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First Light

Looking down into the rotunda from the spiral ramp of New York’s Guggenheim Museum can be dizzying. My perch tonight is located two-thirds of the way to the top—and it’s the best view in the house for Lucinda Childs’ Early Works program. A postmodern minimalist, Childs is known for setting her dancers to walk, trot, and leap in ways that carve intricate, mathematically precise patterns in space. When viewed from above, the pathways come into focus so visibly it’s as if the dancers are painting the floor with their feet. Over the 45-minute showing of two trios and three quartets, it’s easy to see how these explorations eventually led to “Dance” (1979), Childs’ notable collaboration with artist Sol LeWitt and music by Philip Glass.

Performance

Lucinda Childs: Early Works

Place

Works & Process, Dance Reflections Festival by Van Cleef & Arpels , Guggenheim New York, New York, NY, March 14, 2026

Words

Karen Hildebrand

Sarah Hillmon and Sharon Milanese in “Early Works” by Lucinda Childs. Photograph by Titus Ogilvie-Laing | Works & Process

The opening trio, “Pastime,” might be my favorite. Simple, clear, and short, it feels like a poem. A trio of women in black unitards maintain the same diagonal placement throughout, as if a line marking the time on a sundial. In the middle, Sharon Milanese is swathed in a stretchy cocoon while balanced on her coccyx. It looks like she’s sitting in a canoe. At one end, Sarah Hillman stands on one leg, while the other dangles from a flexed knee like a divining pendulum. At the other end, Katie Dorn is crouched spidery, piked with head to floor, rear to sky, reaching and lunging. Dreaming of spring, I see all three as garden plantings in different stages of emergence.

Also charming is “Reclining Rondo,” a trio with Kyle Gerry, Lonnie Poupard Jr., and Robert Mark Burke, all in white, performing a series of basic yoga floor poses. Beginning in side-lying while propped up on one arm, in unison they take each pose in silence: cobra, child’s, deer, half frog, thread-the-needle. In a reclining table top, they roll to one side, closing a clam shell, then reverse to the opposite side. I find myself trying to memorize the sequence as if I might join them, when I notice one dancer shift his direction. Then another. It’s a wonderful disruption in expectations. 

Caitlin Scranton, Sharon Milanese, Sarah Hillmon, and Katie Dorn in “Early Works” by Lucinda Childs. Photograph by Titus Ogilvie-Laing | Works & Process

Caitlin Scranton, Sharon Milanese, Sarah Hillmon, and Katie Dorn in “Early Works” by Lucinda Childs. Photograph by Titus Ogilvie-Laing | Works & Process

Three quartets, two for women (adding Caitlin Scranton to the previous trio) all feature complex traffic patterns of dancers walking, running, skipping with quick changes in direction and reversals. For “Calico Mingling,” they move in circles, each around her own body and also in relation to the group. The arms respond by winging out, a gentle breeze. When the four return for “Katema,” they form a diamond shape and move in pairs to mirror an opposite duo. The walking patterns begin to resemble a flower petal. The swinging arms are more active here, propelling the dancers into turns rather than simply responding. I can hardly imagine the mental focus it takes to pull off what looks so completely spontaneous. 

At 85, Childs’ popularity is resurging. She’s beginning a five-year contract as resident choreographer with Gibney Dance Company, and preparing a new work for the Fisher Center at Bard this summer. She’s worked consistently since her beginning with Judson Dance Theater in the 1960s, becoming more widely known in the 70s with the success of “Dance” and “Einstein on the Beach,” the iconic five hour long Robert Wilson production. She founded her own dance company in 1973, and has worked with many ballet companies and opera productions. 

The final piece of Early Works, “Radial Courses,” is a promenade, which begins with four men walking counterclockwise in a hurried pace that irregularly hiccups into a skipping run. Two by two the dancers circle, reversing their direction in intricate repetition, with arms held in first position throughout. I’m reminded of show horses cantering in a dressage ring. They mesmerize.

Karen Hildebrand


Karen Hildebrand is former editorial director for Dance Magazine and served as editor in chief for Dance Teacher for a decade. An advocate for dance education, she was honored with the Dance Teacher Award in 2020. She follows in the tradition of dance writers who are also poets (Edwin Denby, Jack Anderson), with poetry published in many literary journals and in her book, Crossing Pleasure Avenue (Indolent Books). She holds an MFA from the Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. Originally from Colorado, she lives in Brooklyn.

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