+ Add An Event

Contribute

Your support helps us cover dance in New York City and beyond! Donate now.

Lumberyard in the City Winter Festival: Dana Reitz

Lumberyard in the City Winter Festival: Dana Reitz

Company:

Dana Reitz

Location:

New York Live Arts; 219 W 19th Street

Dates:

Thursday, February 8, 2018 - 8:00pm daily through February 10, 2018

Tickets:

http://www.lumberyard.org/nyc/dana_reitz/

Company:
Dana Reitz

Dana Reitz, choreographer, dancer and visual artist, often uses silence as a means to reveal the musical nuance of movement itself.  On her own and in her collaborations with lighting artists such as Beverly Emmons, James Turrell, and extensively, Jennifer Tipton, she has pioneered the use of light as a physical partner. Her woven movement and light scores -- essential, spare and fleeting -- create a continually shifting perception of time and space.

Her performance projects include Necessary Weather, a collaborative work with Tipton and dancer Sara Rudner, Unspoken Territory, a solo she created for Mikhail Baryshnikov, Shoreline, Private Collection, Lichttontanz, Suspect Terrain, Circumstantial Evidence, Severe Clear, and Field Papers. She and Baryshnikov toured together with a program of solos; she later created Cantata for Two, a duet for Baryshnikov and Kabuki master Tamasaburo Bando (Tokyo).  In recent years, for The Body Acoustic, she has continued to investigate the shifting sense of place with both built and natural environments.

Ms. Reitz has toured, as a performer and mentor, throughout Europe, Asia, Australia and the US.  Since 1973, she has been commissioned/produced by multiple venues internationally including Festival d’Automne (Paris), the Hebbeltheater (Berlin), BAM’s Next Wave Festival, and the Lincoln Center White Light Festival (New York). She is the recipient of two Bessies, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and multiple awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, including one as part of American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius, sponsored by the Flynn Center for the Performing Arts.

Share Your Audience Review. Your Words Are Valuable to Dance.
Are you going to see this show, or have you seen it? Share "your" review here on The Dance Enthusiast. Your words are valuable. They help artists, educate audiences, and support the dance field in general. There is no need to be a professional critic. Just click through to our Audience Review Section and you will have the option to write free-form, or answer our helpful Enthusiast Review Questionnaire, or if you feel creative, even write a haiku review. So join the conversation.

Share Your Audience Review.


+ Add An Event