Archives

FareWell: To The End of the World as We Know It OR Dancing Your Way to Paradise

2008 – FareWell to the End of the World As We Know it or Dancing Your Way to Paradise
“FareWell is a modern Greek-style tragedy, delivered by a warrior goddess.”
Ballet-Dance Magazine, Carmel Morgan.

Dance Place Performance:  http://vimeo.com/17018474
Trailer:  https://vimeo.com/15561322

TOURS:  2008-2012
World Premiere:
  Zagrebi Festival! Zagreb, Croatia  (U.S. Embassy) (2011)
USA Premiere:  Fringe Festival, Shakespeare Theatre, Washington, DC (2008)
Local Performance: Dance Place, Washington, DC (2010)
Tours:
Performatica, Puebla Mexico (2009)
GoDown Center, Nairobi, Kenya (U.S. Department of State, Cultural Envoy) (2008)
Laban International Celebration, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2008)
Amazing EarthFEST, Kanab, Utah (2009)
Alwin Nikolais 100th Anniversary Celebration, Hunter College, NYC  (2010)
7th Annual Carnival of eCreativity, Sattal Estate, Bhimtal/Himalayan India State of Uttarakhand, India (2012)
India International Center (IIC) (US Embassy) (2012)
Dance in the Desert Festival, Las Vegas, Nevada ( )

SAMSUNG

Maida Withers, Zagrebi Festival, Croatia…..night out

An evening-length performance by pioneering choreographer Maida Withers, Steve Hilmy, electronic musician/composer, and Ayodamola (Ayo) Okunseinde, new media artist. Fare Well brings insight and vibrant critique to the contemporary issue of end time. Fare Well is as extreme in its moods and absurdities as we might think of “extreme weather.” We watch hypnotized, immobilized, arrogant, innocent and powerful – as the fires rage, volcanoes erupt, the Arctic melts, the Earth becomes parched, and the seas rise.
The performance engages the audience intimately through the real-time interactive aspects of the performance where the dance takes place in ever-changing projected environments on the floor and the backdrop. The electronic music, created and performed live by Steve Hilmy, is dramatic and penetrating. The text brings immediacy and clarity to the ideas as the dancer talks and frame questions to the audience.

Interviews with collaborators on camera:
http://maidadance.com/works/farewell-comments-by-choreographer-maida-withers
http://maidadance.com/works/fare-well-comments-by-composer-steve-hilmy
http://maidadance.com/works/farewell-comments-by-media-artist-ayo-okunseinde
_GTH5029MRWSquatFurCoat1 IMG_0393DP program IMG_0457
Copy of MaidaDSCN03452x2 Maida Withers in Nairobi, Kenya – Cultural Envoy US Department of State_GTH5137MRWArchBackPurbleBluProj1 IMG_0488        Ayo Okunseinde, Media                                     Steve Hilmy, Composer/Musician
DSCF0038AyoCropDSCF0044SteveElectronicsDCCom_GTH4996MRWArmsCrossGrnDCCom_GTH5088MRW&ShadowGrn1Sm_GTH5076MRWFaceFrameArm1IMG_0538

59397_151413664881088_138595266162928_306153_6310290_nMRWReclineIMG_0635
IMG_0403
Maida Reach AP LV 2
IMG_9213
10038739316_d9e736b33e_o
DSC_3259-3                   Improvisation for party after performance – Washington Fringe Festival, D.C.Selman_70_Ayo Maida SteveSteve Hilmy, Composer/Musician; Maida Withers, Choreography/Performer; Ayo Okenseinde, Media “LIVE”

 

FareWell and Hell-O

images
Alissandru (Alex) Caldiero

IMG_9212
Maida Withers

2008 Alissandru (Alex) Caldiero and Maida Withers performed together at the Utah Arts Festival.   Alex performed live on the stage with Maida on the  Salt Lake City Library  Theatre Stage  spontaneously reciting and creating text and projecting the writing onto the background of the performance space.  Maida and Alex were interacting “live” with known material.  The performance was passionate and intense due to the small theater space and proximity to the audience.

Maida adapted FareWell – To The End of the World As We Know It OR Dancing Your Way to Paradise! while keeping interaction between herself and Alex  as he improvised on his writings.

