Tag Archive | "dixon place"

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Andy’s Weekend Round-Up

Posted on 02 May 2011 by Andy Horwitz

So this weekend was pretty busy – maybe we passed each other like ships in the night.

It actually started on Thursday with a viewing of The Anthropologists‘ “Another Place” at HERE. The show was really more of a work-in-progress so it is not really appropriate to review. They’re a promising young company and the show had an interesting premise – a woman scientist discovers how to create new universes by collapsing black holes. It got kind of hard to follow at times but the energetic cast managed to keep things entertaining. I’m curious to see where this project goes.

Friday night I went to Dixon Place for “Balkan Express” an evening of three works from Balkan artists. The Bulgarian performance artist Ivo Dimchev (now living in Brussels) kicked things off with his work “Som Faves.” In this piece he uses the same kind of free-associative madness that was on display in “Lili Handel” to created a world that is all his own. Flowing from one idea to the next he explores the line between life and art, the difference between choreography and song, blurring the line between the personal and the public. The work is the kind of performance that tends to be categorized as “dance” these days, though there’s very little that resembles traditional dance. Dimchev’s work is reminiscent of Taylor Mac, Justin Bond and Miguel Gutierrez in its artful chaos, its gender-bending queer aesthetic and its joyful rejection of labels. He performed a beautifully deranged version of Kenny Rogers’ “The Gambler” which devolved into barking and grunting. He played a beautiful scene of want and need to a porcelain cat – “why won’t you eat my food!?” that felt urgent and absurd all at the same time. Dimchev is a powerful performer whose stream-of-consciousness style disarms as he lays into your preconceived notions of art and identity and rips them apart. All for ART. Good stuff. I’m not sure when he’ll be back again, but keep your eyes peeled.

Dimchev was followed by a solo from Ursula Eagly, choreographed by Iskra Sukarova and entitled “It”. Sukarova is from Macedonia and the two artists met while working for Yoshiko Chuma. The solo took advantage of Eagly’s uniquely elegant/grotesque movement vocabulary to explore a nameless creature coming to life and stalking the stage. I could watch Ursula do just about anything and this piece, while a little disorganized and unfocused, was fun to watch. Creepy and unnerving and sometimes beautiful, it was a good companion piece to Dimchev.

Next was “I Am Always Watching You” – created by Viktorija Ilioska from Prilep, Macedonia. In this piece five actors sat on the stage staring at the audience. That was basically it – they occasionally whispered to themselves and then started, kind of, once it got uncomfortable, interrogating the audience. At first I was kind of annoyed – it seemed like an old idea not particularly well executed. But as it went on I got kind of into it. This one woman in the audience was really confrontational and bullying and it made everyone uneasy. Gradually the whole endeavor became more uncomfortable and disturbing and it got interesting. It was very antagonistic and off-putting but also fascinating because, for once, you really didn’t know what was going to happen and the safety of the observer/observed contract was violated. I think it would have been cooler if everyone had stayed silent longer and let it get really, really uncomfortable. But overall I give Ilioska credit for exploring this idea and putting it onstage. Its been a while since I saw theater that really, actually messed with you in a confrontational way.

Balkan Express was part of the New Dance Alliance’s Performance Mix Festival.

Saturday afternoon I went to see Immediate Medium‘s “The Assassins Chase Pinocchio” at CSV. This show is a multimedia event for children of all ages reinterpreting Carlo Collodi’s classic tale Pinocchio. Max Dana’s adaptation strips the story of all its Disney-fication, bringing it back to starker folk-tale roots. In this adaptation people die, cats get their paws chewed off and Pinocchio is a lot more mischievous and troublesome.

Since I was at a matinee I saw the show with an audience full of kids and it was pretty crazy. Kids have such short attention spans and they notice things differently than grown-ups. They also have no compunction about talking in the theater, wandering onstage or just generally acting out. It made for a strangely edgy dynamic because I was constantly wondering if the kids were just going to lose it. Mostly, though, the kids seemed into it – though I had some trouble following the story myself. The amplification kind of garbled the dialogue at places and it was hard to understand what the actors were saying. Minor complaint.

