“Low” is one of six performative events that are part of Ceremonies Out of the Air: Ralph Lemon at MoMa PS1 through March 24, an interdisciplinary exhibit that documents Lemon’s creative investigations over the last two decades. The exhibit features some 60 pieces—drawings, sculpture, video installations, including the not-to-be-missed spaceship that Lemon collaborator Walter Carter (1907–2010) built from materials found in his Mississippi Delta garage. Lemon, who famously disbanded his dance company in 1995 after ten years of rising success, was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2020.
Billed as a world premiere, “Low” derives from the warm-up and recovery practices that occur adjacent to Lemon’s previous choreographic work (“Come home Charley Patton,” 2004; “How Can You Stay in the House All Day and Not Go Anywhere?” 2010; “4Walls,” 2012; “Rant,” 2019-present). The improvisational energy of Jones’ performance is fiercely internal. In a program note, he writes, “It’s a big ask, to ask an audience to sit in the time of this rigor. I still have questions about it being seen.”
While Jones continues his gyrations, a giant video projection, duplicated on both sides of the stage, shows a group of dancers working together in much the same manner. Jones himself is featured, alongside other long time Lemon collaborators, Djédjé Djédjé Gervais, Gesel Mason, Okwui Okpokwasili, Omagbitse Omagbemi, and David Thomson.
At first Lemon keeps to the perimeter of the stage, not engaging directly with Jones. Instead, he steps up to a microphone and conducts a dialogue with a recorded (or at least unembodied) voice that seems to cover the nature and terms of the practice. I catch a few phrases such as “you never go to the floor;” “de-languaging;” “high, low, mid-level;” “learning, as opposed to learning material.”
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