From saliq at wiremonkeydance.com Fri Oct 5 00:00:51 2007 From: saliq at wiremonkeydance.com (Saliq Francis Savage) Date: Thu, 04 Oct 2007 18:00:51 -0400 Subject: [CI-Announce] Message-ID: Customer care billing dept Vonage 23 Main St Holmdel NJ 07733 From saliq at wiremonkeydance.com Mon Oct 8 02:42:16 2007 From: saliq at wiremonkeydance.com (Saliq Francis Savage) Date: Sun, 07 Oct 2007 20:42:16 -0400 Subject: [CI-Announce] Wire Monkey Dance Fall Season 07 "OPEN SECRET" opens next weekend In-Reply-To: Message-ID: Hello friends! Please pass this info on and come see the show! And sorry for that mistaken email sent last week. Saliq WIRE MONKEY DANCE premieres OPEN SECRET A MULTI-MEDIA DANCE EVENT ON SCAFFOLDING ??beautifully conceived, vividly imaginative, and superbly performed?riveting and viscerally thrilling.? The Boston Globe 3 WEEKENDS OF SHOWS OCT 12-14, OCT 19-20*, OCT 26-28 FRIDAYS, SATURDAYS 8 pm, SUNDAYS 2 pm *Additional matinee Saturday Oct 20, 2 pm TREE STUDIO, 108 CABOT ST, HOLYOKE, MA TICKETS: $17/ $12 students Reservations: 800 224 6432, www.wiremonkeydance.com OPEN SECRET is 90 minutes of riveting dance, original music, and videography that investigates interdependency, vulnerability, and intimacy. OPEN SECRET premieres for a eight-day run as part of MIFA FALL FESTIVAL 07. The work focuses on finding the extraordinary in the ordinary. Using normal steel scaffolding and platforms, the company?s powerful acrobatic dancers create a distinctive and compelling world ? swinging, leaping and flying through sets that transform from traveling minstrel stages to monster trucks to habitats and more. With directors: Saliq Francis Savage and Jennifer Polins composer/musician Stephen Katz videographer Yoann Trellu dancers: Katie Aylward, Ione Beauchamp, Ariel Cohen, Milena Dabova, Nicole Dagesse, Saliq Francis Savage, Will Savitri, Joe Seitz, Whitney Tucker, , Lizzy Tyler Sponsored in part by a grant from the Holyoke Arts Council To be removed from this list email mailto:saliq at wiremonkeydance.com with REMOVE as the subject -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/ci-announce/attachments/20071007/dbe8c610/attachment-0001.htm -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: image/jpeg Size: 32964 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://mail.python.org/pipermail/ci-announce/attachments/20071007/dbe8c610/attachment-0001.jpeg From scottbwells at hotmail.com Mon Oct 15 10:50:35 2007 From: scottbwells at hotmail.com (scott wells) Date: Mon, 15 Oct 2007 08:50:35 +0000 Subject: [CI-Announce] BMC and CI in San Francisco, December 13-22 Message-ID: Dear Friends, Cathie Caraker and I are teaching a ten day intensive on Body Mind Centering and Contact Improvisation. I have found that BMC and particularly Cathie's approach to it uniquely alters my body and movement experience. And I have wanted more affordable opportunities to study BMC and the other somatic wonders that are generally more expensive than contact/dance workshops. Drumroll.....so at $375 10 days it's a good deal, but we want to get the ball rolling with early registrations so, we've made a 1/3 off discount: $250. (To receive discount send your deposit of $75 postmarked on or before November 1. Check payable to Scott Wells mail to 1805 divisadero, SF 94115 Attention Winter Intensive) Space is limitied, so the earlier the better. Please email me at scottbwells at hotmail.com so I can keep track. THE INTENSIVE Body-Mind Centering?, Contact Improvisation and Performance Research December 13 -22 Experiential, Technical, Somatic and Acrobatic For experienced dancers and contactors. A 10 day intensive with Cathie Caraker and Scott Wells At Danceground Keriac; 1805 Divisadero, San Francisco SCHEDULE: December 13, 14 (Thursday, Friday) 7:30-10pm Dec. 15-18 (Sat ? Tuesday) 10am - 5pm Dec 20, 21 7:30- 10pm December 22 3pm-10pm (Performance/party) Cost: $375 (priced for artists) Pre-registration ($75) recommended Check payable to Scott Wells Mail to 1805 Divisdadero ScottWellsdance.com Caraker.com BODY-MIND CENTERING? WITH CATHIE CARAKER Body-Mind Centering? (BMC) is an innovative approach to movement reeducation developed by dancer and occupational therapist Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen. Integrating anatomical, psychological and developmental principles, the work leads to an understanding of how the mind is expressed through the body in movement. BMC offers an experiential approach to learning about our living anatomy, as well as a method of movement analysis which can be useful in