The company – Liz Vacco, Siobhan Towey and Lisa Clair – developed the piece with Dana and they wisely found a balance between kid-friendly wackiness and adult-friendly aesthetic choices. Grown-ups can appreciate the shadow-play, the video work, the overall design and the silly/smart jokes. Kids can relate to the goofy over-the-top characterizations and the broad physical humor. There is even a sequence where kids are invited onstage to dance and play, which was really fun to watch. It is kind of like Radiohole for Kids but without the beer and with a more structured narrative.

I’m a sucker for fairy tales and folk tales and I really enjoyed the way Immediate Medium stayed true to the story while using contemporary techniques to tell it. And at the end, when Pinocchio turns into a grown man, it is very poignant and touching. I think we all can relate to how the pressures of adult life change us, no matter how much we want to hold onto our youth. Dana’s physicality changes in subtle but noticeable ways and our shoulders slump along with him as the boy becomes a man.

Since I don’t have kids I don’t know how appropriate everything is, but the audience I was with – adults and kids alike – seemed to enjoy it. Once they got over the initial confusion of trying to find the Disney character.
Cool stuff – go check it out.

Saturday night I went to the Chocolate Factory to see Suzanne Bocanegra’s “When A Priest Marries A Witch” performed by Paul Lazar. This was a really great show and it demonstrates what happens when someone who is primarily a visual artist decides to do performance – but chooses to work with accomplished theater artists. Rather than perform this lec/dem monologue herself, Bocanegra wisely enlisted the help of the incredibly talented and entertaining Paul Lazar. Because he was performing “as” Bocanegra, there was this wonderful layering effect on top of the story. What could have been an awkward and self-indulgent autoperformance because this fascinating art object/performance exploring identity, culture, religion, the role of the artist and much more.

Basically, Lazar tells Bocanegra’s story about an artist that was hired to redesign her childhood Catholic church in a small town in Texas in the late Sixties. The story gives an overview of all the sociopolitical changes that were going on at the time and how the evolution of the artist’s work kept up with those changes – thoroughly alienating the parishioners. At the same time, the church’s priest marries a woman who was reputed to be a witch!!! So it is simultaneously a tale of social upheaval, spiritual upheaval, politics and the dawning artistic consciousness of Bocanegra. Bocanegra’s eye for detail and ability to link together seemingly-disparate story elements is matched by Paul Lazar’s seemingly-rambling delivery to create the illusion of “aw shucks” when actually it is a tightly wound and cleverly articulated story. Really great stuff. If it comes back you should definitely go out of your way to see it.

Sunday night took us to the Incubator for Nerve Tank‘s Opal. The show is described as “an overlapping performance text for five voices that explores memory and role play in a fractured family dynamic.” I’d say that’s pretty accurate. The sound design was great and I liked the set/lighting design as well. The layering of the voices as they explored different scenarios worked well with the pre-recorded audio. I have to admit I had a hard time accessing the show – much of the meaning remained opaque to me. With oblique gestural vocabulary and a kind of “cut-and-paste” approach to the text it seemed appropriate that they were performing in Richard Foreman’s old stomping grounds. Opal definitely reminded me of Foreman’s brand of non-narrative, imagistic theater. The individual performers were all very strong, particularly Brain Barefoot as Mother and that helped a lot.

This was my first exposure to The Nerve Tank – they have another piece coming up at World Financial Center called The Attendants and I’m curious to see how their style translates to an “interactive performance exhibit”.

That was the weekend that was! Keep on rockin’ kids and we’ll see you around town!

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Culturebot’s Weekend Plans: March 11, 2011

Posted on 11 March 2011 by Jeremy M. Barker

Yvonne Rainer's "Assisted Living: Good Sports 2" at BAC.

Jeremy‘s all about the Balkans this weekend, and will be catching Ivo Dimchev tonight and BADco. tomorrow at La Mama. Which sucks, because if he wasn’t already booked he’d be headed out to the Bushwick Starr Saturday, where Catch 44 looks pretty cool, with both Joe Silovsky and Young Jean Lee (with her band Future Wife) showing up. Sunday he has vague plans to catch some friends’ Spider-man spoof Spidermann (respectin’ copyright law peeps!) up at the Tank, and then Monday, he means to catch Little Theater at Dixon Place.

