Questo sito non supporta completamente il tuo browser. Ti consigliamo di utilizzare Edge, Chrome, Safari o Firefox.

Sound Effect

Sometimes there’s not much you’re able to say analytically about a dance work, and yet you know you’ve just witnessed a blood-guts-and-soul offering from an artist of the keenest kinaesthetic intelligence. Such was the case with gizeh muñiz vengel’s “auiga,” second on a double bill finale for the ARC Edge residency at San Francisco’s CounterPulse.

Performance

“Augia” by gizeh muñiz vengel in collaboration with Ernesto Peart Falcón and gisel gg torres

Place

CounterPulse, San Francisco, CA, June 15, 2024

Words

Rachel Howard

Gizeh muñiz vengel and Ernesto Peart Falcón “augia” by vengel. Photograph by Robbie Sweeny

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

  • Weekly articles from the world of dance
  • Wide diversity of reviews, interviews, articles & more
  • Support for quality art journalism

Already a paid subscriber? Login

Self-identifying as Mexicana, residing in Oakland, vengel’s name pops up everywhere on the Bay Area experimental dance scene: She is a resident artist at Push Dance Company and the aerial group Bandaloop, in addition to curating and producing the annual KH Fresh Festival, which carries on the legacy of the unforgettable dancer and curator Kathleen Hermesdorf in a most wonderfully unpredictable fashion. For “auiga,” vengel offers this director’s note: “Our sound and movement research is a practice that centers the body as a channeler, a sacred fluid object that surrenders identity.” Few performances can live up to such promises, but “auiga” surpassed them.

“Auiga” begins with a disconcerting but not quite distressing sound of static—grisell gg torres’ audio, integral throughout—and a view of two bodies pressed against a white back wall. In the gulf between us viewers and these bodies lies a pile of earth in a canvas bag, several rocks, and two translucent white objects that later reveal themselves to be large ice cubes. As Jessi Barber’s lighting brightens, the static cuts and then builds again, and we see that the bodies on the wall are covered tight with a plastic sheet, their flesh and faces muted in a way that makes them resemble human remains encased in permafrost.

grisell gg torres in “augia” by vengel. Photograph by Robbie Sweeny

Vengel and Ernesto Peart Falcón hold a bright light between them, and in their shiftings from one clinging posture to another, the energy breaks through their bodies in a vector of sudden illumination, like the cosmos itself bursting open. As a rumble intensifies and the bodies begin to stretch, the image is thrillingly ambiguous, simultaneously calling to mind a young couple awakening in bed and an egg membrane stretching with the first instinctual, mysterious stirrings of life.

When the bodies suddenly break through the plastic, first sitting on the floor, then crawling sideways and tearing the plastic down, their clothing becomes discernible. Both are wearing translucent t-shirts and tights with leotard bottoms in the palest of pastels. Vengel has an open face, guileless, her thighs vulnerable as the tights rip; Falcón is a tall and solidly muscled dancer, Superman in soft hues. A persistent beeping like a medical device takes over as she cradles him and they collapse.

The morphings and grapplings that follow on the floor are so riveting as to tempt one to offer real-time description. Much of the movement is built on the two crawling over one another, but as they do so the intensity of their concentration never fades, and their positions achieve a strangely spectacular fascination: equally organic and unnatural. In one passage, vengel carries the rock across the stage; in another, the two suddenly flop belly down upon the ice and slide around the floor. Eventually Falcón slides his feet to the pile of dirt, pulling it towards himself with his toes (feet are as intentional as hands throughout this whole work). For anyone concerned about climate change, the resonances of this image are painfully relevant: all that ice crackling and cracking, followed by so much effort required just to ground one’s feet into the earth again. A primordial human tragedy in capsule.

Gizeh muñiz vengel and Ernesto Peart Falcón “augia” by vengel. Photograph by Robbie Sweeny

When the two dancers finally stand again, there’s a terrific duet of Falcón holding vengel from beneath the armpits, slapping her arms around; somehow, it’s not violent but tender. Torres appears on a balcony shining a light that leads the two to the rock, where they squat like frogs, fleeing again to the ice, their faces nuzzling, and at last swept up by a stark beat, grooving synthesizers, and a final pilgrimage back to the dirt, where torres sits, her singing beckoning.

What does it all mean? What can we pick apart symbolically, the better to reassure ourselves we haven’t missed “the point”? I want to believe that “auiga” means exactly itself—the movement, the sound, the experience itself, with all its echoes and resonances. I’m assured here by an explanation of the title. As I began writing this review, I researched the word “auiga,” half-expecting and half-dreading that it would function as a conceptual key. Was it Spanish? Apparently not. Was it a deliberate mutation of “Auriga,” the constellation in the Northern celestial hemisphere anchored by the sixth brightest star in the sky and named for a mythological charioteer? Again, no.

Reaching out to the artists, I received an answer from the sound designer, torres. “Auiga”—pronounced ah wee gah with a hard G, torres clarified—“is a word we made up. It’s a sound like when a baby finds its first guttural vocalizations.”

The explanation could not feel more right.

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.

comments

Featured

In and Out of Time
REVIEWS | Cecilia Whalen

In and Out of Time

Dutch company Introdans’s mission statement is in its name: The group was founded by Ton Wiggers in 1971 to “introduce dance” to as large an audience as possible, at first responding to a lack of professional concert dance in Wiggers's own region, the eastern part of the Netherlands.

Continua a leggere
Absurdism
REVIEWS | Cecilia Whalen

Absurdism

Twyla Tharp's newest evening-length work, “How Long Blues,” is absurd. In under an hour, it depicts jazz clubs and soccer games, giant marionettes, a string of affairs, an avalanche, and a suicide, all without any particular reasoning. 

Continua a leggere
So Far So Good
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

So Far So Good

The School of American Ballet is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year. So is George Balanchine’s iconic “Serenade”—the first piece he made in America in 1934, choreographed on students from his brand-new academy.

Continua a leggere
Good Subscription Agency