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Four remarkable new theater pieces and why you should see great performance more than once.

The Time-Based Art Festival (TBA), put on by the Portland Institute of Contemporary Art (Oregon) for the past 13 years, is one of my favorite places to see new and experimental theater, dance, and music from around the world. Taking place throughout the city in theaters, parks, churches, abandoned warehouses—pretty much anywhere you can imagine—there is a casual vibe where artists and Portlandia folk come together to express their individuality and community.

This year I was able to be there for just a couple of days but caught a couple of great artist talks and four remarkable shows in that short time.

My first show was Requiem Mass: LGBT / Working Title. A labor of love by the composer (and Portland native) Holcombe Waller, the event took place in the Trinity Episcopal Cathedral and honored those whose lives had been cut short because of their sexual/gender orientation. The one-hour work had all the trappings of a mass—a procession down the aisle, readings, sermons—but it was really the music, with a choir of 40 community singers, a pipe organ, and an ensemble, that raised the spirit of the 300-plus attendees.

Next up was a real eye opener for me. Until the week before, I had never heard of the Italian choreographer Allesandro Sciarroni. The U.S. premiere he presented, FOLK-S, Will you still love me tomorrow is impossible to describe—and any attempt to do so only makes it sound deadly dull. It is anything but. As the audience enters, six dancers in silhouette on the stage perform rhythmic movement taken from a Bavarian folk dance (one of the dancers is wearing Lederhosen). After the audience is seated and the house lights dim and the stage lights come up, the dancers extend the movement across the stage. After a pause, one of the dancers says the dance will continue as long as there is at least one person seated in the audience and one person on the stage. I could go on, but to what effect? You have to see it. Suffice it to say that throughout the next 90 minutes or so, one goes through a range of experiences—humor, jet-lagged exhaustion, trying to figure out just how they are doing what they are doing, excitement, awe and, in the end, a powerful sense of empathy with both fellow audience members and the dancers on stage. 

The work that drew me to Portland this year was Lars Jan/Early Morning Opera’s The Institute of Memory (TIMe). I have seen other works by Jan and been seduced by the mystery he creates with text, performance, and media. In this latest work, which was first presented last spring but has undergone a substantial rewrite since, he sets out to uncover his father, who is a distant memory at most. A refugee from Nazi Germany, a fighter for the French resistance, and perhaps a spy for the CIA, his father looms as a shadow throughout Jan’s life, but only a few specific memories of him remain (including his giving him a Gore Vidal novel for Jan’s fifth birthday.) The search to find who his father really was takes him to the Polish Institute of National Memory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Washington, D.C., and Harvard, where the elder Jan was associated with the School of Government. The story is told simply with two actors, an amazing mobile light grid, some media, and Gorecki’s 3rd Symphony. Stay tuned. The ICA is a co-commissioner of this work through the National Performance Network, and we may well be presenting this in Boston.

As a rule, I wish we could all see performances more than once.

Finally, I was able to (re)see a work I had seen last spring in New York: Okwui Okpokwasili’s Bronx Gothic. Living in the intersection between dance, theater, and a visual art installation, the work channels the confusion and anxiety that an 11-year-old girl growing up in the Bronx might feel as her body transforms, her friendships complicate, and people start looking at her differently. The innocence of playing double Dutch collides with sexual assault in this very powerful performance.

As a rule, I wish we could all see performances more than once; as with great visual art, great performance reveals more upon every viewing. I can’t end this report without relaying what a powerful performer Okwui is. Her use of words and trance-like movement takes a story and burns it into your being. Upon first viewing, the work made me uncomfortable. But now that I’ve seen it a second time, I know that 11-year-old girl lives somewhere inside me.

From an over-the-top interpretation of Jean Genet’s The Maids to a notorious opera infused with the genius of artist William Kentridge, four productions worth traveling for.

The ICA’s Director of Performing and Media Arts and Assistant Director of Performing Arts share their top picks for New York theater this fall.

Chambre, by Jack Ferver and Marc Swanson 
New Museum, as part of the Crossing the Line Festival
Sep 23 – Oct 4

In the summer of 2009, the ICA hosted writer, choreographer, and director Jack Ferver and American visual artist Marc Swanson, as part of our Summer Stages Dance residency program. Last fall I had the opportunity to see their latest collaboration, Chambre, a wild take on Jean Genet’s The Maids, which serves as a point of departure for a farcical and haunting attack on our culture of celebrity and greed. Catch it while you can at the New Museum, where it’s running as part of the Crossing the Line Festival organized by French Institute Alliance Française.