Tonight, Andy‘s at La Mama for Ivo Dimchev, Saturday he’s down at the World Financial Center for New York Classical Theater‘s production of The Rover, and Sunday has no idea what he’ll be doing, if anythin.

Last night, Maura Donohue enjoyed the opening program in “Rhythm & Humor,” David Parker’s portion of the “Body Madness” Platform at Danspace Project. The shared program by Michelle Dorrance and Dormeshia Sumbry-Edwards is sold-out (including tonight’s added 10pm show), but it’s worth getting on the wait list to see these women throw down. Tonight she’ll be at Vanessa Anspaugh’s Studio Series showing (also sold-out) and then watching Bill T. Jones on Real Time with Bill Maher. Tomorrow she’ll be at the Asia Society for Malavika Sarukkai’s Ganga (sold out, too).

Alyssa joins Jeremy on Saturday for Semi-interpretations or How to Explain Contemporary Dance to an Undead Hare, part of the Perforations New York Festival at LaMama. On Tuesday, she’ll make her way to the Baryshnikov Arts Center for a dress rehearsal of Yvonne Rainer’s (underpublicized?) NYC season.

Saturday, Jane will be at El Museo del Barrio in East Harlem for Ping Chong & Company‘s presentation of Secret Survivors, an interview-based theater project in the “Undesirable Elements” series featuring adult survivors of child sexual abuse telling their personal stories on stage.

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Red Bastard’s Farewell Show at Dixon Place

Posted on 26 January 2011 by Andy Horwitz

I first saw The Red Bastard (Eric Davis) a long time ago at some crazy performance art loft party in Bushwick. I was completely dumbfounded by his ten minutes of confrontational clowning. Never before had I seen a clown who was so aggressive and, well, weird. Dressed in his tight red suit with the bulbous protrusions, his face stark white with red-rimmed eyes, he looked like Satan’s unleashed Id, simultaneously amusing and terrifying his captive audience. Over the years I’ve checked in on Red Bastard’s work from time to time but this farewell show at Dixon Place demonstrated that he’s reached a whole new level.

The show started “normally” enough (for the Red Bastard) – he started in on a surreal monologue intro that quickly turned into an audience participation. In his unique blend of taunting and amusing, he activated the audience by getting them to jump up and down and eventually daring them to run around and switch seats. He did his standard bits – “something has to happen every ten seconds” and having people pull money out of his ass – but about 3/4 of the way through the show it took a turn for the decidedly intensely weird and uncomfortable. He shifted to what can only be called “sincerity” – and played that by engaging with the audience in “genuine” fashion. Making heartfelt statements of thanks and affection to individual members of the audience and eventually singling out one person – a girl named Monica – to shower with intense, stalker-y affection. “You are my favorite person in this room” he said. He then completely undermined the “sincerity” by singling out another woman in the audience and doing a similar bit.

Red Bastard played the audience like a demonic maestro, unnervingly swerving between outlandish oversized Bouffon and intense sincerity, blurring the line between real and artifice, challenging us to “feel” while at the same time risking humiliation. Then the Red Bastard reminded us of the “contract” he’d made with us in the beginning of the show – he would entertain us and when the time came we would be truthful. Then he did a whole new bit about a “Dream Bag” where he solicited the audience to shout out their dreams. At this point he identified another member of the audience, had her take out her cell phone and challenged her to call her soul-killing dayjob and quit. The final 1/4 of the show was, dare I say, Shamanic in a psychotherapeutic way, as Red Bastard continually pushed the audience’s psychological buttons “How can you realize your dreams if you can’t articulate what they are?”, alternately bonding, guiding and mocking everyone and everything. His instructions to the audience kept getting more outlandish and challenging, creating a tangible tension in the room and a genuine sense of chaos and frightening possibility. For his penultimate bit he encouraged the audience to run around the room doing whatever crazy thing they wanted – the room broke into pandemonium.

Finally, Red Bastard came onto stage and, literally, stripped off his clothing until it was just Eric Davis, standing alone on the stage naked, exhorting us to give up the fear of the things that are holding us back, our fear of life, our fear of dreams and “go out in the theater of life” and engage at our fullest possibility.

