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Category Archives: Seattle

3Seasons reSet

Last night, a loud, gutter-gurgling rain kept me awake. Is it too much to ask for sun in late June? Farmer Brendan planted only six tomato plants leaving the other six in pots saying that it’s not worth having stunted plants with green tomatos later this season. I smell the damp earth and think of 3Seasons reSet playing tonight and tomorrow at Intiman Theatre in Seattle.

Photos by Kim & Adam Bamberg: LaViePhoto.com

3Seasons premiered at On the Boards in January 2010. Since then, choreographer Olivier Wevers and his company Whim W’Him have refined their repertoire with works such as Monster. Returning to 3Seasons (an adaptation of Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons), I notice that Olivier has a greater attentiveness to details. Props are more carefully placed, movements are more precise and transitions are more deliberate. For the music, I have refined the instrumentation to violin + soundtrack. Crowding the performance with extraneous instruments is like planting too many tomatos.

Victoria Brown wrote a perceptive:

… the music has undergone the greatest change. In the present iteration of 3Seasons, only Autumn employs the new music of Byron, which has been both drawn in and expanded. Instead of violin, percussion, toy piano and electronic sounds, the composition is now pared down to a single violin heard against a city soundscape of cars and an electronic hum.

In performance the violin will be played by much the praised and prized Michael Jinsoo Lim (Pacific Northwest Ballet concertmaster and co-founder of the Corigliano Quartet). The first movement of Byron’s new Autumn has a jumbled sound. Vivaldi comes in only in snatches, as real music and… as a cell phone ring tone. It’s a 21st century landscape, of timid trust in an unimaginable future warring against barely suppressed chaos and despair. There is, as Byron says, a clear sense of something missing.

Yet for me at least, this apprehension of loss changes as the season unrolls. Last week, after re-observing his bleak take on the Vivaldi Winter (that ends his ballet), I said to Olivier, “This sure doesn’t finish on any note of redemption, does it?” to which he assented. But yesterday, watching the season that preceeds it, I felt an unexpectedly different note in Autumn’s final movement.

By this time, the clutter and static of the earlier sections of Byron’s soundscape are burned away. The violin plays on alone, its sound harsh, seer, but purified, clean. As if, out of the dross that we’ve made from our world, one clear, authentic, silver voice has been refined—or might be. Perhaps this line of music represents another chance for the human race, a sounder basis for a better, more sustainable and earth-centric future. Whether we can save ourselves and our world, or if the centuries to come hold only the peace of cessation, is still, of course, obscure and will remain so well beyond our time. I might be talking through my hat, but ever optomistic, I asked Byron after rehearsal, “Is Autumn maybe where hope creeps into 3Seasons?”

His answer was a broad, if enigmatic, grin.

Read more of Victoria’s insightful thoughts about the revised 3Seasons with photos from La Vie Photography at Whim W’Him’s blog.

 
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Posted by on 24 June 2011 in Dance, Inspiration, Music, Seattle

 

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3Seasons ReSet

It’s not too late to get tickets for Whim W’Him’s ReSet:

  • Friday, 24 June 2011, 8PM
  • Saturday, 25 June 2011, 8PM

ReSet features the choreography of artistic director Olivier Wevers with his company Whim W’him in:

  • a new creation
  • a reworked 3Seasons
  • the return of Monster

I compose new Autumn music for 3Seasons – a work inspired by Antonio Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons — to be performed by violinist Michael Jinsoo Lim + soundtrack. Along with Whim W’him’s dancers, costumes by Michael Cepress and lighting by Michael Mazolla, 3Seasons includes new cardboard sets by Casey Curran.

Intiman Theatre
201 Mercer Street
Seattle WA 98109

Buy Tickets | Facebook Events

 
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Posted by on 7 June 2011 in Dance, Events, Seattle

 

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Collapse

On my flight from Toronto to Seattle, I watched the documentary Collapse. Airplane seats are a confining space to “enjoy” movies, especially now that seat belts must be strapped whenever one is seated. Have you noticed that the movie selection always includes terrifying and seemingly inappropriate flicks about the world ending?

I chose to watch this documentary not realizing how captivated I would become. Michael Ruppert was an investigative journalist. I was fascinated by his calm urgency and insight into how to survive inevitable revolutions. I was touched by his breakdown in thinking about President Obama. I was heartened to hear that his solutions included growing food and strengthening local networks.

Author Seth Godin recently wrote:

¡Note! Like all revolutions, this is an opportunity, not a solution, not a guarantee. It’s an opportunity to poke and experiment and fail and discover dead ends on the way to making a difference. The old economy offered a guarantee – time plus education plus obedience = stability. The new one, not so much. The new one offers a chance for you to take a chance and make an impact.

