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Aqueous
Myth
The
Contributing Artists
The
Creative Process
The
Final Product
The
World Premiere
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Where:
Nancy Smith Fichter Dance Theatre
Montgomery Hall – Florida State University Campus
Tallahassee, FL
When: September 16 & 17, 2005 @ 8PM
Tickets: FSU
Fine Arts Ticket Office
850.644.6500 or 800.757.2146
$16 adults, $14 Seniors, $12 Children, $12 Non-FSU Students, $10 FSU Students
Maps: FSU
Campus, Montgomery
Hall Area, Directions
The Department of Dance
at Florida State University joins forces with local, national, and
international artists to proudly present the world premiere of Aqueous
Myth: Tales of a Water Planet, a full evening of modern dance performed
in a media-enhanced environment of projected video and surround sound.
The Nancy Smith Fichter Dance Theatre located inside the newly retrofitted
Montgomery Hall on the FSU campus will house the event. Performances are
scheduled for 2 nights only, September 16 and 17 at 8PM.
A work in the planning for a number of years, Director of Aqueous
Myth and FSU Assistant Professor of Dance, Tim
Glenn, has at last realized his vision, that of creating an evening-length
“techno ballet”, complete with 8 pre-edited video projection
sources and 2 real-time videographers on stage. The production stylistically
borrows from the film genre, blurring the boundaries of cinema and concert
dance, and results in a sophisticated new work of multimedia dance theater.
Glenn says, “A small, personal project, initially inspired by the
university’s plan to demolish the historic Montgomery Gym swimming
pool at FSU, has, within a 3.5 year period, evolved into global voyage
exploring past and future experiences with water.” Aqueous Myth
was selected by the Maggie
Allesee National Center for Choreography at FSU as a testing ground
for technology applications. If you enjoy either dance, video, music,
theater, and/or the visual arts, then this concert is for you. Read on.
Twenty-seven consecutive vignettes, including 18 dances, have been combined
to create a seamless experience drenched in water-related imagery. Glenn’s
opening dance, Voyage, was inspired by the 1953 choreography
Aqueouscape choreographed by modern dance pioneer Alwin
Nikolais. Choreographer Murray
Louis, a member of the original cast of Aqueouscape, coached
the FSU dancers drawing from his memory of the work. Variety and contrast
are created throughout the concert with sections such as Anemones,
Storm, Jellyfish, Waterbirds, Rain,
and Vapor. In Drip, blue buckets glide diagonally toward
the stage from above the audience. These buckets are strategically placed
to collect droplets of real water falling from a plumbing network above
the stage. Later, with water collected, Splash, references a playful afternoon
in FSU’s historic Landis Fountain. Ice and Vapor
follow. Imagine.
Joining Glenn in the production of Aqueous Myth is a long list
of contributing artists, designers, and technologists. Among them, choreographer
Karen Bell,
Dean of the College of the Arts at Ohio State University, will perform
a series of solos addressing typical uses of water encountered by the
domestic housewife. Carol Burnett, put your mop and bucket aside! Other
featured choreographers include: Alberto
del Saz (Nikolais Dance Theatre), Wallie
Wolfgruber (SUNY Brockport), Anthony
Morgan and Rick
McCullough (FSU), and Lindsay
Meeks (FSU graduate).
Dance technology specialist Kelly
Gottesman will collaborate with Glenn on projection technologies during
2 residencies at FSU. Gottesman will share his expertise in telematic
performance as he assists documentation and broadcast director Marc Ray.
Great care has gone into the Aqueous Myth soundtrack, a component
of the project that tested the technological limits of the Music
Resource Center in the FSU Department of Dance. Twenty-one original
scores will be premiered, creating the aural landscapes to which the dancers
will perform. The theater has been surround sound enabled to support a
number of spatial sound compositions composed for this production. Composers
contributing works specifically for Aqueous Myth include: Tim Glenn, Jeffrey
Rolf, Michael
Strickland, Dr.
Mark Wingate (recent Guggenheim Fellow and FSU School of Music Professor),
and Rob
Eisenberg, who composed the themes for Aqueous Myth.
Giacomo
Battarino, renowned Italian pianist, will perform three scores, including
his original composition for Storm. He will also perform work by Franz
Schubert, and an original arrangement of Rachmaninov’s Andante
from Piano Concerto no. 1 in F-sharp Minor, which he created
for two hands. Battarino, acclaimed by Corriere della Sera for his “striking
maturity”, brings an added layer of artistry and passion to the
premiere of Aqueous Myth.
