The six-work presentation primarily—expectedly—featured the work of Graham herself (particularly fitting amid the company’s 100-year celebration). But it starts with a brand-new piece by Virginie Mécène, a former principal dancer with the Martha Graham Company and the current director of Graham 2. “Clair de Lune,” set to the Debussy work that shares its name, is inspired by an original Graham piece, she explains at the top of the performance, which, like others, has been lost to time. Only a photograph, which may or may not have depicted the original “Clair de Lune,” remains, showing four dancers under a veil. This, Mécène says, was her starting point.
It is a dreamy image, as the dancers—Maylissa Jean, Jacqueline Lee, Emmy Lebrun, Madison Kotch—dressed in flesh-toned unitards, position themselves underneath the sheer white fabric, one standing and the other three in seated repose. Despite the early Graham inspiration, the reference that comes to mind is that of Isadora Duncan, draped in a toga, veil flying behind her. Still, the movements of the dancers, when they emerge, are decidedly from the schoolings of Graham, reaching and contracting. The work is simple and pretty, and at times a touch too sentimental with lyrical stretches of the arms. It’s most interesting when the dancers move through their own individual sequences, creating a more layered effect.
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