I think about Collapse and Godin’s call-to-action. Increasingly, the idea of infinite growth promised by advanced capitalism leads to devastation. I am thankful to be in a neighborhood with vegetable gardens surrounded by folks who take pleasure in digging and planting. I listen to my chickens and notice the breeze or birds overhead. Could the revolution be quiet or will there be riots on Main Street USA?

 
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Posted by on 28 April 2011 in Seattle, Travel

 

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Seattle artists help Japan

I am honored to announce that Seattle artists unite to benefit relief efforts in Japan. Folks who work in a variety of media including painting, drawing, calligraphy, sumi-e, ceramic, jewelry, sculpture, print and more have donated artworks to be displayed at KOBO at HIGO in Seattle’s International District. In addition, the Murakami Family, former owners of the Higo Variety Store, will match up to $10,000 in donations raised.

Here’s how the benefit sale will work according to organizers Binko Chiong-Bisbee, Etsuko Ichikawa, Elizabeth Jameson, Tommer Peterson and Junko Yamamoto:

This event is offered in the spirit of generosity and trust. Instead of purchasing the artwork, guests will have the opportunity to make a donation in the amount of that “price” directly to the International Red Cross in exchange for the work. Donations can be made by only by credit card or check. (Some employers will match your donations, check your company policies on matching donations.) Everybody wins.

Participating artists as of 19 March 2011 include:
Juan Alonso, Toshi Asai, Byron Au Yong, Peter Bagge, Clare Barboza, Debra Baxter, Jennifer Bennett, Tracy Boyd, Allison Collins, Diem Chau, C.T. Chew, Diane Culhane, Celeste Cooning, Sue Danielson, John Dix, Maiji Fiebig, Julia Freeman, Sean Frego, David French, Tim Girvin, Akiko Graham, Adriana Grant, Lisa Hasegawa, Larry Halvorsen, Robert Hardgrave, Stephanie Hargrave, Stephen Hazel, Linda Hoshide, Etsuko Ichikawa, Elizabeth Jameson, Weston Jandacka, Iskra Johnson, Shizu Enomoto Kirk, Seiko Kobayashi, Alan Lau, Anita Lehmann, Micki Lippe, Sarah Loertscher, Ana Karina Luna, Rozarii Lynch, Rick Mahaffey, Mariko Marrs, Akiko Masker, Anna Mastronardi – Novak, Kevin C. McCarthy, Jim McDermott, Shino Mikami, Mutsuko Mitsui, Naomi Mittet, Saya Moriyasu, Yuki Nakamura, Miho Nakaoka, Kristin Nelson, Haruko Nishimura, Nicholas Nyland, Yuko Otoku, Reid Ozaki, Tommer Peterson, AJ Power, Pamela Pike E Powers, Kathleen Rabel, Maria Grazia Repetto, Ken Ray, Dorothy Rissman, Norie Sato, Chiyo Sanada, Tamae Satsu, June Sekiguchi, Roger Shimomura, Katy Stone, Akio Takamori, Mugi Takei, Maki Tamura, Ken Taya, Diane Tchakirides, Timea Tihanyi, Takuya Tokizawa, Genevieve Tremblay, Mizue Trinidad, Ikuyo Tsunoda, Junichi Tsuneoka, George Tsutakawa (estate), Tomoko Uno, Egypt Urnash, Patti Warashina, Barry Wong, Junko Yamamoto, Herman Yu and Ellen Ziegler

Artists 4 Japan
Art Sale to Benefit Relief Efforts in Japan
Saturday, 26 March 2011, 12-8PM
Sunday, 27 March 2011, 12-5PM

KOBO at HIGO
604 South Jackson St
Seattle WA 98104 USA
(206) 381-3000
info@Koboseattle.com

 

 
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Posted by on 19 March 2011 in Events, Seattle

 

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Catastrophe/Bliss

Last weekend I visited Portlandia. Luckily I was able to hitch a ride with Tonya & Brant + touch base with Michelle & Toru. My friendships deepened during this time partly because of how the earthquake in Japan continues to resonate close to home.

Two questions from our conversations:

How do you respond to catastrophe?
If you could follow your bliss, what would that be?

Thinking about responses to the devastation in Japan, I created this video slideshow of Ji Mo 寂寞: The Stillness of Solitude.

Perhaps it is old fashioned to think that art can bridge the place between distress and comfort. Nonetheless, I offer this slideshow as an initial response. The music is a remix from a live performance at Lincoln Hall in Portland. The photos are from an early morning at Kubota Garden in Seattle. This stillness of solitude is a reflective space to recompose.

放火 火の粉
hōka hinoko
fire sparks

放火 炎
hōka hono(o)
fire flames

放火 火事だ
hōka kajida
fire roars

Seattle-based artist Diem Chau responds by offering two crayon family portraits as part of a raffle on her blog. Chau will donate raffle proceeds to the Japanese Red Cross.

Here are other ways to alleviate suffering and oppression:

Have you found more responses worth noting?

 
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Posted by on 17 March 2011 in News, Seattle, Taiko

 

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