There will also be no shortage of talent on the stage. Fifty-two dancers
will perform within the 1.5 hour uninterrupted production. The finale
is a must see, as all 52 performers are synchronized as an ocean of partnered
bodies manipulating 9-foot poles and ropes that recall images from the
opening Voyage duets.
The visual metaphor of the set design is one of a nautical vessel, venturing
through memory of a once-existent water planet. To facilitate this journey,
Glenn has designed and ever-changing, dimensional canvas onto which pre-edited
and live-feed video is used as moving light. The total theater nature
of this production illustrates the influence of Glenn’s former mentor,
Alwin Nikolais. Like the work of Nikolais, Aqueous Myth is the
result of collective effect, gestalt. A variety of media elements are
to be joined by costume designs by Ann Todd, designer for the Tallahassee
Ballet, and theatrical lighting by FSU Professor Russell
Sandifer. Also, Glenn, in collaboration with writing consultant Brandy
T. Wilson, has composed a poetic interpretation of the project, which
will be presented during a reading following the Sept. 16 performance.
Aqueous Myth will be broadcast live on Internet2.
Contact:
Joyce Straub, MANCC Special Projects Coordinator
850.645.2449 (phone), 850.644.1277 (fax)
jbstraub@fsu.edu
Directions:
FROM THE AIRPORT: Leaving the airport, turn left onto Capital Circle.
Drive 2.3 miles to the T-intersection of Capital Cir. and Orange Ave.
and turn left again. (You are still on Capital Cir. after you turn left.)
Drive 1.1mi. to Hwy. 20 (Pensacola St.) and turn right. Take Pensacola
St. east and turn left on Woodward. Limited metered parking may be found
by turning to the left on Park Ave., or you will see a parking garage
on the right at the intersection of Woodward and Park.
TRAVELING EAST ON HIGHWAY 20 OR 366 (PENSACOLA STREET): Take Pensacola
St. three miles east of Capital Cir. (263) and turn left onto Woodard.
Limited metered parking may be found by turning to the left on Park Ave.,
or you will see a parking garage on the right at the intersection of Woodward
and Park.
TRAVELING EAST ON INTERSTATE 10: Take Exit 27, which will put you on US
Hwy.90. Continue driving east 4.4 mi. on Hwy. 90. Turn right onto Capital
Cir. (263), drive 1.7 mi. south to US Hwy. 20 (Pensacola St.), and turn
left. Take Pensacola St. east to Woodard and turn left. Limited metered
parking may be found by turning to the left on Park Ave., or you will
see a parking garage on the right at the intersection of Woodward and
Park.
TRAVELING WEST ON INTERSTATE 10 (From 75 North): Take Exit 29, which will
put you on US Highway 27 (North Monroe Street). Turn left.
Go south on Hwy. 27 for about 5 miles and turn right on College Avenue.
Take College Ave. west for about 6 blocks until it ends at Copeland Street
and turn left. Drive two blocks south on Copeland St. and turn right
on Pensacola Street. Follow Pensacola to Woodard and turn right.
Limited metered parking may be found by turning to the left on Park Ave.,
or you will see a parking garage on the right at the intersection of Woodward
and Park.
TRAVELING SOUTH ON HIGHWAY 319 (THOMASVILLE ROAD): After you cross I-10,
stay on Thomasville Road for about 4 mi. until it merges into Monroe St.
(US 27). Continue south about 6 blocks to College Avenue and turn right.
Take College Ave. west for about 6 blocks until it ends at Copeland Street
and turn left. Drive two blocks south on Copeland St. and turn right
on Pensacola Street. Drive about 5 blocks to Woodward and
turn right. Limited metered parking may be found by turning to the left
on Park Ave., or you will see a parking garage on the right at the intersection
of Woodward and Park.
TRAVELING WEST/NORTH ON US HIGHWAY 27 (APALACHEE PARKWAY): Apalachee Parkway
ends at the Capital Building. Turn right there onto Monroe St. and get
into the left lane immediately. Turn left onto Jefferson St. Follow Jefferson
around to the left, between the Capital Building and City Hall, where
it becomes Pensacola St. Follow Pensacola to Woodward and turn right.
Limited metered parking may be found by turning to the left on Park Ave.,
or you will see a parking garage on the right at the intersection of Woodward
and Park.
TRAVELING SOUTH ON US HIGHWAY 27 (NORTH MONROE STREET): About 5 mi. south
of I-10, turn right on College Avenue. Take College Ave. west for
about 6 blocks until it ends at Copeland Street and turn left. Drive
two blocks south on Copeland St. and turn right on Pensacola Street.
Drive about 3 long blocks and turn right on Woodward. Limited metered
parking may be found by turning to the left on Park Ave., or you will
see a parking garage on the right at the intersection of Woodward and
Park.
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