Alex and Maida have collaborated for many years on several projects.  Maida has deep respect for Alex as a philosophy professor but even more for his love of words and his ability to twist and destroy expectations with his poetic manipulations.
“Performing with Alex has an unexpected ecstasy,” Maida Withres

Maida has included her comments about Fare Well here since there is no video record available from the show – Fare Well and Hell-O.

FareWell: Parched Earth – Remembrances from Tomorrow (Kenya, Africa)

2008 –  A dance project that took place in Nairobi, Kenya at the GoDown Center for the Arts.  The dance work, Parched Earth, was created in collaboration with nine Kenyan dancers (six men and three women) during a three-week residency at the GoDown Center for the Arts when Maida Withers, Wendell Cooper and Steve Hilmy, USA artists, were in Nairobi as Cultural Envoys for the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Embassy.

Concepts and movements for Parched Earth were influenced by the photographic exhibit at the GoDown Center for the Arts – an exhibit of photo images documenting the civil disturbance in Kenya that occurred the month prior to our residency as U.S. Cultural Enjoys in Nairobi, Kenya. The Kenyan dancers had experienced intense personal trauma through the recent upheaval in Nairobi. Together, through rehearsals to create Parched Earth we collaborated to reveal the deep understanding of the Earth and nature by the African people and to further understand violence through the current human disruption of cherished values.

Working together creatively lead to deeper understanding, trust, and acceptance among the artists and the audience.
Copy of GoDownCopy of CircleKepa2Copy of CoreHopCopy of CoreJugs003Copy of CoreJugs0012x3Copy of Hop backCopy of Fare Well_Parched Earth 1.8jpgCopy of CoreLean001Copy of 2 Bottles2x3Copy of CoreJumpCopy of CoreKepaAraCopy of SteveDSCN04505x7Steve Hilmy. Composer/Musician in the Nairobi Residency for US Department of State
Copy of JugsPaulDSCN05485x7Core Lineup2x3DSCN0481smWendell Cooper was teaching acrobatic/aerial tactics to youth at the GoDown Center:
Copy of KunjaHandDSCN0259 Copy of Kunja Dancers0042x4 Copy of Kunja Dancers0012x3 Copy of Kunja Dancers2x3






FareWell: Tipping Point (Jadee Mitchell)

2008 –  Multimedia solo originally created by Maida Withers, choreographer for Jadee Mitchell, GW dancer. Tipping Point refers to the crisis of global warming demonstrated most vividly in the Arctic and Antarctica, continents of ice on our planet that are rapidly disappearing.

Have we reached the tipping point, the point of no return? Huge mountains of ice are breaking away, melting and calving, creating astonishing spectacles of nature and streaming rivers of ice water. These continents of the North and South Poles have cradled the Earth for centuries. Steve Hilmy, electronic composer created and performs the haunting music and Ayo Okunseinde, new media artist, performs his overlays of art and nature that are projected on the white floor and backdrop to swallow the performer in the water/ice.

Several aspects of Fare Well: Tipping Point, early choreography, was included in FareWell:  to the End of the World As We Know it OR Dancing Your Way to Paradise!  Performed and danced by Maida Withers and toured extensively.

IMG_1357 IMG_1359 IMG_1368 IMG_1371 IMG_1372IMG_1408sm Jadee with iceberg A 1.8 Adam Peiperl combine rehearsal photos w professional ICEBERG Photos (no permission to mix)
Jadee in Paul Nicklen's Fogbow Jadee with Nicklen's Iceberg 1.8

FareWell: The Others – Uncertain World

M Withers NYC Fur Coat_Fare Well2007 – A brash but intimate improvisation performance, Fare Well: The Others (Uncertain World) was the first investigation event related to the Fare Well project – environmental change.  A brash and hilarious, but intimate, improvisation performance
Dancers: Maida Withers, DC, Wendell Cooper, NYC; Melvin Fraenk, The Netherlands; Steve Hilmy, electronic music

Movement and music ideas that spontaneously occurred during this performance were carried forward into future explorations in creating dances for the Fare Well project.  The event was produced by Wendell Cooper in the Nickolas Leichter Studio in New York City for the Sublet Series, 2007

I am a Nomad (FILM Short) (3:16)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tw4ZbyuRkCU&t=32s
2007 – (3:15 min) a narrated video short by Maida about life and her dances around the issues “live art,” excerpts of 6 site-specific  projects.  This simple statement was created to show her restlessness (thus her nomadic nature) and her pleasure in working in both theatrical and non-theatrical spaces.   Withers has always been interested in how one tells a meaningful story blending voice/image/aesthetics. This short is an example of low technology applied to creating commentary about an artistic point of view made to share with her students in  Trends in Performance Art, a course Withers developed and taught at GWU for over 20 years.