Ferver refracts Genet through many lenses, including the gruesome facts of the real-life murders that inspired The Maids, Lady Gaga’s infamous courtroom deposition speech, role-play, and a manic fantasy escape to the City of Lights.

His wild imagination and over-the-top performance finds the perfect setting in Swanson’s mythic and evocative sculptures, which function both as freestanding art and a theatrical set, and will be on view as an installation at the New Museum during museum hours. —David Henry, Director of Performing and Media Arts
 

Glasser and Jonathan Turner: Charge
The Kitchen NYC
Oct 23–24

Electropop songwriter Glasser (aka Cameron Mesirow) will perform her lush, intimately epic songs at The Kitchen, accompanied by visual artist Jonathan Turner’s films and animations. Both artists explore the ways that technology intersects with the natural and human world; this show should be both visually and sonically gorgeous. —John Andress, Associate Director of Performing Arts
 

Twyla Tharp 50th Anniversary Tour
Presented by the Joyce Theater at the David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center
Nov 17–22

Unless we were paying close attention to dance 25 years ago, most of us know the iconic choreographer Twyla Tharp mostly for her work in ballet, Hollywood, television, and, of course, Broadway. For her 50th anniversary she has returned to her roots in modern dance and created three new works to celebrate her 50 years of dance-making in what is sure to be THE dance event of the fall. —David Henry, Director of Performing and Media Arts

Lulu
The Metropolitan Opera
Nov 5–Dec 3

Artist William Kentridge stages a new production of Alban Berg’s Lulu for the Metropolitan Opera. The opera tells the story of Lulu, a notorious femme fatale who lures men and women to their doom. Full of sex, obsession, and death (everything that makes opera great!), the production includes costumes, scenery, and animated projections that Kentridge designed for the revival of this early-twentieth century masterpiece. Especially recommended for those who saw—and were mesmerized by—Kentridge’s The Refusal of Time at the ICA last year. —John Andress, Associate Director of Performing Arts

Image credit: Jack Ferver in Chambre; image by Julieta Cervantes

The ICA presented Rama’s first U.S. retrospective, Carolrama, in 1998.

A short (and definitely not comprehensive) list of exhibitions worth traveling for this season.

Making your way to New York this fall? ICA staff including Jill Medvedow, Ellen Matilda Poss Director and Dan Byers, Mannion Family Senior Curator, let you in on what they’re seeing:

 

EDIT_Bauhaus.jpgFrom Bauhaus to Buenos Aires
MoMA
Through Oct 4

MoMA’s From Bauhaus to Buenos Aires is the first major exhibition exploring the work and relationship of two leading avant-garde photographers of the 1920s and beyond, Grete Stern and Horacio Coppola. Stern’s photomontages are a celebration of the progressiveness of the day, heavily influenced by a strong Leftist emphasis on social commentary, her Bauhaus tutelage, and a fascination with psychoanalysis and the female unconscious. Coppola, introduced to the Bauhaus by Stern after meeting her in Berlin, combines an enthusiasm for Surrealism and the uncanny with a politically motivated depiction of social reality. —Kate McBride, Marketing Associate

Image: Grete Stern (Argentine, born Germany. 1904–1999). Dreams No. 1. 1949. Gelatin silver print, 10 ½ x 9” (26.6 x 22.9 cm). Latin American and Caribbean Fund through gift of Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis in honor of Adriana Cisneros de Griffin. © 2014 Galería Jorge Mara-La Ruche

Ron Nagle
Matthew Marks Gallery
Through Oct 24

Simply one of the best sculptors, and painters, working today. Nagle is not shown enough in museums or on the East Coast, though the deft, humorous, and deliciously weird forms of his exquisitely colored ceramic sculptures say as much about bodies, human behavior, architecture, abstraction, and the sheer power of individualized beauty as anything else on public view. —Dan Byers, Mannion Family Senior Curator

Zanele Muholi: Isibonelo/Evidence 
Brooklyn Museum
Through Nov 1

Zanele Muholi is an activist who makes stunning, unforgettable photographs of the LGBTI communities in South Africa, who are under constant threat of violence and discrimination in their country. Often printed in large-format and displayed in disarming grids, her photographs capture the individuality, defiance, beauty, and complexity of her subjects in a way that registers across the expanses of silent galleries. —Dan Byers, Mannion Family Senior Curator

Image (at top): Zanele Muholi (South African, born 1972). Ayanda & Nhlanhla Moremi’s wedding I. Kwanele Park, Katlehong, 9 November 2013, 2013. Chromogenic photograph, 10 7/16 x 14 9/16 in. (26.5 x 37 cm), framed. © Zanele Muholi. Courtesy of Stevenson Cape Town/Johannesburg and Yancey Richardson, New York 
 