Writing it now it sounds a little cheesy – but it didn’t feel that way in the moment. It felt like Red Bastard fulfilled the primal, almost religious, ritual function of theater – to bring people together, to enter into “sacred” (or at least non-normal) space and be transformed. He led us down this crazy, twisting, hilarious and terrifying path of self-discovery in a group setting that felt out of control and yet completely structure. It was truly visceral, harrowing and hilarious.

It was a great send-off for the Red Bastard and part of me feels like its good that he’s leaving. His outsize performance is probably bigger than downtown venues can plausibly contain. He’s ready for bigger stages and those of us who have been fortunate enough to experience his work in intimate settings can join the ranks of people who say, “Oh, I saw him way back when….” Still, it is hard to imagine what Cirque de Soleil will be able to do with Red Bastard’s unique brand of terrifying, hilarious, psychoanarchic interactive performance.

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Andy’s Week In Shows

Posted on 10 January 2011 by Andy Horwitz

Okay gang! Jeremy and I have been racing around town seeing tons of shows, meeting curators and artists and just generally living it up! It has been an exciting and invigorating time with lots of great work and great people. Most of the shows continue through this week so if you haven’t dipped your toe into the sea of shows, you still have time to see them! Get out there!

My week started off on Wednesday night with Diciembre from Chile’s Teatro en el Blanco. In writer-director Guillermo Calderón’s play, a young solider (Jorge) returns home to celebrate Christmas with his pregnant twin sisters. The sisters’ deeply opposing views on the fictional war between Chile and Peru come to a head when it is revealed that Jorge is planning to go AWOL. The show is deceptively simple – the entire action takes place at the dining room table – but the actors are remarkable as they take on different characters and the convoluted plot unfurls. I have to admit, I wish I spoke Spanish – the supertitles were a little wonky the night I saw it and it was sometimes difficult to follow. You can tell that the writing is really strong – it would be great to understand it in the original. Still, this magical realist kitchen sink drama is fascinating and rewarding.

After Diciembre I raced over to PS122 to see Rabbi Rabino, Argentinian director Vivi Tellas’ performance piece using two real-life (non-actor) rabbis. It was frequently funny and touching, and maybe for people who don’t have a lot of insight into Jewish life it could be educational. As someone who grew up in a very Jewish household and whose immediate family is deeply observant, I found the show to be a little simplistic and playing to stereotypes. The rabbis themselves are likable and entertaining – but its not enough. While I laud the impulse to humanize the iconic figure of “rabbi” – and to portray their untold lives onstage – the directorial lens was facile and simplistic. Good effort, good fun, but not quite a home run.

Thursday I went to the Under The Radar Symposium which featured a great keynote from Ben Cameron. You can read it here.

The first show I saw that day was Too Late! antigone (contest #2) by Italy’s Motus. Riffing off of the Living Theater’s Antigone, the conflict between Kreon and Antigone is reimagined as a conflict between two willful individuals, intertwined with the actors – as themselves – negotiating how they are going to perform the story. Kreon frequently wears a Berlusconi mask and the two physically adept performers struggle with each intensely and acrobatically. A kind of minimal physical-theater punk rock show, it is an intense high-octane show that flirts with big ideas while never quite digging under the surface.

After that I ran down to Dixon Place to check out the French collective Ildi/Eldi‘s Vice Versa, which is based on the story Cock and Bull by Will Self. The actors are French, but perform admirably in English, though at times it was pretty funny to hear their pronunciation. The story is about a guy who grows a vagina on the back of his knee and starts an affair with the doctor who diagnoses him. Great performers, silly premise. Clocking in at about 45 minutes its more like a sketch than a fully-realized show. Light stuff but a good night in the theater.

After that I headed over to LaMama for what was, undoubtedly, the highlight for me – Gob Squad’s Kitchen (You’ve Never Had It So Good). Starting from a very simple premise – re-enacting the Andy Warhol film Kitchen – the show gradually unfolds into something complex and beautiful. It explored issues of representation, documentation, history, identity and more in subtle, touching and profound ways. As the ensemble’s efforts to enact the Warhol era slowly spin out of control, they bring up audience members to play themselves, receiving instructions via headset. Willfully questioning – and undermining – the audience/performer dynamic, engaging the idea that “In the future everyone will be famous for 15 minutes” Gob Squad condenses time and folds in on itself. Remarkable. Amazing. Totally transcendent – and, sadly, over. Let’s hope somehow it comes back to NYC so more people can experience this extraordinary work.

