Portraits of a Lady
Martha Graham is the Georgia O’Keefe of dance. No matter what the source material, the primary subject of her works is womanhood.
Continua a leggereWorld-class review of ballet and dance.
State of Heads” opens with a blaze of white light and loud clanking onto a white-suited Levi Gonzalez, part Elvis, part televangelist addressing his congregation. A pair of women sidle in—Rebecca Cyr and Donna Uchizono—dressed in ankle-length white dresses and cowered posture. The political climate that spurred Uchizono’s original depiction in 1999 of government heads of state being out of touch with the needs of their constituents, seems mild when compared to 2025. Indeed, for Danspace Project’s 50th anniversary, the dancemaker has doubled down on her vision, expanding the cast from three to six performers. The satirical “State of Heads” remains more relevant than ever.
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Martha Graham is the Georgia O’Keefe of dance. No matter what the source material, the primary subject of her works is womanhood.
Continua a leggerePetite in stature, with beautiful, delicate features, Scottish dance artist Suzi Cunningham is nonetheless a powerhouse performer: an endless shape shifter whose work ranges from eerie to strange, to poignant, or just absolutely hilarious.
Continua a leggereWith his peerless vocabulary of postmodern abstract moves—or, as he’s called it, “gumbo style,” which blends Black dance with classical ballet techniques—Kyle Abraham, a 2013 MacArthur Genius grant awardee, has been making thought-provoking works for decades.
Continua a leggereCan art save civilization? The question matters deeply to Brenda Way, who has dedicated her life to the arts in San Francisco.
Continua a leggere
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