Berlin Metropolis: 1918–1933
Neue Galerie
Oct 1–Jan 4, 2016

As a former Berliner, I’m drawn to most things having to do with this dynamic and fascinating city. But this exhibition is something really special: a multifaceted endeavor bringing to life one of the most progressive, prolific, and ultimately disastrous cultures in history, a time marked by sexual emancipation, artistic experimentation, and an intoxicating modernity in art, design, film, jazz, and more. Chronologically—and even thematically—it also leads right into our big fall exhibition Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933–1957, and with artists and teachers escaping Germany around this time and landing at BMC, I bet we’ll see some threads of influence. —Kris Wilton, Creative Content Manager
 

Swedish Wooden Toys
Bard Graduate Center Gallery
Through January 17, 2016

I’d also really like to see this exhibition of Swedish toys. With playthings from the 17th through the 21st centuries, I bet it’ll be a really interesting lens through which to consider changes of all kinds—in manufacturing, design, conceptions of childhood, pedagogical theory, societal roles, materials, materialism… And be really cute to boot. —Kris Wilton, Creative Content Manager

Walid Raad _ We decided to let them say “we are convinced” twice. It was more convincing this wayWalid Raad
MoMA
Oct 12, 2015–Jan 31, 2016

I am extremely excited to see the new Walid Raad exhibition, opening next week at MoMA and organized by our Barbara Lee Chief Curator Eva Respini. Raad, a Lebanese-born artist living and working in NY, tackles insistent questions about history in his photographs, videos, sculptures, and performances: Who writes history? Who excavates, who archives, who constructs our understanding of war and conflict? Raad’s work is painfully relevant today, especially as we witness the thousands of refugees fleeing Syria and ask who will write their histories. The ICA is proud to present Walid Raad to Boston audiences when it travels to the ICA in January 2016. —Jill Medvedow, Ellen Matilda Poss Director

Picasso Sculpture
MoMA
Through Feb 7, 2016

This fall, I will be waiting in line for the Picasso Sculpture exhibition that just opened at MoMA. It is not every day that Roberta Smith (of the New York Times) calls a show a “once-in-a-lifetime event.” And I say this with some authority, since stalking, or as I like to term it, “assiduously following” art critics, is part of my official job capacity! —Colette Randall, Director of Marketing and Communications

Walter De Maria, The New York Earth Room
141 Wooster Street
Open fall, winter, and spring

One of my favorite things about fall: The Earth Room re-opens! It is a natural respite in the middle of a brick and mortar city. Go, breathe, and enjoy—it’s a delight. —Anna Lyman, Chief of Staff

The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA) presents award-winning choreographer Faye Driscoll in Thank You For Coming: Attendance on Thursday Oct. 8, Friday, Oct. 9, and Saturday, Oct. 10 at 8:00 p.m., in the Barbara Lee Family Foundation Theater at the ICA (100 Northern Ave., Boston). General admission tickets are $25, $15 for members and students, and can be purchased at www.icaboston.org or by calling (617) 478-3103.
 
A song whose sole lyrics are the names of each of the audience members. A stage that becomes the seating. Costumes that become cords connecting audience and dancers. These are just some of the strategies used by Driscoll in Attendance, the first work in Faye Driscoll’s Thank You For Coming trilogy. The performance continues her interest in how people perceive themselves in relationship to others—an idea also expressed in her earlier work You’re Me, performed at the ICA in 2012. Intimately staged in the round, the work creates a heightened reality of observation and interdependence as five performers (along with Driscoll and composer Michael Kiley) morph through physical entanglements and scenes of distorted familiarity with physical rigor and humor. Audience and performers become one as a beautiful shared identity emerges.
 
The second part of the trilogy: Thank You for Coming: Play (working title) was in development at the ICA this past summer as part of a Summer Stages Dance at ICA choreographic residency.  It will be presented at the museum in 2016.  

Free preshow talks with David Henry, Director of Performing and Media Arts at the ICA, 30 minutes prior to curtain.

About Faye Driscoll
Faye Driscoll is a Bessie Award-winning choreographer and director who has been hailed as a “startlingly original talent” by the New York Times. Her work is rooted in an obsession with the problem of being ‘somebody’ in a world of other ‘somebodies’ and all of the conflicts and comedy born in our interactions with others. Works include: Wow Mom, Wow a postmodern/pop musical/death metal fantasy (2007); 837 Venice Boulevard (2008; Bessie Award) an autobiographical work taking place in a theater within a home; There Is So Much Mad In Me (2010) an exploration of ecstatic states; You’re Me (2012) a duet distorted by props, paint and manic costume shifts; and she is currently at work on a series called Thank You for Coming that implicates the audience in the work and invites the sensation of co-creation.
 
