Self-Portrait in the Making
Now in its second year, the Tate Modern’s Infinities Commission is awarded to a contemporary practitioner whose work proposes radical ways of thinking about performance, installation and time-based art.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Rudolf Nureyev’s “Romeo and Juliet” is built with a finely calibrated balance of choreographic structure, theatrical intelligence, and historical awareness. The marvel is that, for all its formal control and compositional rigour, emotion still breaks through with extraordinary force. Sergei Prokofiev’s score, with its succession of instantly recognisable musical episodes, is matched by a vividly articulated stage world shaped by cinematic imagination. Ezio Frigerio’s sumptuous Renaissance Verona, whose shifting architecture seems to possess a life and language of its own, is populated by a richly characterised human world that lends the drama social depth and expressive force, ensuring that it never collapses into psychological simplification or overstated realism.
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Now in its second year, the Tate Modern’s Infinities Commission is awarded to a contemporary practitioner whose work proposes radical ways of thinking about performance, installation and time-based art.
Continue ReadingA ballet career necessitates lifelong scholarship. Professionals take a daily technique class that begins with the same pliés at the barre as absolute beginners. Most days at the School of American Ballet, New York City Ballet members are tucked into in a corner of the studio, honing their tendus alongside the top divisions.
Continue ReadingJessica Lang is smack in the middle of a three-year stint as resident choreographer at Seattle’s Pacific Northwest Ballet. It’s an excellent artistic match that deserves to be followed closely, because both Lang and PNB merit a higher national profile.
Continue ReadingThe close-knit ballet scene in San Diego was dealt a blow when California Ballet, the company Maxine Mahon founded in 1968, folded in 2020. Insiders tell me the pandemic wasn’t entirely to blame, but since then, Golden State Ballet, still wet behind the ears, has risen in its place.
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