Friday I saw Correspondances, a dance-theater piece created by Created by Kettly Noël (Haiti/Mali) and Nelisiwe Xaba(South Africa) which ended with a stunning sequence of sensory overload as a video montage played and the women were drenched in milk showering down from surgical gloves – crazy! Then, hustled over to 440 Studios for Bonanza by the Belgium-based team Berlin. This was not a performance but rather a five-channel video installation exploring the very real town of Bonanza, Colorado, which has only 7 inhabitants. As a film its a pretty interesting documentary. I’m not sure I accept the premise that this is performance, however. Maybe long-form video art. But so it goes.

Saturday took us to Abrons Arts Center to see Tarek Halaby’s An attempt to understand my socio-political disposition through artistic research on personal identity in relationship to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Part One. Halaby is an entertaining performer and his exploration of his identity is as engaging as it is, at times, disturbing. He tells the story of his awakening to the plight of Palestine – how it became real to him, though he grew up Palestinian in America, far removed from the conflict itself. Essentially it is an autobiographical solo show and if it had been advertised as such, I don’t know that I would have enjoyed it as much. But because it was promoted as “dance” – somehow I was open to seeing it through a different lens. That’s a whole topic for discussion unto itself. And of course it is politically relevant and a not-frequently-heard perspective. I’d like to see what he does for Part 2.

After that I saw John Jasperse and Faye Driscoll show works-in-progress (fun!) but left before Miguel Gutierrez because I had seen his show before at CPR. (You can read my write-up of that show here.

Saturday night took me back to the Public for Universe’s Ameriville. Nobody does spoken-word performance/theater better than Universes and this is an incredibly polished and well-composed show. The performers are all exceptional, the music is great and the ensemble moves from sequence to sequence seamlessly. It is like one symphony with different movements. That being said – it starts as an examination of Katrina and its aftermath and then kind of expands into every ill currently plaguing America. A bit too much of a reach – the show loses focus and power as it attempts to take on too much. The audience I was with stuck with it and was dancing and clapping along by the end, so maybe I’m just a grinch. Good stuff, but could use some editing.

Sunday took me to the Hudson Hotel for Travis Chamberlain’s site-specific staging of Tennessee Williams’s Green Eyes. This short one-act is a psychosexual battle royale between Erin Markey and Adam Couperthwaite as a husband and wife on their honeymoon. The husband is a Vietnam-era solider on leave and the two are engaged in a brutal and erotic test of wills. Once again, it feels a bit more like a sketch of an idea than a fully-developed work, and that is very possibly what it is. But it shows how adventurous and surreal Williams became in his later years, even if he didn’t fully realize his vision. Markey brings a feral sexuality to the role that drives the twisting plot forward like a runaway freight train. Chamberlain and his designers have created a hermetic world that is at once erotic and violent, surreal and bleak. I think it is sold out but if you can get a ticket, check it out.

After that I headed down to PS122 to see Jack Ferver’s Rumble Ghost. Intertwining scenes from Poltergeist with movement sequences and a group therapy session, Ferver playfully – and spookily – explores the terrain of subconscious fear. It is one of the rare shows that I actually wished were longer. When it concluded, at just under an hour, I was left wanting more.

So the first “week” of shows conclude. Here’s my schedule for this week:

Monday:
Annie Dorsen’s Hello, Hi There at PS122
Show Your Face at LaMama
Holiday at PS122

Tuesday:
JUMP at The Public

Thursday:
The Interminable Suicide of Gregory Church at St. Ann’s Warehouse

Saturday:
Devotion at The Kitchen

Sunday:
Daniel Fish’s Tom Ryan Thinks… at Incubator Arts Project

Hope to see you out there!!!!

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Emily Berry & Body Blend at Dixon Place

Posted on 22 September 2010 by Maura Donohue

Call it Destination Dixon Place. You’ve got to go. The newly opened space, in it’s inaugural season complete with new raised audience seating, includes state of the art equipment in its intimate downstairs theater, rehearsal space and a lounge. That’s right, a cozy conversation bar and you can bring that vodka spiked tonic into the theater with you. How European and civilized.  Conversation, cocktails and experimental art.  I’m ready to move in, though I miss the sofas.

