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Wall Flowers

If there’s anything Shu Kinouchi can’t do—dance-wise, that is—nobody’s told him yet. Indeed, this endlessly fascinating artist who was with Houston Ballet and Tulsa Ballet before joining L.A. Dance Project in 2020, again proved a compelling presence in the first of four solo performances seen at LADP’s black box space last weekend.

Performance

“Wall-Body” by Shu Kinouchi

Place

L.A. Dance Project, Los Angeles, California, May 16-17, 21, 22, 2026

Words

Victoria Looseleaf

“Wall-Body” by Shu Kinouchi. Photograph by Hope Spears

Dubbed, “Wall-Body,” the 90-minute, two-section work is a collaboration between Kinouchi and designer Hiroshi Kaneko and features a dozen moveable 10-foot walls that, according to the press notes, “create shifting conditions that test the endurance of the body and its desire for change.” Set to a variety of tracks (heard on tape), by Kaneko, Nico Muhly and Masayoshi Fujita, the music suited the many moods of the piece, among them longing, vulnerability, intimacy and resistance. 

At the outset of Section 1, “Wall-Body, Wall,” Kinouchi is first seen facing the walls and dressed in all white (costume design by Clay Koonar), one arm outstretched, palm up, articulated fingers. He then deployed a tiny cakewalk-y two-step move before going into über-deep pliés. A virtual exploration— of the body, the room and those walls—the dance also had a stillness to it, with the performer moving from a meditative calm to lying on the floor, the latter scene reminiscent of Andrew Wyeth’s iconic 1948 painting, “Christina’s World.” 

Shades of Robert Wilson slo-mo walking were also on view, Kinouchi’s countenance the perfect accompaniment to Kaneko’s chimes-driven score. And did somebody say, “arabesques?” Kinouchi, his long black braid a fitting accoutrement, has them in spades, as he does pirouettes, his feverish spins leading into backwards running. In truth, a firecracker has nothing on this dancer.  

Vacillating between lying prone and bolting upright, at one point he slithered between the walls before assaying a series of backbends and Nijinsky-esque leaps best described as wondrously animalistic (calling all gazelles!). Abetted by Chu-hsuan Chang’s amber lighting, the ethereal glow added to the terpsichorean goings-on, a single violin providing a mournful accompaniment. 

“Wall-Body” by Shu Kinouchi. Photograph by Hope Spears

“Wall-Body” by Shu Kinouchi. Photograph by Hope Spears

While Kinouchi, born and raised in Japan, has said that his sense of longing “comes from living between cultures,” and the work having emerged from an “extended exchange of drawings, dances, models, and conversations, bringing architecture and choreography into a shared creative process,” his sense of movement compels the viewer to go with him on this journey of discovery, his body a cypher for a world on the brink.

This threshold also served as an intermission where audience members were encouraged to move about the space as several stagehands rearranged the walls in a cage-like formation, now dubbed “Section 2, Wall-Body, Cube.” In other words, think Kafka’s A Hunger Artist with Kinouchi sitting on his knees and appearing trapped—the lights coming up as if he were being interrogated, his hands-on-face mode telegraphing angst. 

And yes, that hallmark of Butoh—the silent scream—was also present, the dancer now a kind of shadow puppet, one seeming to say we are all trapped in our bodies, as well as within walls, moveable or not. But once this caged bird was outside the box and behind it, he was, unfortunately, obscured, meaning Kinouchi could benefit from a dramaturg, as both he and Hiroshi are credited with artistic direction. In fact, this writer believes that the dance would be better served if it began with the cage, this container begging its inhabitant to seek an outlet.

Still, whether walking gingerly backwards or assuming a neo-crucifixion pose—or one signifying thanks, his arms shooting skywards—Kinouchi was, it seemed, made to move, animating, along the way, something as inanimate as, well, a wall. Shades of Hitchcock’s Rear Window loomed large, the shadows creating amorphous tableaux in what might be seen as some kind of supplication house, his presence divine, even when confined.

With a serene stillness butting up against the rhythmic thrust of the soundtrack, Kinouchi, back lit, gave off a Kabuki vibe. Yet even while contained within the stricture of those walls, his starry presence ruled. As the work demanded, though, that he free himself, it was a welcome gesture when he emerged from confinement and, at long last, began peeling off his top and pants (more, please!). Again, prayer hands ruled, and hope, thankfully, seemed within reach.

Always a remarkable ensemble performer, Kinouchi has much to say as a solo artist. Grateful for his gifts, this scribe looks forward to his continuing the corporeal conversation.

Victoria Looseleaf


Victoria Looseleaf is an award-winning, Los Angeles-based international arts journalist who covers music and dance festivals around the world. Among the many publications she has contributed to are the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, Dance Magazine and KCET’s Artbound. In addition, she taught dance history at USC and Santa Monica College. Looseleaf’s novella-in-verse, Isn't It Rich? is available from Amazon, and and her latest book, Russ & Iggy’s Art Alphabet with illustrations by JT Steiny, was recently published by Red Sky Presents. Looseleaf can be reached through X, Facebook, Instagram and Linked In, as well as at her online arts magazine ArtNowLA.

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