the creative process. In this workshop we will use the BMC work as a lens through which we investigate our creative resources as movers. We will study each of the major body systems (skeleton, muscles, organs, fluids, nerves and endocrine glands), experiencing their structures, functions and individual expressive qualities through intentional touch and improvisation. We?ll also explore the developmental movement process, which underlies all our movement expression. Reintegrating these fundamental patterns and principles helps to increase our clarity and coordinaton as movers, allowing us longer and healthier dancing lives. This workshop is highly recommended for dancers, actors, movement therapists and others who work with movement. CONTACT IMPROV WITH SCOTT WELLS CI into Performance Jam We take one element (yes, we'll learn some flying and fluid acrobatics) work it inside out, practice integrating it into jamming then use it for performance experiments. Performance research: 1) We start with our own body. Sensing self, desires, body awareness. 2) We expand our awareness to partners ( contact improvisation). 3) We expand our awareness to watchers (or audience). We connect to their experience. This is improvisational performance. To connect to the audience, we must also practice being an audience. BIOS Cathie Caraker is an international dance performer, choreographer and teacher. A certified practitioner of Body-Mind Centering? (BMC) since 1992, she also holds an MFA in Dance from Bennington College and is an instructor of the Pilates Method of movement reeducation. Her teaching work investigates the experiential anatomy of the body and its innate states of movement and mind, applying this study to dance training, somatic movement reeducation, Contact Improvisation and creative sourcework. Her solo performance work has been presented in NYC by Dance Theater Workshop, Danspace at St. Mark's Church, Movement Research at the Judson Church, University Settlement House and the New York Improvisation Festival, and elsewhere in the US, Canada, Europe and South America. Her collaborations with numerous artists have included works with Daniel Lepkoff, Felice Wolfzahn, David Beadle and Gonnie Heggen. Cathie has been a guest artist at numerous institutions internationally, including the Holborn Centre and Chisenhale Dance Space in London, Bewegungs-Art Freiburg, Tanzfabriek Berlin, Brown University, University of Rochester, Amherst, Mt. Holyoke and Middlebury Colleges, Omega Institute and Movement Research in NYC, Moving On Center in San Francisco and USINA in Brasilia, Brazil. She is currently on the faculty of the School for New Dance Development in Amsterdam. Scott Wells discovered the pleasure of contact improvisation in 1981 shortly after becoming obseessed with the struggles of modern dance. He stuck with both and currently directs a company in San Francisco. Scott has trained extensively in contemporary dance and the Alexander technique. and has an MFA in dance. In 2005 Scott received an Isadora Duncan Award for Outstanding Choreography and was selected by Dance Magazine as "One of 25 to Watch in 2005". This year he is teaching in Graz,Transylvania, Romania, Amsterdam, Budapest, Croatia and Germany. Scott?s style of contact is athletic and emphasizes freedom of movement, flying, fluid acrobatics (easy to advanced), safety, precision, pleasure and technique. What students often like best in Scott's classes is the variance between the meditative, listening, slow and sensual dancing and the daring, playful, very physical dancing. And students appreciate how the scary or advanced moves are safe, relaxed and made possible. "Wells has become over the last fifteen years the Paul Taylor of Contact Improv - that is, the first to make dances in this idiom that are deeply musical, somehow "normal," imaginative, witty, often hilarious, sometimes fierce, but always respectful enough of the concerns of the general public so that the audience in Peoria would feel they had something at heart in common. In Wells's case, perhaps as in Taylor's, it's rooted in a profound need to reconcile deep oppositions, softened and lightened by a Zen attitude towards the impossibility of it. For Wells, it looks like to me (and I follow Wells as some movie-goers followed Kieslowski) these oppositions are between art and athleticism, the masculine and the feminine, the almost disembodied breath of music and the deeply muscular nature of movement, and the aggressive and the passive modes of being." --Paul Parrish, Dance View Times