Catching the Moment with Paul Kolnik
For nearly 50 years the legendary dance photographer, Paul Kolnik, helped create the visual identity of the New York City Ballet.
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No matter the theme, an evening with David Dorfman Dance is likely to uplift. The gregarious choreographer has a habit of engaging with the audience pre and/or post show with energy approaching that of a church revival gathering. For audiences of Brooklyn’s the Space at Irondale last week, he signed a handwritten note on each program: “I have a proposal—Could we be compassionately tactile with our skin and fervently elastic with our minds.” In his work and in person, Dorfman creates community with and for dance. The company’s newest production, “truce songs,” has a searing resonance, given real world circumstances of war and political vengeance. With eight dancers including Dorfman and Lisa Race, the longtime collaborator to whom he is married, and composers Sam Crawford and Lizzy de Lise, this work speaks to vulnerability and empathy, loss and displacement. What are we willing to risk for peace? What is the power of surrender?
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For nearly 50 years the legendary dance photographer, Paul Kolnik, helped create the visual identity of the New York City Ballet.
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Continue ReadingThe height of summer has arrived to New York’s lush and idyllic Hudson Valley. Tonight, in addition to music credited on the official program, we are treated to a chorus of crickets and tree frogs in the open-air pavilion of PS21 Center for Contemporary Performance.
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