Returning to Dancehouse’s Sylvia Staehli Theatre for Week Two of the Keir Choreographic Award, let us begin at the end. In a live cross to Carriageworks, Sydney, the 2022 KCA international jury, Daniel Riley (Wiradjuri/Australia), Eko Supriyanto (Indonesia), Laurie Uprichard (Ireland), Lemi Ponifasio (Aotearoa/New Zealand), and Nanako Nakajima (Japan), awards the $50,000 Keir Choreographic Award to Tra Mi Dinh for her questioning of what really is an ending in her work “The ___”.
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Performance
Keir Choreographic Award, Week Two
Place
Sylvia Staehli Theatre, Dancehouse, Melbourne, July 2, 2022
Words
Gracia Haby
“Exoticism” by Lucky Lartey at the Keir Choreographic Award. Photograph by Zan Wimberley
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As Dinh describes in an interview with Ari Tampubolon: “what I’ve discovered looking at “endings” is that they’re a circular situation. Where something ends is also where something else begins.”Things unfold and become, because time is woven all around us. Time is relative, Einstein circulated. A continuation, Thích Nhất Hạnh disclosed. And so Dinh’s work about the cycle of things does not actually end. As the recipient of the KCA, this short work will generate and become a longer work, and new works, and be part of all things, like “rain is a continuation of the cloud” and “rain is transferred into grass” (No Death, No Fear, Thích Nhất Hạnh).
With the final paper votes counted in Melbourne, Phillip Keir announces that Jenni Large is the recipient of the $10,000 Peoples Choice Award for her work examining the duplexity of stability and instability in “Wet Hard,” and the audience applauds, whoops, clicks their fingers, and stomps their feet to both announcements in the direction of the screen.
“Slip” by Rebecca Jensen. Photograph by Zan Wimberley
Not for the first time do I find myself at Dancehouse thinking about time as a harmonious cyclical return. Or is it more of a spiral-shape? Does it exist at all, asks the hypothetical physicist seated behind me? In the distance, all lights out, I hear the familiar creak of someone scaling a ladder. In Rebecca Jensen’s “Slip” where “obsolete objects fall out of time and everywhere there is noise,”[note]Rebecca Jensen, “Slip” choreographer’s notes, Keir Choreographic Award, Dancehouse, program, 2022.[/note] Jensen tumbles from an a-frame ladder and lands on a padded base with a thud. With two long plaits brought from the nape of her neck, crossed over the top of her head and tied together, Jensen appears to have tumbled ‘forward’ from the Middle Ages to present day. In a long, olive green costume, replete with a veil held in place by a medieval circlet, Jensen is interested in exploring the space where our own personal memories smudge into collective memories seen on the screen and how, in doing so, a new sense of reality is made.
Working with performer and composer Aviva Endean, in the role of a film’s Foley, to turn a page of a newspaper is the sound of scrunching the page into a ball; to eat the contents of a packet of chips is the sound of biting into a celery stick. With Endean not hidden off stage, but on stage, by her table of props to reproduce everyday sound effects, their conversation is initially a playful one before “delay, deferral, and doubt” arrive.
Lucky Lartey and Vishnu Arunasalem in “Exoticism” by Lucky Lartey. Photograph by Zan Wimberley
Also paired, taped at the hip, performer and choreographer Lucky Lartey and performer Vishnu Arunasalem in “Exoticism.” At times, Lartey and Arunasalem mirror one another, and at other times they complete the other and make a silhouetted whole, in a deconstruction to reconstruction “of what a diverse contemporary work should look like in a post-colonial landscape.”[note]Lucky Lartey, “Exoticism” choreographer’s notes, Keir Choreographic Award, Dancehouse, 2022.[/note] Drawing upon their “collective lived experience of people with diverse backgrounds”, Lartey marks out the space and draws with lengths of black PVC tape. Lartey’s performative interventions transform flat surfaces into depth, following the principle that two converging lines can make a landscape. In tape art, the marks are unfixed, and so an arm pointing diagonally from the body of a stick figure can change to keep pace with the movements of Arunasalem.
“As Below, So Above” by Joshua Pether. Photograph by Zan Wimberley
Joshua Pether’s from ‘end to beginning’ ritual, “As Below, So Above,” is experienced, on the night, as another pairing, though this was not the original intention. The absence of two of the four performers hides two points of the cross, only to reveal them through the measured retracing of steps. Through trance-like repetition to “uncover the hidden spaces that exist in the known,”[note]Joshua Pether, “As Below, So Above” choreographer’s notes, Keir Choreographic Award, Dancehouse, 2022.[/note] we’ve circled from collective memory to collective lived experience, to collective consciousness.
“Follies of God” by Raghav Handa. Photograph by Zan Wimberley
With the world ever oscillating between states of war and peace, violent and non-violent means, literally or allegorically, Raghav Handa’s “Follies of God” takes place “on a battlefield, the sacred text of Bhagavad Gita.”[note]Raghav Handa’s “Follies of God” choreographer’s notes, Keir Choreographic Award, Dancehouse, 2022.[/note] Through looking at the many readings, translations, and interpretations of the Bhagavad Gita, from Gandhi’s understanding that the Gita was a framework for his philosophy of non-violence to those who have grossly misinterpreted it to suit their own ends, active resistance and brutality bump up against each other, and all in the span of twenty-minutes.
By the time the sixth edition of the biennial KCA rolls around, Mars will have orbited around the Sun once (as we know it in Earth time). Time passes. Quickly, you’ll see.
Using an armoury of play and poetry as a lure, Gracia Haby is an artist besotted with paper. Her limited edition artists’ books, and other works hard to pin down, are often made collaboratively with fellow artist, Louise Jennison. Their work is in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia and state libraries throughout Australia to the Tate (UK). Gracia Haby is known to collage with words as well as paper.
While Kendrick Lamar performed “Humble,” during his Super Bowl halftime set and was surrounded by dancers clad in red, white and blue—and in the process assumed the formation of the American flag (choreographed by Charm La’Donna)—so, too, did Faye Driscoll use performers who created slews of shapes/sculptures in her astonishing work, “Weathering,” seen at REDCAT on February 8, the last of three sold-out performances.
Let’s start with the obvious, or maybe to some this notion will be highly disputable, even offensive. OK, then, let’s start with what kept repeating in my head as I walked out of UC Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall, synapses abuzz with the wonders of Twyla Tharp Dance’s 60th anniversary “Diamond Jubilee” program: My God, Twyla Tharp really is the most brilliantly inventive choreographer now alive on the planet.
In Maldonne, French filmmakers Leila KA and Josselin Carré pose eleven women side by side on a barren stage. They’re dressed in floral patterns that hearken to the 1950s. The camera zooms in to frame their faces—each woman is in a state of distress.
Today I have the immense privilege of speaking with Riley Lapham. Riley started dancing early in her home town of Wollongong, and by age 14, she had joined the Australian Ballet School. But from here, Riley's journey takes twists and turns. In her graduation year, Riley missed her final performance due to injury. But in a Center Stage-like moment, the then artistic director David McAllister offered her a contract with the company. In this brave and vulnerable conversation, Riley and I talk about what it's like to join a company while injured, and what it was like to deal with...
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