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.
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