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Celebrate Dance In Chicago–For Free!

August 22, 2012 by 4dancers

The Chicago Dancing Festival is generating a lot of buzz these days…and it’s no wonder–there are precious few opportunities like this to see dance for free–especially when it comes to companies/dancers of this caliber.

Thursday evening features “Dancing Under the Stars” at Grant Park’s Spirit of Music Garden where you can learn to Mambo, and Saturday night wraps things up with the “Celebration of Dance” event at the Jay Pritzker Pavilion–and a celebration it will be, indeed! Performers include Chicago’s own Hubbard Street as well as stars from companies such as New York City Ballet and San Francisco Ballet.

There’s nothing quite like a free night of dance these last beautiful days of summer in the city–if you live in the Chicago area, take advantage of it–and bring some friends!

4dancers is proud to be a media sponsor for the Chicago Dancing Festival.

Filed Under: 4dancers Tagged With: chicago dance, chicago dancing festival, grant park, hubbard street dance, jay pritzker pavilion, mambo

Chicago Dancing Festival – Prima Parti

August 19, 2012 by 4dancers

The Chicago Dancing Festival kicks off opening night with a “Prima Parti” on August 20th starting with a pre-show donor reception at 6 pm on the rooftop of the Harris Theater.

There will be a performance at 7 pm, and then an afterparty at 8.

Artists and audience will mingle at this special VIP event, and if you can’t attend yourself, you can sponsor a dancer–or do both if you prefer! The cost is $200 per ticket. ($100 will sponsor a dancer.)

Reserve your ticket(s) online now if you haven’t already…it should be a lovely night for it. Seems like the weather in Chicago is cooperating for this special event!

To learn more about all of the dance offerings at the CDF, including FREE opportunities to see dance, visit their website. The Festival runs from August 20-25th.

4dancers is proud to be a media sponsor for the Chicago Dancing Festival.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: chicago dance, chicago dancing festival, dancer, harris theater, prima parti

Chicago Welcomes The American Rhythm Center

July 11, 2012 by 4dancers

Just a quick update on an  interesting space for dance in Chicago…

The Chicago Human Rhythm Project (CHRP) announced a new arts facility, the American Rhythm Center (ARC), which will be located in Chicago’s Fine Arts Building at 410 S. Michigan Avenue. This space will feature a collaborative business model, with the aim of offering diverse, high-quality dance and movement classes while centralizing the education programs, rehearsal space and administrative offices of some of the core groups.

Some of the groups that will be participating include:

  • Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre
  • Chicago Chinese Cultural Institute
  • Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras (already in residence at the Fine Arts Building)
  • Giordano Dance Chicago
  • Kalapriya, Center for Indian Performing Arts
  • Luna Negra Dance Theater
  • Ping Pong Productions, which facilitates collaborations between Chinese and international artists
  • River North Dance Chicago (studio space to expand educational programs)

To learn more about the timetable for this project or to find out more information visit the web page or contact Program Manager, Bridget Rodgers, at bridget(at)chicagotap.org.

Filed Under: 4dancers Tagged With: american rhythm center, cerqua rivera dance theatre, chicago dance, chicago human rhythm dance project, giordono dance chicago, kalapriva center for indian performing arts, luna negra dance theatre, river north dance chicago

Hubbard Street’s Summer Series – Complex and Sublime

June 1, 2012 by 4dancers

by Catherine L. Tully

After a strong spring program, expectations ran high for Hubbard Street Dance Chicago’s Summer Series at the Harris Theater. The line-up features three pieces—an unusual collection of choreography that takes the audience on a journey that they are certain to remember for a long time to come.

Choreographed by Alejandro Cerrudo, “Malditos” was originally a collaborative effort between Hubbard Street and Nederlands Dans Theater. Set to music from the film, The Beat My Heart Skipped (composed by Alexandre Desplat), one of the most striking features of this piece is the lighting design by Tom Visser. At times it barely illuminates the dancers—the visual equivalent of a whisper, making the viewer almost lean forward in their seat to watch the movement. Indeed, nothing about Cerrudo’s choreography shouts; it’s not showy even when it’s infused with energy. Instead it melts and dissolves through space, much like the dancers that come and go seemingly out of nowhere from the back of the stage.

Featured next is William Forsythe’s “Quintett” – and Hubbard Street has the honor of being the first American company to perform this work, first created in 1993. Set to U.K. composer Gavin Bryars’ composition “Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet”, it opens with five dancers, a stark white set–and a palpable feeling of discomfort.

