at the Maison de la culture de Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, 3755 rue Botrel at the Jean-Corbeil library in Anjou, 7500 Avenue Goncourt. 5 at 7:00 pm at Ausgang Plaza (presented by the Maison de la culture Rosemont - La Petite-Patrie) at 6524 rue Saint-Hubert. Under the theme of low-tech creation and popular culture, the works offer an amazing and fun journey into the margins of contemporary creation. We are honored!įor the 4th consecutive year, the artist and curator Priscilla Guy is offering a selection of choreographic short films from the programming of the International Encounters Hybrid Looks. It is an unemotional, detached reflection of things we find holy, in an episodic manner.‘ground'-swell’ has been selected as 1 of 8 films to tour as part of the Mandoline Hybrides platform. Wings (2019) extracts the iconography in baroque architecture and catholic art. Julia Antinozzi is a fiscally sponsored member of New York Live Arts, and a recipient of Triskelion Arts’ Space Subsidy program sponsored by New York State Council on the Arts. Julia had the pleasure of working with many international artists including Lucia Pasquini, Toby Fitzgibbons, Quim Bigas and Søren Linding Urup, as well as performing in a work by Gustavo Ramirez Sansano. There, she studied under the direction of Lotte Sigh and Morten Innstrand who personally coached her to develop her technique and performance skills. In the fall of 2018 Julia was invited to be a Postgraduate Diploma student at the Copenhagen Contemporary Dance School in Denmark. She was Business Manager and choreographer of Smith’s Celebrations Dance Company, which is dedicated to student composition, performance and production. At school, she studied with Chris Aiken, Angie Hauser, Jen Nugent, Joy Davis, and Katie Martin. She received the Excellence in Dance Studies Award for outstanding work in her senior capstone project and overall contributions to the Department of Dance. Julia earned her BA in Dance and Astronomy from Smith College, graduating cum laude with high honors in Dance. Since moving to New York, she has performed in work by Javi Padilla, Mia Martelli and Maggie Goulder. She has brought her work on tour to Seattle (CHOP SHOP: Bodies of Work at the Meydenbauer Center), Salt Lake City (Queer Spectra Arts Festival) and Copenhagen DK (GAME Streetmekka København).Īs a performer, Julia has danced in work by Bebe Miller, Shayla-Vie Jenkins, Barbie Diewald, Rodger Blum, Sarah Lass and Rowan Salem. Her work has recently been presented at Jack Crystal Theater (TDH Festival for Emerging Choreographers), The Craft, and HATCH Presenting Series in NYC. Her work investigates the specificity of place, exploring the idea: + dance and architecture are fundamentally related by the active body, both grounded by the necessity of bodies in space + Julia is a dance artist, gemini and optimist. In others, we simply read scenes while others danced. In some instances, we rearranged words and phrases to disassociate meaning from the original scene, making space for new sense and context to be imagined. I picked scenes that offered a handsome text, and brought the scripts to rehearsal. Text: I wanted to treat text with the same complexity that I treat movement material. As a group we dissected the text, movements, and material from Moonstruck in a few ways, wondering: how familiar do you have to be with this film to be able to pick up on the references? If you’ve never seen the film, what do you think this is all about? The following videos are edited clips of fairly raw material from our short rehearsal process. Near the end of January 2020, I began a process with five dancers - Taina Bey, Mia Martelli, Delaney McDonough, Paulina Meneses, and Kelsey Saulnier. It’s currently available to stream on Amazon Prime and Youtube Movies. I can’t remember when my mother first showed it to me, but it has been a classic in my family’s DVD library for years. Moonstruck has been a part of my life for a long time. It is about a widowed, 37-year-old, Italian-American woman who falls in love with her fiancé’s estranged, hot-tempered younger brother. Moonstruck (1987) is a romantic comedy film directed by Norman Jewison, written by John Patrick Shanley, starring Cher and Nicholas Cage. So instead, I began sourcing material from something concrete that stands out to me as a good work of art. I was tired of trying to make dances about abstract concepts.
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