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Noism08
Global choreography
Still contending with the loss of George Balanchine twenty-five
years on the legendary choreographer and New York City Ballet
founder died in 1983 the dance world tends to pin its hopes
for fresh new ballets on a couple of European-American gentlemen.
Setting aside the impossibility that anyone might live up to the
Balanchine legacy, I'd vote for broadening out the pool and
throwing in Noism's Jo Kanamori for consideration.
Kanamori, thirty-three, began dance training early with his
father and subsequently studied with companies in Japan and
Switzerland. His enviable experience in Europe also included stints
with Nederlands Dans Theater II (for which he first choreographed),
the Lyon Opera Ballet, and the Gothenburg Ballet. After returning
to Japan, Kanamori founded Noism04 in 2004. (The name of the company
changes with the year.)
On February 15, UMS presents Noism08 in NINA materialize sacrifice,
a stunning piece of dance-theater, which premiered in 2005 in
Niigata, Japan; Noism is the resident dance company at the City
Performing Arts Center there. With choreography and lighting (just
as critical, as you'll see) by Kanamori and music by Vietnamese-French
composer Ton That An, NINA, with its techno-ballet sheen, is as
watchable as it is occasionally disturbing.
If the age-old artistic debate of color versus design, or drawing,
still holds any sway, you'd have to put Kanamori in the draftsman
camp. His universe is a stark, maybe even sinister, study in
contrasts, riddled with sharp angles and fluid lines. Yet to judge
by his self-consciously futuristic, cinematic vision, he's
eminently twenty-first century.
In NINA Kanamori sets up a postapocalyptic landscape with women
as expressionless mannequins to be fair, the men in dark
suits also lack color and emotion and minimal decor. If
you're thinking Butoh, you're on the right track, but his
is a post-Butoh sensibility fusing East and West, ballet and modern
dance.
Early in the piece, a precise, balletic solo in a square of white
light suggests a stylized gymnastics floor routine; a second dancer
joins in and they lean into each other like a couple of sumo wrestlers
on a mat. Later, two men enact a loopy, snaky mirrored duet, leading
to some kind of confrontation. At different times, the group
circumnavigates the stage in a slow-motion shuffle, as if ice
skating.
Kanamori also samples ballet history with refreshing irreverence.
At one point I detected a whiff of pagan sacrifice, Á la The
Rite of Spring; at another the perfume of a Romantic ballet pas de
quatre, complete with Giselle-like long tutus. Throughout the
piece, dancers enter and exit dramatically by picking up the
backdrop.
I'd love to see a European or American ballet company stage
NINA, or anything else by Kanamori. He gives globalism a good
turn.
Stephanie Rieke
[Review published February 2008]
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