Cuba – Havana Today – 2007 (Documentary Short 8:39)

2007 – Maida visited Havana from her stay in Santiago de Cuba and made this simple record of the sights and sounds on the streets of Havana, Cuba with her Sony mini-dv camera. Fidel Castro was gravely ill on the day of this documentary, February 11, 2007. Americans were not, generally speaking, allowed to travel to Cuba at this time, but Maida went with a group of artists interested in the dance  with music (drumming) and vocals preserved and developed in Santiago de Cuba.  The country was generous and warm to me and struggling with the lack of international exchange to keep the country progressing.

 

Cuba – Santiago de Cuba: In the Eye of the Beholder (Short Film 10:00)

2007 – This informal film short reveals Maida’s brief engagement with the people and culture in Cuba. Sensual dance, jazz music, voodoo, religion, and revolution are part of the Haitian-Afro-Cuban culture of Santiago.

Maida visited Cuba for ten days, February 5-10, 2007 to study the dance/text/ritual of the Cutumba Ballet Folklorico Santiago de Cuba.  Jim Lepore, dancer/choreographer/professor, made this trip possible.

Africa Comeback Women-Film, Meru, Kenya (Film 9:40)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1nwnRYuHxQ

DCC Photos (many videos and photos….need a decision????_

2007 – During a second trip to Kenya, Africa, Maida visited Meru at the invitation of Karambu Ringera, Kenyan political and social activist who was building a school, providing space and incentives for small cottage industries with the women of Meru (soap and jewelry), and assisting financially with families in need.

This film short was shot during a 5-day stay in Meru, January 26 to February 18, 2007 where more than 40 men and women were interviewed when Maida participated in training sessions, visited roadside stands and homes, and enjoyed dancing and singing with the Kenya women.  Maida was traveling with her friend and filmmaker, Verabel Call Cluff, Kristin, Eric, and Marc Withers.

Dr. Karambu L. Ringera is the Founder and President of International Peace Initiatives. She is a Lecturer at the University of Nairobi. Born and raised in Kenya, she earned her Ph.D. in intercultural communication in 2008 from the University of Denver. She earned a Masters Degree in Media from Natal University, South Africa, as well as a Master of Theological Studies (with a peace and justice emphasis) from the Iliff School of Theology in Colorado. She received her Bachelor of Education degree and Postgraduate Diploma in Mass Communication from the University of Nairobi, Kenya.

Karambu Ringera was running for national political office in Kenya in 2007. Maida continues to be in touch with Karambu in Kenya.

Video of Ringera talking about her projects and women dancing (DCC Photos:  Africa Comeback Women  Meru, Africa, Africa, Karambu Ringera (folder includes = video  avi.  too large for the system of this media page), many photos; music of boys on the street, other interesting situations in Kenya.

 

Dance DC – Street Dance (Film Short 3:40)

2006 – Maida Withers, founder and Co- curator of DC International Improvisation Plus+ Festival created a video that mixed the street protest at 1700 K Street, Washington, DC with the street dance by Lotta Lundgren and Amanda Abrams on K Street that happened at the same time.  The street performance was part of the DC 12th International Improvisation Plus+ Festival.

