Dance students and faculty join forces for 'The Current'
Each year, CU-Boulder dance students and faculty come together for The Current, an annual showcase of brand-new pieces. This years performances take place April 15-17 and feature evocative, original work by dance professors Erika Randall and Donna Mejia, lecturer Larry Southall, alumna Megan Odom and Roser Guest Artist Faye Driscoll.
Every year at this show, I fall in love with our department all over again, said Mejia, an assistant professor in dance. Im in awe of the artists here, and Im unbelievably honored to be part of this crew. The work of my colleagues brings me to tears.
Mejia, a self-described transnational fusion artist, has choreographed two works on the program: a longing solo exploring the theme of human intimacy, which draws on moves from Northern Africa and hip hop communities, and an ensemble work called The Amplified Field, an uptempo, highly athletic exploration of what its like to negotiate overlapping identities in the digital age.
Ive got blue eyes, African features and dreadlocks, she said. My multi-ethnic physical appearance is definitely provoking and disruptive in social situations, and people frequently approach me asking What are you? But in truth we all manage overlapping identities, to some extent. Maybe were mothers and also professionals. I happen to broadcast my overlapping identities in a very obvious way, but I observe everyone to be negotiating these cultural collisions within themselves.
Randall, the dance divisions director, also choreographed two pieces in The Current: a driving, bombastic seven-person work inspired by composer David Langs piece cheating, lying, stealing, and an ensemble piece called There I Still Hear, created in memory of a close friend.
The whole piece is about whats carried inside someones last breath, said Randall. It weaves together memory and nostalgia, and the dancers are meant to represent children who died from scarlet fever in the Victorian era.
She will also perform a solo piece created by alumna Megan Odom after she read a draft of Randalls novel, The Secrets of the Dashboard Hula Dancer. In the novels last chapter, a plastic hula dancer comes to life and finds out what happens when, instead of looking out the rear window, she turns around and glimpses the future.
This years Roser Guest Artist Faye Driscoll says she looks forward to visiting Boulder for the first time and collaborating with dance students on a whole new piece.
Its a fantastic opportunity for the students to use creative agency and work together to make something, said Driscoll. Thats what most of my pieces are about, too the very fact that were interdependent and interconnected. Being able to connect with each other in person and in real time that just doesnt happen much these days.
The Current showcases more than just physical talent. During the performance, audiences can feast their eyes on beautiful Victorian silhouettes created by CU-Boulder costume designer Markas Henry, music arranged by Daniel Beahm and light design by Jim Doyle, a CU-Boulder alumnus who lit up the Bellagio fountain in Las Vegas, the Lincoln Center fountain in New York and Michael Jacksons Thriller music video.
For more information or to purchase tickets, visit the .
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