Ellen Moore / Dance Arts Institute
Venue
The Citadel: Ross Centre for Dance
Aug 3, 7:00PM *
Aug 4, 9:00PM
Aug 5, 4:00PM (RP)
Aug 6, 4:00PM
40-50 minutes
Ticket Price
$15, $25, $35
A study in intimacy, form, and task-based improvisation.
Expanding on a previous study, 52 (navigation) investigates the abstract emergence of an interpersonal relationship through the embodiment of seemingly unrelated or slightly strange tasks. Dancers make choices as they pass through several sets of sensation, form, and movement based improvisational tasks, both together and within their own bodies. With an awareness of presence, patience, and vulnerability, dancers navigate their relationships to the self, each other, and the structure of a world.
52 (navigation) aims to deepen the understanding of a specific improvisational score and further explore its potential to physicalize psychological or emotional experiences. The task sets are inspired by several physical concepts, including circularity, weight-bearing, and proximity. Although the general arc remains largely consistent, dancers use their agency within the score to create differing forms for each performance.
* There is a 15-minute post-show Q+A on August 3rd, facilitated by Amanda Acorn.
Ellen Moore – Choreographer
Amelia Brown, Micaela Janse Van Rensburg – Dancers
Amanda Acorn – Choreographic Mentor
Helin Gungoren – Production/Stage Manager
George Stamos – Project Manager
This SummerWorks Lab presentation is part of a double-bill with within sensation, and part of an ongoing partnership with Dance Arts Institute (formerly The School of Toronto Dance Theatre) that is generously supported by Lindy Green and Sam Chaiton as the Winchester Prize.
There is a Relaxed Performance (RP) on August 5th.
CLICK HERE FOR THE VISUAL STORY FOR THE VENUE
CLICK HERE FOR THE VISUAL STORY FOR THE DOUBLE BILL
SummerWorks Lab programming – a place for exploration, experimentation, and process, with diverse performance works shared at crucial stages of creative development, forging connections between artists and audiences.