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Washington University in St. Louis

December 5, 2003
Vol. 28, No. 16

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December 5, 2003 > Student dance performances at Edison Dec. 5-7

Student dance performances at Edison Dec. 5-7

By Liam Otten

Washington University Dance Theatre (WUDT), the annual showcase of professionally choreographed works performed by student dancers, will present a concert called dance@stl.art in Edison Theatre.

Performances will begin at 8 p.m. Dec. 5-6 and at 2 p.m. Dec. 7.

ragtimedance
Photo by David Kilper
Student dancers Alessandra Larson and Jun Cai will perform Christine Knoblauch-O'Neal's Joplin's Ragtime Rolls as part of Washington University Dance Theatre, an annual showcase -- this year titled dance@stl.art Dec. 5-7 in Edison Theatre -- of professionally choreographed works.

Thirty-eight dancers selected by audition will perform seven works by faculty and guest choreographers. Cecil Slaughter, artist-in-residence and director of WUDT, noted that dance@stl.art will celebrate the richness and variety of St. Louis arts and culture.

"This is arts and culture in motion," Slaughter said. "Dance@stl.art pays homage to dance, music and visual art by St. Louis artists both past and present. At the same time, it also embodies — through its sheer diversity of forms and styles — the amazing artistic and creative diversity that resides here."

Slaughter's own contribution, Miles In Between, is inspired by the life and music of jazz great Miles Davis, an East St. Louis native. The piece for 10 dancers also features imagery by St. Louis artist Riccardo Hayes.

"Miles in Between is not a literal interpretation of Davis' music," Slaughter said, "but an impetus for the dancers to celebrate the energy and moods that went into the creation of the music itself."

Similarly, Joplin's Ragtime Rolls — a work for six dancers by Christine Knoblauch-O'Neal, senior artist-in-residence and director of the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences' Ballet Program — is inspired by the music of ragtime pioneer Scott Joplin and a strong sense of local history.

"The work is set in any of the pavilions or grassy areas in Forest Park just following the St. Louis World's Fair" in 1904, Knoblauch-O'Neal said. "The choreography blends both classical ballet and ragtime ballroom dances such as the tango, the waltz and the castle walk."

narasimha
Photo by David Kilper
Students perform Asha Prem's Narasimha, part of danc@stl.art, a showcase of professionally choreographed works Dec. 5-7 in Edison Theatre.

Other works on the program give testimony to the breadth of contemporary St. Louis dance.

Mary-Jean Cowell, coordinator of the Dance Program, choreographed On Location IV: Per-spective(s), the latest in a series of modern pieces exploring "the effect of the moving figure in relationship to specific spatial configurations." The work for 15 dancers also features visual projections of videographer Susan Volkan, adjunct faculty member in the PAD.

Adjunct faculty member Asha Prem, founder of the company Dances of India, choreographed Narasimha, an expressive, rhythmic piece for five dancers dedicated to the titular half-man, half-lion incarnation of the Hindu deity Vishnu. The work reflects the angular, Bharatha Natyam style of Indian classical dance, characterized by tight coordination of footwork with hand and eye movements.

David W. Marchant, senior artist-in-residence, will offer an untitled work for 10 dancers that explores "our increasingly distant, technological communication media" and the meaningfulness of touch as expression and interpersonal communication.

dance@stl.art

Who: 38 student dancers selected by audition

What: Washington University Dance Theatre, the annual showcase of professionally choreographed works

Where: Edison Theatre

When: 8 p.m. Dec. 5-6; 2 p.m. Dec. 7

Tickets: $12, $8 for students and senior citizens; available through the Edison Theatre Box Office, 935-6543, and all MetroTix outlets

"Human touch is a basic human need, vital to our health and relationships with others," Marchant said. "Where words fail us, the depth of direct, physical contact is the most simple and profound way to reach one another."

In addition to faculty choreographers, WUDT will feature works set by two fall visiting artists. New York's Carlos Fittante, a celebrated performer of both Baroque and Balinese dance, choreographed a series of eight Baroque dances, set to selections from Jean Phillippe Rameau's opera Les Indes Galantes.

And St. Louis' own Jennifer Medina — a young dancer/choreographer teaching at Webster University — will offer Arcadia, a work for 10 dancers inspired by Nicholas Poussin's painting Et en Arcadia Ego.

Tickets are $12, $8 for WUSTL faculty, staff and students and senior citizens, and are available through the Edison Theatre Box Office, 935-6543, and all MetroTix outlets. The concert is sponsored by the Dance Program and the PAD.



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