This performance is supported, in part, by the David Henry Fund for Performance.

First Republic Bank is proud to sponsor the ICA’s 2015–16 Performance Season.

New site offers expanded artist and curatorial content, greater access to images and information from the ICA’s collection and exhibitions, multimedia features, and more

(Boston, Sept. 17, 2015)—The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA) has relaunched its website, www.icaboston.org, today announced Jill Medvedow, the museum’s Ellen Matilda Poss Director. The first major redesign in ten years, the relaunch represents a new chapter in the ICA’s online presence. The site will feature robust, expanded content—including artist interviews, curatorial essays, behind-the-scenes museum images, and related news features from Boston and beyond—to more fully reflect the richness of the museum’s exhibitions, performance, and educational programs.

“The relaunch marks the start of an exciting new era in how the ICA creates and shares our collection, programs, and knowledge,” said Medvedow. “Our online features extend the artists’ voice and curatorial ideas—commentary, interviews, images, and publications—into the digital sphere where they are open to a global audience. We share diverse perspectives on the art at the ICA as well as timely and relevant voices from our community and around the world, all contributing to a dynamic online discourse and new ICA experience.”

New web features include:

  • Editorially driven content created by ICA staff and curators including essays, travelogues, thought pieces, artist Q&As, recommendations for exhibitions and performances outside the ICA, and behind-the-scenes images from exhibition installations and performance rehearsals.
  • “In the News” section: A regularly updated compilation of art news articles related to ICA artists, staff, and exhibitions.
  • Access to object information and images for works of art in the ICA Collection, including a special section devoted to the Barbara Lee Collection of Art by Women.
  • An extensive Education section featuring publications on the ICA’s award-winning teen arts program, teacher resource sheets, and tips for families visiting the museum
  • An expanded video and audio page, featuring exhibition previews, artist interviews, studio visits, and talks between artists and curators.
  • A historical timeline highlighting key moments and exhibitions in ICA history
  • A streamlined exhibition page layout, making it easy for visitors to view related talks, tours, and events, and store merchandise, as well as exhibition-related articles and reviews, images, and video.
  • An overhauled “Calendar” section, enabling visitors to easily filter events by genre; category type, such as “Free”; or event timeframe, such as ‘This Weekend.”
  • An elegant and user-friendly design that adapts seamlessly to mobile devices and tablets
  • Enhanced social sharing capabilities

The site launches with an essay on Black Mountain College by Medvedow, as well as an introduction to the coming year’s internationally driven exhibition schedule by recently appointed Barbara Lee Chief Curator, Eva Respini. Forthcoming content to be published on icaboston.org this fall includes:

  • An essay on the connections between sculpture and photography by Dan Byers, ICA Senior Curator, in connection with current and upcoming exhibitions on Erin Shirreff, Diane Simpson, and Geoffrey Farmer.
  • An essay on race and Black Mountain College by Bryan Barcena, ICA curatorial assistant.
  • Behind-the-scenes images from the exhibition Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933-1957 and its preparation.
  • An interview with Silas Riener, former member of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, on reprising Cunningham works as part of Leap Before You Look.
  • A travelogue through Italy and Switzerland by Barcena.

The new site is overseen by Kris Wilton, the ICA’s Creative Content Manager, an art writer and former editor at ARTnews and Artinfo.com. “It’s been extremely gratifying to delve deep into the ICA’s programming, mission, and goals and reconsider how the institution presents itself digitally,” Wilton said. “Launching the new site is just part of a larger refresh of how we offer dynamic engagement with art of all kinds for visitors both near and far, one that will continue to be a priority in years to come.”

The website was created in partnership with Digital Loom, a web design and development company based in Cambridge, Mass.

ICA staff let you know where they’ll be this fall. 

From beloved artists who’ve appeared at the ICA to up-and-comers we can’t wait to check out, ICA Staff share Boston-area picks not to miss.