The dance season kicked off with a DP Mondo Cane commission.  The commissioning program allows artists 1-3 months of workshop time and a month long run (when do dance artist gets that?) allowing the commissioned artist to continue developing their work.  Past choreographers on the program have included Laura Peterson, Edisa Weeks, Ivy Baldwin and Jack Ferver.  The website states that half of the artists chosen represent minority perspectives, though I’d say those perspectives aren’t necessarily in the minority in the DP community long known as a haven for supporting those on the outer fringes.  Knowing the lengths some DP artists can go to, this month’s run of Emily Berry’s “Confined” seemed almost quaint.  Her exploration of women’s subjugation ambitiously pulled upon an unfortunately constant stream of spoken word, written by Todd Craig and delivered by actress Shonnese CL Coleman.  Berry could trust that her audiences are smart enough to read her evocative movement sequences without accompanying verbal explanation.  While some of Craig’s material was potent, the pairing proved overwhelming and the experience of being talked at became a frustrating distraction.  The text was often related to older generations of women and seemed distantly, though historically, important to the bodies on stage and to more contemporary feminist concerns.  The dancers Sara Roer, Nicole McClam, Yuko Mitsuishi, Milvia Pacheco, and Berry each offered powerful physical portrayals of disconnection and oppression – Pacheco’s attempt to move forward while slowly being borne down upon by the other women who wrap around her shoulders, stomach, and legs was a clear expression of idea in movement.  Berry’s other collaborators composer Daniel Bernard Roumain and new media artist Gail Scott White provided additional layers to the ambitious work.

At Monday night’s Body Blend program, Courtney Cooke and Matthew Heggem bookended the evening with works that seemed more familiar to my early experiences of DP.  Cooke provides a charming glimpse into ever changing interpersonal moments between two women – with a memorable slowly repeated sequence of entangling legs – before singing enchantingly. Heggem offered the climactic finale for the evening, channeling Shaniquatikyafreakya Cheng (she’s half Asian, you just can’t tell) in a riotous act of virtuosic one platformed stiletto heeled dancing, grinding, and (literally) bouncing off the wall.  After simulating various acts of self satisfaction and addressing the audience in his racial-sexual-gender bending persona, he pulled the fake breasts from his shiny, black catsuit, opened a beer, sat on a folding chair and shared his love of Black Dick with us in explicit,  I mean I learned what “breaking the seal” means explicit, detail.  It was absolutely outrageous and thoroughly entertaining.  He’s a witty, committed performer who pushed the audience beyond the bounds of a typical dance program but it seemed well suited within the walls of Dixon Place.  It was refreshing to see that the venue’s more formal digs haven’t resulted in leaving its spirit in the dust.  However, not everyone shared the love and if you visit his 36545 vlog Heggem offers an interesting reflection on his experience of watching 3 African American women walk out on the piece here.

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CHIP KIDD presents ARTBREAK at Dixon Place

Posted on 17 December 2009 by Andy Horwitz

You know how Culturebot loves cartoons and comic books stuff? Well this looks like it’ll be a hoot and a half! Save the Date and Check it out:

CHIP KIDD presents ARTBREAK
featuring
MUSIC, ARTISTS and CARTOONS!
One Night Only!

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 29TH – 8PM
DIXON PLACE
161A CHRYSTIE STREET (Delancey/Rivington)

TICKETS: $30 – www.dixonplace.org – 212 219-0736

Acclaimed art director, designer, author, and book jacket designer, Chip Kidd, will present an evening of music, comics and cartoons New York indie style. Kidd’s band Artbreak (with Mars Trillion) will perform a full set in preparation for its up-coming self-produced LP Wonderground and the debut of their first EP and single, “Speedy”. Special guest cartoonists Dash Shaw, David Heatley and Josh Neufeld will be featured in a visual presentation and be on hand to sign artworks and autographs.

CHIP KIDD

Chip Kidd is a graphic designer and writer in New York City. His book jacket designs for Alfred A. Knopf (where he has worked since 1986) have helped spawn a revolution in the art of American book packaging. Even after two decades, his pervasive influence can be seen on any trip to the bookstore.

