Time Present, Past and Future

The present and past merged onstage at Bard’s SummerScape last weekend, and the result looked very much like the future.

    Lucinda Childs’s “Danceâ€� still looks fresh after 30 years. Pairs of dancers, dressed in white leotards and flowing white pants, cross the stage in deceptively simple grid-like patterns. The stripped down choreography is no more than a series of turns, slides and low jumps, but at a relentless and ever-increasing pace.

   The music, by Philip Glass, repeats its patterns endlessly, evolving gradually and then returning to the same chord sequences and rhythms.

   A third element, film “decorâ€� by artist Sol LeWitt, adds focus.

   LeWitt filmed Childs and her dancers doing the same choreography, back in 1979, and their image is projected on a giant scrim in front of the stage, with the live dancers visible behind. The projected dancers appear 30 feet tall, sometimes seeming to loom like ghostly giants, other times to be dancing in a space above the heads, or through a window behind, the live dancers. Sometimes they are shot from above, on a white floor with a grid pattern, so that the live dancers appear to be dancing in a room below them. The live and the spectral dancers sometimes move in perfect synchrony, other times a beat apart. Watching, I had the feeling of a giant and complex mathematical equation being worked out — the patterns and counts and geometric shapes folding in on each other and expanding.

   A middle solo section is danced on film by Childs herself.

   On stage it was performed for the first time by another dancer, Caitlin Scranton, who didn’t quite achieve the solemnity of Childs as she repeated slow crosses up stage and then back down.

   The Childs style is a relaxed  upper body, with hands extended softly, the feet moving fast but never with highly technical steps. Today’s dancers look quite different from those of 30 years ago: more turned out, more muscular in appearance and in style.

   There’s a poignancy to watching the dancers of the past.

   Where are they now?

   And what about today’s dancers?

   Where will they be in 30 years?  p

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