A FINE WORK, WITH SHADES OF REFINEMENT |
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Flicker Choreographer: Ann Dewey Composer: John Gibson Music artist: David Kilgour SPINNING SUN at TAPAC Theatre, Western Springs, Auckland From 8 Oct 2008 to 10 Oct 2008 Reviewed by Jack Gray, 9 Oct 2008 |
Flicker is a choreographic body of work by Anne Dewey and friends, that explores the idea of four dancers controlling much of the stage theatricality through the use of hand held lights. Dewey's aim is to manipulate precise images in a shifting landscape of idiosyncratic abstract movement to/ around/ with a textured and 'raw' score by composer/ collaborators John Gibson and David Kilgour.
Performed at TAPAC Theatre after a successful recent Christchurch season, the set design consists of a huge hanging white curtain made up of several pleats, offset by an upside down hanging map of the South Island and a North Island map/ screen set up on the opposite side of stage.
The dancers - Liz Kirk, Zoe Watkins, Julie Van Renen and Sophie Ryan - make their entrance with a mysterious light show; shadows, silhouettes of bodies, females, youthful, ponytails, baring long legs through basic cream pantaloons and singlet tops. Twisting, fast limbs, hops, all accentuated by mini lights attached to different parts of their bodies: hip, collar, waist, knee and foot ...
A jazzy introduction, we see this light play and get the feel of the first 'flicker' as their leaps, unders, overs and shifts in-between, give us changing perspectives and a sense of their range of motion across the space like constellations in a night sky.
A duet: dancer carefully balanced on another's back in an intimate light begins a build towards painting a more fleshed out view of the body. Precision of weight transference, unfussy partnering, release, surrender and an unfolding to a guitar track give us a taste of Dewey's careful and detailed movement approach and philosophy.
Throughout, little glimpses of light create transitions that draw our eye towards various aspects of the space. A torchlight on the NZ map, a big bright reflection off the papery backdrop, or dancers standing on different levels pointing torches towards the others illuminating them in a myriad of ways. More dance sequences abound, bodies moving like moths, circling, nudging, long arches and quick bounces to show her deep fascination with choreography.
The dancers possess a mercurial quality, like children intrigued by blowing bubbles, as they sustain an engagement throughout an eclectic range of movements and styles. A dancer smiles before the trio, faces moulded of elastane, flowing hair, seamless shifts of energy and dynamic inhabiting states from light to dark.
Solo dances extend upon their repertoire; developed with facial expressions, elbow isolations, flicks, swipes performed to a ukulele sound. Back to a trio with movement that flows from the back, extensions contrasted with undulations, gestures juxtaposed with linearity, unpredictable yet beautifully phrased.
As the work digs deeper and deeper into the psyche, we uncover the performers' states of consciousness, riding and going through the music yet maintaining their individual line of focus. Little subtle touches and hints for each other, a foot placed succinctly near a heel sets another dancer off. This timing and connection was obviously fine-tuned during the works year-long gestation period in Leigh.
Other sections offer other expressions of humour, quirkiness and character, mesmerising faces lit by a small light while a red blinking light bleeds across the backdrop. Other figures also emerge, such as nymphs, fairies, Siamese twins and the crone.
The work wraps up with a series of faux endings, an exposition of movement themes already explored. Finishing with my favourite image of the dancers silhouetted by a light partly submerged under someone's skirt, before a dancer reaches towards a line of light that gradually becomes so small it disappears.
The dancers deserved their two curtain calls for their commitment. Blending joy, spontaneity with a specific performative focus, which Dewey said was deliberately anti "po-face", the work is made up of ideas that interest her and reflect a personal priority all mature artists should have.
"Flicker" is a fine work, with shades of refinement present that distinguish Anne Dewey as an important singular choreographic voice in both the festival and nationally. Satisfying!
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Felicity Molloy


