The two dancer/choreographers joined forces with video artist Christian Faur, who created stunning video projections of the moon, ocean tides, and island landscapes, as well as a quartet of musicians from Denison and elsewhere playing the work’s jazz score.
Ramirez, a Puerto Rican dance artist, and Banks, who has African American, Pasifika, and Chamoru ancestry, created an easy, breezy choreographic language for their dancing in the work, which blended island folk dance and contemporary dance with the free-spirited movement a la 1960s hippie culture.
On a bare stage, except for a blanket at the front containing flowers, shells, a container of sand, and talismans of island culture, Banks and Ramirez spun, swirled, and flowed back and forth across the stage as if, like the ocean and tides, they were subject to the moon’s gravitational pull. The two dancers played off of one another, creating a symbiotic relationship to their less-than-technique-driven dancing. And what the dancing lacked in polish, the two seasoned performers made up for in their compelling stage presences.
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