As a chronicler on design and pop culture he has written regularly for The New York Times, McSweeney’s, Newsweek, The New York Observer, The New York Post, Print, ID, and Entertainment Weekly.

The Cheese Monkeys, Kidd’s first novel, was published by Scribner in Fall of 2001 and was a national bestseller, as well as a New York Times Notable Book of the Year. His second novel, The Learners, was published in February of 2008 to tremendous acclaim. He is also the author of numerous books on Batman, including the recent “Bat-Manga!: The Secret History of Batman in Japan” (Pantheon).

In his role an editor of books of comics for Pantheon (a subsidiary of Knopf) Kidd has worked extensively with some of the most brilliant talents practicing today, including: Chris Ware, Art Spiegelman, Dan Clowes, Kim Deitch, Charles Burns, David Mazzucchelli, Ben Katchor and Alex Ross. At Dixon Place he will open the show by presenting the work of three young NYC-based cartoonists he has recently published: David Heatley, Josh Neufeld, and Dash Shaw.

Kidd’s band, artbreak, is an on-going collaboration with Mars Trillion, combining multiple pop styles including neo-new wave, blues, alt-country and punk. Their self-produced album of all-original material, Wonderground, will be released in 2010. Though live performances are rare, they’ve been received with wild enthusiasm by critics from New York magazine (“Love was in the air”) and Media Bistro (“Ridiculously good. Think The New Pornographers meet The Cars.“)

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Five Questions for Leslie Strongwater

Posted on 26 October 2009 by Andy Horwitz

(photo by Steven Battaglia)

(photo by Steven Battaglia)

Name: Leslie Strongwater
Title/Occupation: Director of Programming/Curator
Organization/Company: Dixon Place
URL: www.dixonplace.org

1. Where did you grow up and how did you end up where you are now?

If I say New Jersey I’m screwed, right? So, let’s say this. Seminole, Oklahoma shaped my formative years, New York educated me in the theater, and Hampshire College (in Amherst!) molded me as an artist. New York was an easy, logical move, but a lazy decision in retrospect.

2. Which performance, song, play, movie, painting or other work of art had the biggest influence on you and why?

Christ, Andy. I guess Ballad of the Sad Café or maybe To My Chagrin by Split Britches. The scene with the projections of her grandson was the one that did me in. Peggy Shaw used to talk about this funky little space on the Bowery back when she taught at Hampshire. Her work- that downtown aesthetic moved me. She literally led me to Dixon Place. I’m still totally obsessed with Peggy, which can be a little embarrassing, and surreal as we’re commissioning her and Lois to create their new work, The Lost Lounge this December! Oh my god. Can we just talk about them for the rest of this interview? No? Well, I also love Hendrik Goltzius and the whole Dutch school. They light me up! Go see Without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus would Freeze! Seriously.

3. What skill, talent or attribute do you most wish you had and why?

I wish I could drive stick. (for a fast getaway.)

4. What do you do to make a living? Describe a normal day.

I am a teaching artist in the NYC public schools, so some days I’m in the Bronx or wherever they send me, playing theater games with a bunch of kids! At Dixon Place, I am responsible for the curation of our wonderful performance programs, which means I review submissions, meet with artists, create new programs, and see a lot of shows! It’s normal to me, but definitely insane. The artists outnumber us 300 to one.

5. Have you ever had to make a choice between work and art? What did you choose, why, and what was the outcome?

I make those choices a little bit everyday, but really it just vacillates back and forth and everything balances out in the end. Being surrounded by so many artists, and so much work (administrative and artistic), sometimes, I forget to make my own stuff. I’ve got my feet wet now though with Peg-Ass-Us, so I feel fulfilled. And I’m pursuing my Master’s Degree at NYU where I’m encouraged to combine my passion for theatre and education, so that’s a nice compromise!

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Little Theatre – Season 10

Posted on 25 August 2009 by Andy Horwitz

Little Theatre @ Dixon Place launches its tenth season with new work by Rob Erickson, Amber Reed, Satsang Circus, Courtney Wetzel & Anna Foss Wilson on Monday, September 14, 2009 at 8:00 pm.

