Dia:Beacon
Beacon
Riggio Galleries, 3 Beekman Street
845 4400100 FAX 845 4400092
WEB
Yvonne Rainer
dal 21/10/2011 al 22/10/2011
1pm-3pm

Segnalato da

Nicki Sebastian


approfondimenti

Yvonne Rainer



 
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21/10/2011

Yvonne Rainer

Dia:Beacon, Beacon

Performance Series. Dia's retrospective celebrates the depth of Rainer's contributions to dance and features her earliest works of choreography from the 1960s - including both iconic and lesser-known pieces - and three compositions created within the last twelve years.


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New York, NY—Dia Art Foundation is pleased to present dance works by renowned avant-garde choreographer and filmmaker Yvonne Rainer at Dia:Beacon, Riggio Galleries, in Beacon, New York. Dia’s retrospective will celebrate the depth of Rainer’s contributions to dance and will feature her earliest works of choreography from the 1960s—including both iconic and lesser-known pieces—and three compositions created within the last twelve years. Three distinct programs will be presented over weekends in October, 2011, and February and May, 2012, and tickets for performances on Saturday, October 22, and Sunday, October 23, 2011, at 1 pm and 3 pm will go on sale August 25 for Dia members and September 10 for the public.

As co-founding member of the Judson Dance Theater group, Yvonne Rainer produced groundbreaking works that echoed ideas of time, space, and seriality that were being explored in the field of visual art at the time. Throughout the 1960s, Rainer and the other Judson choreographers—including Trisha Brown, Lucinda Childs, and Steven Paxton, among others—developed a new vocabulary for dance that built upon nonexpressive techniques and chance procedures, while also incorporating task-oriented movements that brought attention to the physicality of the body.

The Yvonne Rainer retrospective at Dia:Beacon will highlight key works from this period, including the seminal piece, Trio A (1966); her first dance work, Three Satie Spoons (1961); and rarely seen performances such as Three Seascapes (1962), We Shall Run (1963), and Chair/Pillow, an excerpt from Continuous Project—Altered Daily (1969). Each program will also feature a recent composition by Rainer who returned to choreography in 2000 after a nearly 30-year hiatus from dance. Trio A: Pressured with 5 people (forward, retrograde, facing, in the midnight hour) (1999–2011), Spiraling Down (2008), and Assisted Living: Good Sports 2 (2011) will be performed over the course of the year.

Yvonne Rainer demonstrates Dia’s ongoing commitment to presenting experimental performance and dance at Dia:Beacon through commissions and retrospectives of historical works. Previous presentations include Robert Whitman’s Prune Flat and Light Touch (2003); Joan Jonas’s The Shape, the Scent, the Feel of Things (2005–2006); Merce Cunningham Dance Company Beacon Events (2007–2009); Trisha Brown Dance Company (2009–2010); and most recently Robert Whitman’s Passport and MoonRain (both 2011).

PROGRAM SCHEDULE:

Saturday, October 22, 2011
Sunday, October 23, 2011
1 pm, 3 pm

Three Seascapes (1962)
Three Satie Spoons (1961)
Trio A: Pressured with 5 people (forward, retrograde, facing, in the midnight hour) (1999–2011)
Chair/Pillow (1969)

Saturday, February 25, 2012
Sunday, February 26, 2012
12 pm, 2 pm

Three Seascapes (1962)
Spiraling Down (2008)
Three Satie Spoons (1961)

Saturday, May 12, 2012
1 pm, 3 pm

We Shall Run (1963)
Trio A (1966)
Assisted Living: Good Sports 2 (2011)
Chair/Pillow (1969)

FUNDING
This program is made possible by Dia’s Commissioning Committee: Jill and Peter Kraus, Leslie and Mac McQuown, and Liz Gerring Radke and Kirk August Radke.

YVONNE RAINER
Yvonne Rainer was born in San Francisco in 1934. She trained as a dancer in New York at the Martha Graham Dance School and the Merce Cunningham Dance Company and began to choreograph in 1960. She was a founding member of the Judson Dance Theater, a movement that began in 1962 and proved to be a vital force in redefining dance for the following decades. Starting in 1968, Rainer began to integrate short films into her live performances and, by 1975, had made a complete transition to filmmaking. She has since completed seven experimental feature films, and, in 1997, retrospectives of Rainer’s films were held at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York City.
In 2000, Rainer returned to dance with a commission by the Baryshnikov Dance Foundation for the White Oak Dance Project titled, After Many a Summer Dies the Swan (2000). Most recently, she choreographed AG Indexical, with a Little Help from H.M. (2006), a reinterpretation of George Balanchine's Agon; RoS Indexical (2007), after Vaslav Nijinsky’s Rite of Spring; and Spiraling Down (2008), a meditation on soccer, aging, and war. In 2010, Yvonne Rainer: Dance and Film, the first major European survey of Rainer’s work was presented at the Tramway in Glasgow, Scotland. A premiere collection of Yvonne Rainer’s poetry, Poems is newly released by Badlands Unlimited (2011).
Rainer is the recipient of numerous awards, including two Guggenheim Fellowships (1969, 1988), three Rockefeller Fellowships (1988, 1990, and 1996), a MacArthur Fellowship (1990–95), and a Wexner Prize (1995). She currently lives and works in California and New York.

DIA ART FOUNDATION
A nonprofit institution founded in 1974, Dia Art Foundation is renowned for initiating, supporting, presenting, and preserving art projects. Dia:Beacon, Riggio Galleries, opened in May 2003 as the home for Dia’s distinguished collection of art from the 1960s to the present, and features major installations of works by artists including Joseph Beuys, Louise Bourgeois, John Chamberlain, Walter De Maria, Dan Flavin, Michael Heizer, Donald Judd, On Kawara, Imi Knoebel, Sol LeWitt, Agnes Martin, Bruce Nauman, Gerhard Richter, Robert Ryman, Fred Sandback, Richard Serra, Robert Smithson, and Lawrence Weiner. Alongside the collection, special exhibitions, commissions, and diverse public and education programs take place at Dia:Beacon throughout the year. Dia also maintains long-term, site-specific projects across New York State, in New Mexico, and in Utah, and is developing a new exhibition facility in Manhattan’s West Chelsea neighborhood.

Image: Yvonne Rainer, "Trio A," 1973. Performed as part of "This is the story of a woman who…," Theater for the New City, New York, 1973. Performers: John Erdman and Yvonne Rainer. Photo: © Babette Mangolte (All Rights of Reproduction Reserved). Courtesy of Broadway 1602, New York.

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Nicki Sebastian at:
T: 212.293.5518
F: 212.989.4055
nsebastian@diaart.org

Dia:Beacon
Riggio Galleries, 3 Beekman Street - Beacon
Saturday and Sunday 1 pm, 3 pm
Tickets are $35 general, $28 for students and seniors, and $24.50 for Dia members

IN ARCHIVIO [8]
Franz Erhard Walther
dal 1/10/2011 al 12/2/2012

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