Photo by Lorna Sim |
LESS
– Australian Dance Party at LESS Pavilion, Canberra. March 4th , 5th ,
10th , 11th and 12th. Enlighten Festival; The BOLD Festival.
Reviewed by Frank McKone
March 12
Directed by Alison Plevey in collaboration with dancers Ryan Stone, Ashlee Bye, Levente Szabo, Jake Silvestro and Patricia Hayes-Cavanagh.
Sound design by Alex Voorhoeve with live instrumentation by Liam Budge (vocals) and John Mackey (sax).
Lighting Design by Dynamic AV.
Costume Design by Aislinn King.
Though
I am old and no longer anywhere near as bold as so many of the workshop
participants and performers in Liz Lea’s week-long BOLD Festival, I
will boldly write that there definitely should be more of LESS.
For
those old enough to remember Graham Jones’ Kinetic Energy Dance
Company, in its early days in the 1970s, when his company “became famous
for its site-specific events for tertiary institutions, in cafeterias,
libraries, quadrangles etc.”, Australian Dance Party’s very
site-specific exploration of the new sculpture, LESS Pavilion, at the
Dairy Road precinct adjacent to the Jerrabomberra Wetlands has a déjà vu
effect.
Alison Plevey’s style may be rather different from
Graham Jones’, with his Ballet Rambert experience, but the
scene-shifting in response to the different elements of the built
environment is in this tradition. In creating the work, improvisation
on location must surely be central to ADP’s process as it was for
Kinetic Energy’s.
LESS begins with a kind of almost formal
invocation adagio in water, recognising its place underlying the land.
From walking in still water, shallow and almost representing Biblical
walking on water, reactions form – from humour to intense dislike and
even fear – to the splashing nature of the medium, as well as
recognition of our need for life-giving water. Accompanied by a miked
amplified voice – musical at first through to all kinds of mouth noises –
seemingly improvised live, the dance of life spreads into the structure
of the LESS Pavilion at ground level until there is excitement running
up around the circular ramp into the upper level among the ever-rising
pillars.
A point is reached when it seems that all possible
moods and responses in movement have been explored – and quietness and
stillness reign again. And our applause becomes our response.
Photos: Frank McKone, taken during the performance by phone along with many other audience members.
ADP's LESS on water 1 |
ADP's LESS on water 2 |
ADP's LESS on built structure - lower level |
ADP's LESS on built structure - upper level |
“Commissioned by Molonglo Group from Chilean architects Pezo von Ellrichshausen (Mauricio Pezo and Sofia Von Ellrichshausen),
the LESS Pavilion pays homage to Canberra’s brutalist architectural
roots as well as the feel of ancient temples and structures.” The dance
and sound effects in its times of frustration and fear certainly felt
brutalist but perhaps the message for us Canberrans is to learn to
accept the contrasting elements of lived reality even when things seem
to be the same-old same-old. The interest lay in the moments of change
and the appearance of the unexpected.
Australian Dance Party’s LESS,
then, is an interesting work in the tradition of site-specific modern
dance. The water provided reflection both in reality and of the spirit
of the place. The Pavilion as a sculpture – as Alison Plevey said, with
no intended purpose – was given a purpose by providing the place and
the spaces for the art of dance, surrounded by the recorded soundscape
by Alex Voorhoeve, and led emotionally by Liam Budge (vocals) and John
Mackey (sax).
The result was more a kind of meditation on the
nature of things – natural and built – rather than a narrative in the
ordinary sense. Interesting indeed.
See: http://www.kineticenergytheatre.org/history
https://australiandance.party/the-party/
© Frank McKone, Canberra
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