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.
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The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s annual December residency at City Center featured four world premieres. I caught two: Hope Boykin’s “Finding Free” and Lar Lubovitch’s “Many Angels.” Both were in conversation with the troupe’s repertorial lodestar, Ailey’s spiritual “Revelations,” which closed the show. (As it does most nights, 27 times this season. Ronald K. Brown’s similarly uplifting “Grace” holds the finale honor 9 times, while Kyle Abraham’s “Are You in Your Feelings?”, Matthew Rushing’s “Sacred Songs,” and Alonzo King’s “Following the Subtle Current Upstream” close once apiece.) Like “Revelations,” “Finding Free” contemplated the path to heaven—with detours through the hell of oppression—while “Many Angels” started in a higher plane and stayed there. Both new dances were beautiful variations on the deliverance theme, making for an exalted Sunday night triptych.
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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.
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