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IMPRESSIONS: Cornfield Dance in "Scrambled Stages" at Arts on Site

IMPRESSIONS: Cornfield Dance in "Scrambled Stages" at Arts on Site
Catherine Tharin

By Catherine Tharin
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Published on July 1, 2025
Cornfield Dance in "Scrambled Stages." Photo: Alexis Silver

Cornfield Dance and The Bang Group present

Scrambled Stages

Choreographer: Ellen Cornfield

Dancers: Mariah Anton Arters, Sarah Cecilia Bukowski, Julian Donahue, Aaron Loux, Deniz Erkan Sancak, Hannah Straney, Timothy Ward (understudy)

Composers: Jerome Begin (Scrambled Legs, 2023 | The Endless Ladder, 2025), Andreas Brade (Small Stages, 2013)

Lighting Designer: Bhagavan Angulo

Sound Operator: Ryan Wolf

Costume Designers: Tops by Andrew Jordan | Shorts by Ellen Cornfield

Venue: Arts on Site

Date: June 19, 2025


Ellen Cornfield, who founded her company, Cornfield Dance in 1989, is a choreographer’s choreographer. She constructs dance phrases in surprising and endlessly inventive ways, prompting fellow dance makers to ‘read’ the construction and consider, “I hadn’t thought of that!”

Cornfield’s work unfolds like a jigsaw puzzle, with pieces interlocking from left to right, right to left, center to edge, and top to bottom. Blocks of imagery assemble into a larger picture. Like a mosaic that is completed tesserae by tesserae, or a detective story revealing itself clue by clue, the viewer, until it comes together, is kept in suspense. 

Three women dancers each costumed in a different bright color plies on their right legs with their left legs lifted in attitude and right fists below their chins.
Sarah Cecilia Bukowski, Mariah Anton Arters, and Hannah Straney in Ellen Cornfield's Scrambled Stages. Photo: Alexis Silver
 

Cornfield’s bold physicality stems from her years dancing with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, from 1974 to 1982. Her choreography reflects the Cunningham lineage yet remains distinctly her own — whether in a sweeping gesture that ruffles the space or a delicate action that lingers in stillness.

David Parker, who presented this June choreographic series at Arts on Site with Jeff Kazin and The Bang Group, recalled that Cornfield was one of his favorite teachers at the Cunningham studio. Watching her work now, it’s easy to see why. “She is a choreographer,” he said, emphasizing her gift for constructing and teaching phrases that are both challenging and thrilling.

A man behind and a woman jump straight up with legs long. The man clasps his hands around her waist.
Aaron Loux and Mariah Anton Arters in Ellen Cornfield's Scrambled Stages. Photo: Alexis Silver
 

Scrambled Stages is a reimagining and interweaving of three previously performed works — Small Stages, Scrambled Legs, and The Endless Ladder — to create an entirely new dance. The approach echoes Cunningham’s famous “Events,” in which he reconstructed past dances by extracting and juxtaposing segments from different works. Like Cunningham, who emphasized movement for its own sake rather than expressing narrative, Cornfield trusts the choreography to speak through form and rhythm. As Cunningham once said, “We present something. We do something. And then any kind of interpretation is left to anybody looking at it in the audience.” The program notes explain that Small Stages unfolds, as it originally did, within three 6’ x 6’ blue-taped squares arranged on a diagonal. In contrast, Scrambled Legs and The Endless Ladder expand into the full space.

Each dancer projected a distinct individuality. Mariah Anton Arters and Julian Donohue stood out for their expressive faces and recognizable human tics. At spaced intervals, Donohue smiled enigmatically like the Mona Lisa, smoothed his hair behind one ear, nodded with quiet agreement, and occasionally beckoned with the smallest tilt of his head. Arters faced the audience with a wide grin, hands peaked beneath her chin like a photographer’s studio portrait, or she turned to beam over her shoulder while tossing off a playful hip shake.

A man wearing a red, purple and gray colorblocked top, jumps straight up on one leg with the other extended to the diagonal, foot pointed and arms flung to the ceiling.
Deniz Erkan Sancak in Ellen Cornfield's Scrambled Stages. Photo: Alexis Silver
 

Aaron Loux and Deniz Erkan Sancak — both mustachioed, compact, and closely matched in height — were near mirror images. Their gorgeously pliable spines and spring-loaded directional shifts recalled the light-footed landings of a cat. They moved with alert, animalistic presence, as if their ears were pricked for cues. Their brief duet was a memorable highlight. Sarah Cecilia Bukowski and Hannah Straney, both tall and long-limbed, served as counterparts. Bukowski shifted between Cunningham-esque shardlike uprightness and low, prowling curves. Straney was warm yet cool, self-possessed and rounded, as if there was a concentric circle forcefield around her body.

Dancers entered and exited in dizzying rushes, forming ever-evolving configurations. (I wondered if the shifting solos, duets, and trios were influenced by the challenging schedules of freelance dancers.)  Andreas Brade’s recorded score included spoken word, and accompanied Donohue’s opening solo: “Where? Here? Yes. Over there, no?” — just before he steps into a square and jumps skyward in a picture-perfect X.  A kaleidoscope of movement signals to the audience: we’re in for a ride.

Two dancers fall forward as the third lounges against the upstage window fram.
Aaron Loux, Hannah Straney, and Mariah Anton Arters in Ellen Cornfield's Scrambled Stages. Photo: Alexis Silver
 

Fists punch the air while running in place to Jerome Begin's distinctive beat and techie high-pitch sound. Deep pliés contrast with large jetés that cover the small space. The fingers count, run over an ear or up a leg as if shaving, wriggle down the sides of the body as if smoothing clothing, scrutinize fingernails, or form the hands into O’s over both eyes like binoculars. Unison trios and duets are observed by dancers who lounge in the stage right and upstage windows changing positions to slink on the casements. A recorded cough, clearing of the throat, and a laugh remind us of a human presence, interspersed with static thrumming and birdlike trills put through a synthesizer. The exposed brick and lack of curtains or sets lends an air of orthogonal urbanity, along with the bright, Mondrian inspired color-block costume tops and shorts hugging the dancers’ sleek bodies. One beautiful movement has Donahue clasping Straney’s forearm as they both plié before he pulls her hard and one leg flies behind and around her as if an afterthought. Repeated several times, the duet revolves in a circle before the dancers depart.
 

Six dancers are grouped in a small 6' X 6' square each performing different movement: jumping with arms overhead and legs parallel, standing with arms overhead framing the face, clasping the arms of another who is in plie with a leg behind in high attitude.
(L to R) Deniz Erkan Sancak, Aaron Loux, Julian Donahue, Hannah Straney, Mariah Anton Arters, and Sarah Cecilia Bukowski in Scrambled Stages. Photo: Alexis Silver
 

The final short dance (a new addition) for all six dancers, took place in the center square. Despite the limited space, dancers did not hold back when they hopped or leapt into a new spot or lunged and sliced between one another. Summarizing the dynamism of the cityscape, Scrambled Stages expresses right-angled buildings, curved arches, honking horns, cars cutting one another off, transportation grids and cobblestones, and the simultaneous chaotic wackiness yet structured efficiency that keeps the city in which we live, metaphorically moving (like the dance), day and night.


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