a known product. “I was longing to be weird and artistic again instead of the ‘we want the wow and punch, please’,” Rudolph explained to me. In 2012, she handed artistic leadership of Bandaloop to longtime company member Melecio Estrella. Now at last, at age 60, Rudolph has gone further. On a windy spring weekend, as Bandaloop was preparing for big concert performances with the singer/drummer and famous former Prince collaborator Sheila E., Rudolph unveiled her new company, Amelia Rudolph Movement Arts, or ARMA.

The scene was a decided contrast with Bandaloop’s typically vast outdoor locales. “Water Moves” was staged in the intimate (and somewhat geometrically awkward) black box space of the Joe Goode Annex. The audience, including aerial dance eminence Joanna Haigood herself, could sit to the side or in a row of chairs and floor-pillows facing the action, with dancers flying right over one’s head. But the 50-minute show led off in a more contemplative mood, with Olivia Sander drinking from a glass of water next to the wall, then walking toward a hanging water jug. 

Clarissa Dyas and Faith Elder in “Water Moves” by Amelia Rudolph. Photograph by Brooke Anderson, Movement Photography

Clarissa Dyas and Faith Elder in “Water Moves” by Amelia Rudolph. Photograph by Brooke Anderson, Movement Photography

A tower of three conical speakers, created by sculptor Todd Laby, began to spin. Purcell’s opera aria “L’ascia Ch’io Piana” poured into our ears with each rotation of the sculpture as Sander hugged the plastic jug, made her way regretfully into a shoulder stand, and began to swing the vessel. Faith Elder, with her arresting blonde pixie cut, entered and fastened herself to the rigging, looked sharply at Sander, and started to spin. If my notes and memory serve, Sander then held out another rope, which Elder, after much reaching, finally grasped. As for the next part, I absolutely know it happened because I cannot forget the images: Elder spun faster, her body pouring itself into the loveliest and most angelic shapes, until at last she again simply hugged the jug.

As Rudolph told me in our pre-show interview, “This is sort of my water decade;” she is also currently choreographing a site-specific work for a secret waterfall location in Ireland, and working on another water-related project with the Bay Area’s Indigenous Ohlone tribe. The penultimate page of the program for “Water Moves” offered a list of “Water Statistics,” building to a grim science-supported glimpse of the future: “By 2050//water scarcity increases/Glaciers melting/Rivers no longer reach the sea/Groundwater depleted/faster than it returns.” Despite that program page, I have to confess, I had a hard time delving deeper into what the four sections of “Water Moves” had to say about its subject, other than the general idea that water is crucial and connecting and should be treated reverently. Perhaps that in itself is plenty to say. Or perhaps I was too fixated on how the plastic jugs reminded me of a children’s sermon I once witnessed in an Episcopal church, the purpose of which was to illustrate the holiness of water, but all through the sermon I could not thinking about all the damage plastics are doing to the water supply, and I wondered why the preacher hadn’t used tap water in a glass—was Rudolph aiming for a similar dissonance?

B Dean in “Water Moves” by Amelia Rudolph. Photograph by Brooke Anderson, Movement Photography

B Dean in “Water Moves” by Amelia Rudolph. Photograph by Brooke Anderson, Movement Photography

Because I am habituated to watching dancing for its own sake, throughout “Water Moves” I mostly focused on the stunning airborne musicality Rudolph and her dancers achieved, aided by a pulse-driven score by Luke Mombrea. What touched me most were the intimate relationships. In the section titled “Floating,” Ciarra D’Onofrio, Clarissa Dyas, Kriss Rulifson, and Sander and Elder clustered on the wall, walking sideways over each other’s bodies with the most tender care, pushing off into explosive flips that resolved into fleeting tableaux as wondrous as the Sistine Chapel. In “Source Water Counterbalance,” B Dean and Rulifson were each rigged to a jug, the music faster and more worrisome, swift propeller twirls dropping until a head touched the floor, then suddenly pushing up again. And in “Sector 5” (a reference to a water-submerged environment in the video game “Metroid Fusion”?), five of these exquisite dancers filled the floor, four of them in hammock swings, one of them earthbound. The emotional climax of the finale, when four dancers “leapt” in the fabric hammocks, and one in the center leapt from the floor, was so compelling that I wondered why such a contrast of purely earthbound and rig-aided physics isn’t explored more often. 

In every section, the dancers were as refined and flowing in their lines as they were present in their intense dynamics. I suppose I am admitting here that the “weird and artistic” elements of “Water Moves” flew—no pun intended—over my head. All the same, there was an unforced authenticity to the performances, an emotional rawness, that made me eager to see Rudolph keep pursuing her new direction.

Rachel Howard


Rachel Howard is the former lead dance critic of the San Francisco Chronicle. Her dance writing has also appeared in the New York Times, the Hudson Review, Ballet Review, San Francisco Magazine and Dance Magazine.

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