| When
Trisha Brown was a young choreographer in the 1960s, she began collaborating
with visual artists, giving their work the same significance as
her choreography in her dances. The collaborations continued for
decades with renowned artists like Robert Rauschenberg, Donald Judd,
Nancy Graves, Fujiko Nakaya, and Terry Winters. This spring the
UW is celebrating Brown’s collaborative work through a series
of coordinated events that includes an exhibition at the Henry
Art Gallery, master classes in the Dance
Program, performances by the Trisha Brown Dance Company through
the UW World Dance Series
(May 20-22), and public lectures.
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Trisha
Brown performing Homemade in 1966, with a working projector
strapped to her back. Photo by Peter Moore.
© Estate of Peter Moore / VAGA, NYC.
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The Henry Art Gallery
exhibition, Trisha Brown: Dance and Art in Dialogue 1961-2001,
runs through July 18. It was organized by the Addison Gallery of
American Art at Phillips Academy and the Tang Teaching Museum and
Art Gallery at Skidmore College. When Henry curator Robin Held learned
of the exhibition three years ago, she was immediately interested
in bringing it to the Henry.
“The exhibition
seemed a perfect fit for the Henry’s mission,” she says.
“It provides opportunities to present performances in the
museum and to create partnerships on campus and in the community.
It brings art audiences and dance audiences together in a way that
is very exciting. It also showcases an important interdisciplinary
period in art history that tends to be overlooked because of the
art’s ephemeral nature that relies on performance documentation.”
Which begs the question,
how does a museum showcase collaborations between visual artists
and choreographers that occurred decades ago? By displaying existing
artworks—sets, drawings, and sculptures—along with historical
and contemporary video clips, interviews with the collaborators,
and DVDs with performance documentation.
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Left:
Trisha Brown in Roof Piece, 1971. Photo by
Babette Mangotte.
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“The challenge
is to give the full sense of the work while maintaining its ephemeral
character,” says Held, “and to make it come alive for
people more used to seeing drawings and paintings on the wall than
performance documentation.”
Twice each week (Thursdays,
6-7 pm; Sundays, 2-3 pm), the exhibition literally comes
alive, as dancers perform an historic Trisha Brown dance in the
Henry Art Gallery, using one of Brown’s more intriguing sets.
“The Henry’s
Stroum Gallery is perfect for this,” says Held. “It’s
a large and very flexible space, with multiple vantage points. The
sets are great even without the dancers, but the performances give
visitors a fuller sense of what the choreography and art collaboration
might have been. They are the biggest challenge of the exhibition,
but they are also the part that makes it so exciting.”
The dance, sponsored
by The Boeing Company, is Floor of the Forest, a seminal
Trisha Brown work from 1970. The set is a large metal grid with
ropes and clothing woven through it. Dancers cross the grid, climbing
into and out of the clothing. The dancers are current and former
students of the UW Dance Program and Cornish College of the Arts
Dance Department.
“This is a great
opportunity for our students,” says Betsy Cooper, director
of the UW Dance Program. “We talk a lot about historic pieces
and watch videos, but we don’t often have the opportunity
to dance the choreography of these artists. This is a great wedding
of theory and practice.”
Cooper recognizes that
Brown’s early work, like Floor of the Forest, may
be puzzling for some audiences. Even for some dance students. But
that’s okay. “People may question, ‘Is that dance?’”
she says. “That’s exactly the question that was being
asked in the 1960s. It was a period of questioning everything that
dance was—theatrical and narrative-based. For Trisha Brown,
that didn’t suit her. A lot of her early work was done in
art spaces and galleries. She wanted to get out of the concert hall.”
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Trisha
Brown |
To ensure the historical
accuracy of Floor of the Forest, former Trisha Brown dancer
Shelley Senter traveled to Seattle to check the metal grid and rig
the clothing used in the dance. Then she trained the dancers performing
the piece. “It’s an unusual dance,” says Cooper,
“and the dancers needed to get used to being horizontal, negotiating
the space and use of weight. But the great thing about this piece
is that an advanced dancer can do it and bring that maturity, and
a novice dancer can do it too.”
UW dance students will
have an opportunity to work with current Trisha Brown Dance Company
members as well. Prior to their UW World Series performances, Trisha
Brown dancers Sandra Grinberg and Trina Thompson will spend four
days on campus teaching technique and repertory classes to intermediate
and advanced students in the Dance Program, with support from a
College of Arts and Sciences Exchange Award. “It will be a
wonderful immersion for our students,” says Cooper. “They
can take these classes, visit the Henry exhibition, attend the lectures,
and then attend one of the company’s performances.”
For those who want to
learn more about Brown’s work, graduate students
in dance will present lectures prior to Trisha
Brown Dance Company’s May 20 and 21 performances at Meany
Hall, and Brown will present a lecture prior to the May 22 performance.
Betsy Cooper hopes for
a big turnout for the Trisha Brown Dance Company’s performances.
Personally, she is thrilled to have the company return to Meany
Hall.
“At Brown’s
last concert here, in 1997, I was aware of how beautifully crafted
her compositions were—textured, rich, with unexpected things
happening that delighted and surprised me,” says Cooper. “She
is continually refining. Audiences should expect to enjoy themselves.”
To learn more about
the Trisha Brown exhibition and performances, visit the Henry Art
Gallery’s website at www.henryart.org
or UW World Series’ website at www.uwworld
series.org. For tickets to the UW World Series performances,
call 206-543-4880.
[Winter/Spring 2004 - Table of Contents]
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