BANDAGE A KNIFE Nov. 13-22

THE FOLLOWING EVENTS take place at
Performance Works NW
| 4625 SE 67th Ave. | Portland, OR 97206
Tri Met #14 & #17 [map it!]

For PHONE RESERVATIONS call 503 777 1907
For ADVANCE TICKETS
click here
To DONATE TO PWNW
click here

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COMING SOON to PERFORMANCE WORKS NW

LINDA AUSTIN DANCE + SETH NEHIL
Nov. 13-22 BANDAGE A KNIFE

ALEMBIC SERIES OF ARTIST CURATED EVENTS

Dec. 4-5 ALEMBIC #5: The Third Side
Rebecca Davis (NYC) & Sreshta Rit Premnath
Curated by Bethany Ides

Dec. 5 – DYNAMIC POSTURE: a Feldenkrais Workshop
led by visiting artist Rebecca Davis

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Nov. 13-22
BANDAGE A KNIFE – Linda Austin Dance + Seth Nehil

wonderful Neighborhood Notes story here
–check out the preview in Willamette Week here
–and Portland Monthly’s recommendation here

postcard_front1w
Collaboration between choreographer Linda Austin & sound and video artist Seth Nehil

Performers: Linda Austin, Anne Furfey, Bonnie Green, Rebecca Harrison, Kaj-anne Pepper, and Lucy Yim

This evening-length theatrical performance, based on a “forgetting” of Seijun Suzuki’s 1967 cult classic movie Koroshi no Rakuin (Branded to Kill), will incorporate dance movement, projected image, live and recorded sound. Austin’s distinctive choreography is matched with Nehil’s evocative musique concrete, creating a place where the grotesque and the whimsical slide into each other, overlap and become confused.

Seating limited to 26 people—reservations or advance tickets required!

Call 503-777-1907 or visit http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/80237
$10-$15 sliding scale

PerformancesRACC-VlogoBW

FRI Nov 13, 7pm & 9pm
SAT Nov 14, 7pm & 9pm
SUN Nov 15, 7pm

THU Nov 19, 7pm
FRI Nov 20, 7pm & 9pm
SAT Nov 21, 7pm & 9pm
SUN Nov 22, 7pm

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ALEMBIC SERIES OF GUEST CURATED EVENTS

Dec. 4-5 @ 8pm
Alembic #5: The Third Side

Guest Curator: Bethany Ides
Tickets $10-15 sliding scale

THE THIRD SIDE
~ studies in radical nostalgia ~

Rebecca Davis (dance)
*premiere: solo adaptation of Deborah Hay’s “I’ll Crane For You”

Sreshta Rit Premnath (sound)
Ben Asriel (movement)
Jaime Lee Christiana (voice)
Emma Lipp (dissimulation)
Alicia McDaid (memorization)
Kaya Oneida (constellation, unearthed)

THE THIRD SIDE of the tape occurs when the magnetic tape is twisted from exhaustion and outstrips its memory.

This program collects interpretations in dance, theater and sound — each internalized and processed before reemerging and taking new form. Rebecca Davis, a choreographer and installation artist based in New York, will premier “I’ll Crane for You,” the result of her participation in Deborah Hay’s 2008 Solo Commissioning Project. Interdisciplinary artist and independent researcher, Sreshta Rit Premnath (NYC) spearheads an assembly of local performers in dynamically rehashing a playlist of sappy 70’s folk songs that once filled the halls of his now-demolished art school.

If you’ve ever wondered what to call the place between recalling and foretelling, imagined yourself and your cohorts starring in a “flashback” episode from the sitcom of your lives, or pressed “play” in order to reconceive an emotional terrain now in ruins, you’ve been dialing The Third Side. The phone is ringing again. It’s for you.

Rebecca Davis makes movement and objects. Her work has been presented at Danspace Project, The Chocolate Factory, Linfield Art Gallery, The Old American Can Factory, and PS 122. She has performed in the work of Ursula Eagly, Juliette Mapp, RoseAnne Spradlin, Ansley Vandenbroucke, and Christopher Williams. She founded and curated the Dance Forum series at the Brooklyn Museum from 2001-2006. Davis is the Director of Education and Outreach at Trisha Brown Dance Company, where she has worked since 2002. She currently dances with Kathy Westwater and will be performing at MOMA in Spring 2010 in the Marina Abramovič retrospective.

Sreshta Rit Premnath lives and works in New York City. He is the founder and editor of the magazine Shifter. He received his BFA from The Cleveland Institute of Art, his MFA from The Milton Avery Graduate School of Fine Art at Bard College, was a 2008 studio fellow at The Whitney Independent Study Program and attended Skowhegan in 2009.

His work has been shown at Gallery SKE, in Bangalore (India), Rotunda Gallery, Art in General, Bose Pacia Gallery and Thomas Erben Gallery in New York City.

He is engaged with forms of interrogation and representation. Often using strategies of negation, erasure, fracture, displacement and disembodiment, his work explores spaces of subjectivity and slippage – those liminal spaces of language where meaning and representation, memory and history, split. Installations, writings, and a topical magazine, Shifter, amongst other things have emerged from this practice.

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Dec. 5 – DYNAMIC POSTURE: a Feldenkrais Workshop
led by visiting artist Rebecca Davis
11 am-12:30 pm @ PWNW
$20

In this one-day workshop, Rebecca Davis will share a Feldenkrais Method Awareness Through Movement® lesson designed to help students find more mobility and length in the spine.

Rebecca Davis is a Guild Certified Feldenkrais PractitionerCM and a Choreographer/Performer based in New York City. (see bio above).

The Feldenkrais Method is a physical practice that offers a direct and effective means for healing pain, while also improving posture, flexibility and coordination. Over time, we each adopt physical and psychological habits, often constraining us to a small portion of our movement potential, and creating unnecessary physical limitations, injury, or chronic pain. The Feldenkrais Method is practiced in two complimentary and versatile formats: Awareness Through Movement® and Functional Integration®.

Awareness Through Movement® is typically done in a group class and combines verbal instruction and gentle, purposeful movement to clarify the relationship between parts of the body and the whole. Students learn efficient use of the skeleton and how to reduce unnecessary tension and muscular effort. Classes are non-competitive and students move according to their own comfort level and progress at their own rate. The emphasis is on sensory learning. The lessons are of benefit to everyone wishing to move with greater comfort and ease.


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