Hubbard Street Dancers Penny Saunders and Jesse Bechard. Photo by Cheryl Mann.

In an unapologetic fashion, the audience is quickly pulled into this private, intimate setting. Dancers offer brief moments of tenderness, surrounded by explosive, sometimes unsettling sequences of movement. “Quintett” isn’t a passive piece where the audience gazes upon the dancers as they entertain. In fact, giving in to the uncomfortable feelings generated by the droning loop of the soundtrack and the unexpected movement patterns is almost a requirement if any sense of connection is to be found within the piece. This acceptance doesn’t come easily, but with it “Quintett” begins to transform, rewarding the viewer for the struggle.

“THREE TO MAX” is the final piece, originally created for Hubbard Street as a collage of Ohad Naharin’s works over the last decade. From the sensual hip circles seven women perform from a seated position on the floor to the “snapshot” movements that pulse out from a counted vocal rhythm, this is a piece that truly lets the company shine. Jeans, t-shirts and tank tops outfit the dancers in simplicity as they perform movements that range from clock-like ticking of the limbs (complete with vocals) to arabesques with arms that float skyward like a long swath of ribbon suspended in the air.

Hubbard Street Dancer Robyn Mineko Williams in Ohad Naharin’s THREE TO MAX. Photo by Todd Rosenberg

Although the collection of his works here are each quite different they are blended together well, and selecting “THREE TO MAX” as the final piece is a fitting end to a wonderfully executed program. Chicago should be proud—there’s nothing quite like Hubbard Street—and this is a program to prove it.

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago is at the Harris Theater through June 3rd, which will also be Robyn Mineko Williams’ final performance after 12 years with the company.

Filed Under: 4dancers, Performance Reviews Tagged With: alejandro cerrudo, chicago dance, hsdc, hubbard street, hubbard street dance chicago, hubbard street's summer series 2012, malditos, Ohad Naharin, quintett, three to max, william forsythe

Why Works In Progress Showings Work…

May 22, 2012 by Ashley David

by Lauren Warnecke

Getting people to come to dance shows is hard, but getting friends and colleagues to come to a Works In Progress showing (WIP) is even harder.  With dance happening virtually every day of the week in my home city of Chicago, why would I want to go see a work that’s in progress when I could spend my night out watching something that’s “finished” (1)?

"Home", photo by Kelly Rose


Choreography can at times be an insular art form.  Though you are working with other dancers and collaborators, it can be difficult to find the time and resources to get others to give you feedback.  But ultimately, dance is as much about what the outside viewer witnesses as it is about you and your vision.  Ergo, from time to time throughout the development phase of a piece it’s nice (if not critical) to bring in some of those outside eyes to tell you what they are seeing.  That way, you can either ensure that your message is being clearly communicated – OR – a viewer could throw a wrench in and discover a hidden jewel in the work that you never considered or saw previously, giving you further inspiration to keep exploring.

That sounds like it could be a pretty enlightening and important thing to do.

I recently had the pleasure of showing new work at a series called Fraction at Links Hall in Chicago. Having been on both sides of the WIP scene (as both choreographer and viewer), I had low expectations in terms of attendance and the potential for feedback.  These things can often include long, awkward silences during the feedback session in which people feel like they need to say something but don’t exactly know what to say.  Amazingly, Fraction was packed.

It could have been that it wasn’t simply one, but seven different artists presenting new work, or it could have been the promise of snacks.  Heck if I know, but Fraction was a super positive experience for me that afforded great feedback and I made $17 to boot!  Instead of a verbal dialogue, audience members were encouraged to write feedback on an index card and place the cards in a basket to be given to the artists later.  Perhaps due to the anonymous and non-verbal nature of feedback, I got a plethora of cards that said everything from “Razzamatazz” and “I want some grits and eggs!” to “I wonder what it would be like to change the soundtrack. I feel an antiquity and nostalgia surrounding the piece and wonder if it would remain with different music/sound or silence.”  All of this is informative and inspiring and helps me decide where to go next with this piece. Or not. Either way, the value of hearing what people see cannot be underestimated and gives me direction in a sometimes arduous process that emulates a long and winding road. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 4dancers, Making Dances Tagged With: chicago dance, choreography, kelly rose photography, lauren Warnecke, work in progress

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