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Baseball, Butoh and the Imaginary Ballroom Akemi Takeya
In the opening segment, called “Semidream,” she is a sleeper who rises in fits and starts, then discovers the bow of a stringed instrument. This she uses to carve the air, as she crosses the stage in loops and circles, a slow-motion ritual that might be drawn from Japanese Kendo, the sword-fighting martial art. Whatever she is doing in this half-sleep, it is creating art out of the primal conflicts of the mind. The accompaniment is slow plucked arpeggios on the guitar, the basic exercise of harmony. Her closing piece, “Moon moss blossom,” is even more mysterious. Takeya enters naked from the waist up, faces a mirror to the rear and body-paints herself black all over. Then she climbs into the frame of a huge hoop skirt, with the fabric tucked up around the waist. She swirls the hoop as she moves, then releases the fabric, which cascades into a floor-length golden skirt. The lights slowly dim and she becomes a black silhouette, turning slowly with her arms spread wide, drifting on the air as the colors shift, then burn out into a dark violet. It looked like a distant relation of Suzanne Farrell’s haunted solo in “Vienna Waltzes,” but without the ballroom set. The hoop skirt stands in for the ball gown, but the naked black torso and face tell a different story, hinting at a harsher kind of suffering than a Viennese socialite might know. Takeya, in fact, is a Vienna-based artist, an emigre from Japan whose program was sponsored jointly by the Japan Society and the Austrian Cultural Forum. Japan Society Performing Arts Director Yoko Shioya says she wants to reflect “the diaspora of Japanese artists” in the society’s programs, because Japanese artists are now a world-wide presence and speak a universal language.
“Bodypoems_reflection” is not a perfect show. “How to cure a running nose” was a sneezing routine that went on too long, and never supplied the answer. But Takeya is always a pleasure to watch. She has the dramatic transformations of a Butoh dancerthe tension and control of slow movement, suddenly releasing into powerful impulses that fling the body out to its limits. Her reflections are also set off by two sensitive collaboratorsGerman musician Marc Weiser, low-keyed on guitar and electronics, and Swiss lighting designer Reto Schubiger, who employs a full palette without ever distracting from the dance. Volume 3, No. 41
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