The OBIE Award-Winning Little Theatre–a more-or-less monthly presentation of new theatre, dance, performance & media, more-or-less curated by Jeffrey M. Jones & Mike Taylor—launches its tenth season on Monday, September 14, 2009, at 8:00 pm in the new Dixon Place theatre, 161 Chrystie Street (btw Delancey & Rivington). Tickets are $15.00 at the door or online, first-come first-served; reservations are not accepted. For more information, call (212) 219-0736, or browsewww.dixonplace.org.

Scheduled performances include:

  • Augustine of Hippo: a performance by Amber Reed
  • Blackout: a theatre/movement work by Courtney Wetzel, in collaboration with Brooke Volkert, Mary Archbold, Perri Yaniv and Rachel Biello
  • Granted: a short play by Anna Foss Wilson, with  Sofia Johnson, and Tom Brangle
  • Lumberob: a performance by Rob Erickson
  • Satsang Circus: the mantra duo of Brad Roberts (Crash Test Dummies) & Cypress

Popularity: 1% [?]

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John Kelly at Dixon Place

Posted on 23 July 2009 by Andy Horwitz

Don’t miss this:

Picture 1

THE ESCAPE ARTIST
at the DIXON PLACE HOT! FESTIVAL
161 Chrystie Street (between Delancey and Rivington)

ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY!  Sunday, July 26th, at 9pm

Original songs by John Kelly & Carol Lipnik collide with video dramatizations of the paintings of Caravaggio~~in an hour-long performance / concert. Paintings come to life and identities blur: expect to see some blissful video shot in Rome, and hear some seriously beautiful original music written in collaboration with  Carol Lipnik.

Music Director: John DiPinto.

http://www.hotfestival.org

https://www.ovationtix.com/trs/pr/672875

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Dixon Place in April

Posted on 18 March 2009 by Andy Horwitz

Here are some of the groovy events going on at Dixon Place this April:

ARABY

by Chris Rael

Wednesdays-Saturdays, April 8, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16, 17 & 18 @ 7:30pm $20, $15 Sundays, April 12 & 19 @ 3:00pm $15, $12 

*April 16- Special Araby Event! Composer & Performer talk back with post performance reception $30

LITTLE THEATRE

Monday, April 6, May 4 &  June 1 @ 8pm, $15, $12

Curated by Mike Taylor & Jeffrey M. Jones

Stay tuned for an extraordinary line up of new work by 

Scott Adkins, Normandy Sherwood, Sonya Sobieski and Tom Swofford. 

EXPERIMENTS AND DISORDERS

Thursday, April 2 @ 730pm, $6

Curated by R.A. Villanueva & Brian Kalkbrenner

Featuring emerging and established writers who endeavor to obliterate the boundaries between fiction, poetry, drama, and the extra-textual. Featuring Guest Species in the Conference House & Dan Hoy. 

FELICE SHAYS & JESS DOBKIN

Friday & Saturday, April 3 & 4 @ 8pm, $15, $12

Work that doesn’t get made, calls that can’t be returned, deluded personal ads in The Possibility of Response by FELICE SHAYS and humor and pathos in Everything I’ve Got by JESS DOBKIN.

PUSSY FAGGOT: A CELEBRATION FOR EARL DAX

Monday, April 6 @ THE DELANCEY LOUNGE

Benefiting Dixon Place’s HOT! FESTIVAL

$18 advance / $25 at door

doors open at 8pm!

YOU WILL EXPERIENCE SILENCE

Friday & Saturday, April 10, 11, 17 & 18 @ 10pm, Tuesday & Wednesday, April 21 & 22 @ 8pm, $15/$12

Two bitchy gay teenagers in ancient Jerusalem find themselves entangled in sex, politics and each other in this surreal exploration of citizenship and sexual ethics. 

Directed by Stephen Brackett Written by Dan Fishback Performed by DAN FISHBACK, MAX STEELE, JOSEPH KECKLER & COLE ESCOLA.

CAROUSEL

Thursday, April 30, May 28 @ 8pm, $15, 12 

Hosted by R. SIKORYAK

Cartoon slide shows & other projected pictures presented by a glittering array of artists, performers, graphic novelists, & other characters. DEAN HASPIEL, JOSH NEUFELD, JIM TOROK, KRIOTA WILLBERG & more!

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