Converging Lines: Eva Hesse And Sol Lewitt
Addison Gallery of American Art
Through Jan 10, 2016

Two of the late 20th century’s most important artists, Eva Hesse and Sol LeWitt shared a close and generative friendship. If curator Veronica Robert’s insightful, generous catalog is any indication, this exhibition will not only elucidate the artists’ shared and diverging aesthetic and conceptual concerns, but also their friendship, an oft-overlooked aspect of artistic creativity also at the center of the ICA’s upcoming Leap Before you Look: Black Mountain College 1933–1957—Dan Byers, Senior Curator

I also recommend Converging Lines: Eva Hesse And Sol Lewitt! The selected art creates a correspondence focused on a visual/personal relationship illuminating the genesis of conceptual art. —Ruth Quattlebaum, Tour Guide

Laura McPhee, The Home and the World
Carroll and Sons
Through Oct 31

As a photographer myself, I’ve been a big fan of Laura McPhee’s work for a while now, especially her projects River of No Return and Guardians of Solitude. She teaches at MassArt and she’s one of my favorite Boston area photographers. I just learned about this series The Home and the World, in which she photographs gorgeous domestic architecture in Kolkata, India. I can’t wait to check it out at the gallery. Her prints are beautiful and if you want to see all the marvelous details, you really need to see them in person. —Chris Hoodlet, Membership Manager

Language vs Language
Sol Koffler Graduate Student Gallery at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence
Sep 15–Oct 11

The Sol Koffler Graduate Student Gallery is a great place to see what RISD students are putting out throughout the year. This fall’s exhibition, Language vs Language, is a group exhibition exploring “language, translation, and intercultural space.” RISD’s grad student open studio events are amazing also—the chance to see hundreds of artists’ work—but details for the fall event haven’t been released yet, it seems. —Africanus Okokon, Interpretive Media and Adult Education Coordinator
 

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The Krieg Cycle: Käthe Kollwitz and World War I
The Davis Museum at Wellesley College
Through Dec 13

I’m fascinated by woodcuts in general—and how they so evocatively show the traces of the artist’s hand and the hours of painstaking work. I can’t wait to see this exhibition of woodcuts by the wrenching East German artist Käthe Kollwitz from her print series Krieg (War), published nine years after her son was killed in battle in World War I. I expect to be awed, inspired, rattled, heartbroken, and galvanized, in equal measure. — Kris Wilton, Creative Content Manager

Image: Käthe Kollwitz, The Parents (plate 3) from the portfolio “War,” 1923. © 2015 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn.

Makeover!
Sübsamsøñ
Oct 7–24 

Sübsamsøñ and the BLAA (Boston LGBTQIA Artist Alliance) teamed up for Makeover!, a show of 18 Boston-affiliated or -based artists whose work considers reshaping, modifying, and updating the self. With the recent loss of a permanent space, the BLAA is undergoing its own makeover and this exhibition is an exciting first look at the organization’s new direction. [Disclosure: I have work in this show. See it here.] Come to the opening reception! Friday, Oct 9 from 6–8 PM. —Lenny Schnier, Education Department Assistant
 

24th Drawing Show: Feelers
Mills Gallery at the Boston Center for the Arts
Oct 9–Dec 20

For the 24th installment of the Mills Gallery’s annual Drawing Show, the BCA enlisted guest curator Susan Metrican (one quarter of the 2015 ICA Foster Prize recipient kijidome). The 56 artists in the exhibition explore the possibilities of existing in a two-dimensional reality through drawing’s inherent encounter with flatness. [Full disclosure: I have work in this show too.] Come to this opening reception too, Fri, Oct 9 from 6–8 PM! —Lenny Schnier, Education Department Assistant

Rosa Barba: The Color Out of Space
MIT List Visual Arts Center
Oct 23, 2015–Jan 3, 2016

Rosa Barba’s much-needed first survey exhibition in North America, at MIT’s List Center, includes a diverse range of works made over the last ten years. The exhibition premieres Barba’s latest work, The Color Out of Space, a film that incorporates images collected over the past year from the Hirsch Observatory at Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute, which expands on the artist’s sustained interest in different registers of time. —Jeffrey DeBlois, Curatorial Assistant

 

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Lorraine O’Grady: Where Margins Become Centers
Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University
Oct 29, 2015–Jan 10, 2016

Lorraine O’Grady, born in Boston in 1934, has been one of the more perceptive observers of contemporary culture since bursting onto the New York scene in the 1980s. I am excited to witness her energetic and critical engagement with questions of race, gender, and class across six bodies of work brought together in this survey exhibition. —Ruth Erickson, Assistant Curator

Image: Lorraine O’Grady, Miscegenated Family Album (Sisters I), 1980/1994. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates.
 

Actually, everything this fall at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard

What other organization can get away with a program that combines the elegantly cerebral institutional interventions of Martin Beck, the participatory and public boat building of Mare Liberum, the stunning monotypes of Dutch graphic design giant Karel Martens, Josiah McElheny’s walking mirrors, and film screenings by Boston-born and LA-based Kerry Tribe, not to mention exhibitions by an artist long overdue (Lorraine O’Grady) and prescient (Shahryar Nashat). And that’s not even everything. —Dan Byers, Senior Curator