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March 2007 PERFORMANCE |
Program:
One,
Two , Three,
Four |
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Tramp: Dances from Minneapolis
Curated by the Minneapolis-based, Chicago-bred, choreographic duo
HIJACK
Co-presented with the Dance Center, Columbia College
Chicago
January to March 2007: Links Hall's
new Artistic Associates each curate a month-long series of performance,
based on expertise in their respective artistic fields. The March
program has been curated by HIJACK (Kristin Van Loon and Arwen Wilder),
and focuses on Minneapolis-based artists; new collaborations with
Chicago-based artists have also been woven into the series.
In case you hadn't heard, Minneapolis is an eden
for dance. Is it the low rent, state supported healthcare, robust
arts funding? Is it the bad winters? The Galapagos Island effect:
the free flow of ideas between artists, musicians, dancers huddled
together for warmth? In Tramp, six Minneapolis-based
choreographers demonstrate why that drive through Wisconsin should
be done more often. - HIJACK (Kristin Van Loon and Arwen Wilder),
curators
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Laurie Van Wieren and the B-Specifics
5 Dancers and a DJ plus Anthony
Photo by Warwick green
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PROGRAM ONE
March 2-4
Karen Sherman – sixty one
Laurie Van Wieren and the B-Specifics – 5 DANCERS AND A DJ plus
ANTHONY
HIJACK’s Cast of Thousands
Workshop: Morgan Thorson - Dance Clinic PROGRAM
TWO March 9-11
Morgan Thorson – Faker
Morgan Thorson and Molly Shanahan - Worse Case Scenario
Workshop: Karen Sherman - Systematic Spontaneity
PROGRAM THREE
March 16-18
HIJACK - HIJACK’s Half
Sheldon B. Smith – Rhainjdaocmk Gheinjearcaktor
Post-show talkback Friday, March 16
Workshop: HIJACK - Throwaway Contact Improvisation
PROGRAM FOUR
March 23-25
Catalyst, dances by Emily Johnson - Heat and Life
Post-Show discussions
Workshop: Emily Johnson – Class with Emily
Symposium: Through Different Lenses: Community
Analysis, Interpretation, and Action towards Environmental Policy
ALSO IN MARCH
Julia Mayer - Coffee Dance
Xwing - Calling-card Theatre
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Also
in March:
Julia Mayer
Coffee Dance
Friday March 2, 9:30am
Free
BYOC (bring your own coffee)
Once a month, Julia Mayer opens her weekly Friday morning solo movement
practice to the public. In this ongoing series of engaged, informal
performances, her idiosyncratic movement adventures are an invitation
to watch, feel, and find creative impulse in unexpected places.
Mayer's current movement practice is influenced by her studies with
Deborah Hay, her years dancing with Chicago-based improvisation
collective FUSE, and qi gong. The performance will last approximately
20 minutes.
“[her] movement is refreshingly off the
map” - Chicago Reader
“a delicately luminous, inquisitive stage presence”
- TimeOut Chicago
Xwing
Calling-card Theatre - theatre that comes to you
Booking for Spring 2007
Xwing present a season of performances that offers theatre in the
comfort of your own home. Choose two plays from a menu that includes
the French avant-garde (Rachilde and Alfred Jarry) and a contemporary
take on the English traditional puppet show Punch and Judy. Invite
your guests for drinks, cook them dinner, arrange a potluck, or
just pass out the popcorn, and enjoy a unique theatrical event.
A list of the plays on offer can be seen at www.nicholaslowe.co.uk.
Call Links Hall at (773) 281-0824 for more information.
Reservations start at $150, and a member of Xwing will visit your
home to confirm the details for your very own private performance.
This program is partially supported by a grant from the Illinois
Arts Council, a state agency.
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Tramp: Dances from Minneapolis
has been made possible with support from the Dance Center
of Columbia College Chicago, The Boeing Company, Elizabeth
F. Cheney Foundation, The Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs,
Illinois Humanities Council (with the National Endowment for
the Humanities, and the Illinois General Assembly), and the
Performing Arts Fund, a program of Arts Midwest funded by
the National Endowment for the Arts with additional contributions
from General Mills Foundation, Land O’Lakes Foundation,
and the Illinois Arts Council.
Morgan Thorson’s performances are
made possible in part by a grant from the National Performance
Network’s Performance Residency Program. Major contributors
of the National Performance Network include the Doris Duke
Charitable Foundation, Ford Foundation, the National Endowment
for the Arts (a federal agency), Altria and the Nathan Cummings
Foundation. www.npnweb.org
Links
Hall Supporters |
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