 

Thresholds Crossed (Stage Performance)

2006 – Part I, II, III, IV:   A fusion of East and West that explores the events, ideology and humanistic issues that link the U.S. with the former Soviet Union and contemporary Russia over four decades of time. Colored by the implied humor of propaganda art, old scars of the Russian gulag system, and our war on terror (Guantanamo Bay), Thresholds Crossed actively explores moments when society crosses the line.”
Continue description below:  Program Note  (See Part II below – performed/toured separately)

Object Text (209 words)

#3
Thresholds Crossed
(2006)
Choreographer, Maida Withers
Live, Electronic Music, patriotic songs, pop and classical music, Steve Hilmy
Extreme Vocals and Cello, Audrey Chen, Berlin
Design, Video and Media Installation, Linda Lewett
US Dancers, Maida Withers, Robert Bettman, Wendell Cooper, Anthony Gongora, Dan Joyce, Jennifer Clark Stone, Megan Thompson; Russian Dancers,  Konstantin Grouss, Anastasia Oleynik, Nikolai Shchetnev, Ekaterina Zharinova; Ukraine dancer, Vitalii Sozoniuk
Light Design, William (Bill) DeMull
Costume Design, Anthony Gongora
Sculptures,  Frank Williams
Russian Sponsor, TsEKh, Elena Tupyseva
Technical Advisor, Carl Gudenius
Producer, Maida Withers Dance Construction Company

Sources:
http://maidadance.com/works/thresholds-crossed/
https://vimeo.com/6880178  (1:14:34)
http://maidadance.com/works/solosphere/
https://vimeo.com/videos/8079530  (03:51)
https://maidadance.com/works/thresholds-crossed-norilsk-performance/

End DISPLAY #3

An international project Created in Russia and US with four Russian dancers, one Ukraine and five American dancers. Thresholds Crossed was made possible by the expansion of contemporary dance in Russia in the 1990s following perestroika and is a direct result of extensive tours and residencies by Maida Withers and the Dance Construction Company in Russia since 1997.

Premiere / Tour, Lisner, Washington, DC, April 21, 2006; Luna (Moon) Theatre, Moscow, Ru, April 26, 2007; Isadora International Dance Festival, Krasnoyarsk, Ru, April 30, 2007; Part II, American Celebration Week, Archangelsk, RU, April 16, 2007; Part II: Go Down Center, Nairobi, Kenya, May 1, 2008, Viseos Urbanas, Sao Paulo, Brazil, April 28, 2011, Anastasia Oleynik and Konstantin Gross, 3rd International Annual Conference “Integrity of Cultural  Space or Sum of Territories,  November  2006, Norilsk, Russia

Original music was created by award winning electronic composer/musician, Steven C. Hilmy (Washington, DC), and Audrey Chen, original vocals and cello (Baltimore, MD/ Berlin, DE).   Five dancers were auditioned and cast in the capital city of Moscow, Russia in July 2005 to join with six American dancers with MWDCCo that were cast in March/April 2006 in Washington, DC.  Thresholds Crossed was the centerpiece of the 30th anniversary celebration activities of the founding of Maida Withers Dance Construction Company.

The performance was created  in Moscow (3-week residency, TsEKh) and Washington, DC (GW) and performed in the Washington, DC (Lisner) and in Moscow (Luna (Moon Theatre), Krasnoyarsk (Isadora International Dance Festival) Arhangelsk (American Celebration Week, U.S. Consulate). The performance includes a captivating video, by filmmaker, Linda Lewett (Washington, DC) that is projected as a full backdrop on the stage. The visual installation features footage shot on Solovki Islands, Russia (first Soviet Era Gulag); animated propaganda poster art; memorials to war in Russia and America; historical quotations; colorful graffiti art, and images from pop culture in Russia and America today.

The new music score, created in sonic blocks and performed live to heighten the interactive aspect, references Russian Civil War and patriotic songs as well as contemporary pop and classical music. The drama of the work is enhanced by the light design of William DeMull (North Carolina). In this international collaboration of U.S. and Russian dancers, Thresholds Crossed fearlessly explores the events, ideology and humanistic issues that link the U.S. with the former Soviet Union. Colored by the implied humor and propaganda art, old scars of the Russian Gulag system and modern terrorism, Thresholds actively explores the moment when society crosses the line.  An installation/exhibition of Frank Williams, American painter living in Moscow, was presented at the Luna for the performance and the official reception for dignitaries.

The residency in Russia with four Russian and four American dancers is made possible by the dance agency TSEKH, Elena Tupyseva, Co-Founder and Executive Director. a national organization in Moscow founded in 2001 with the support of the Ford Foundation in Russia to contribute to the development of contemporary dance in Russia (July 2-23, 2005).  In Washington the residency will be housed in facilities at George Washington University and sponsored by Maida Withers Dance Construction Company.  Thresholds Crossed premiered April 21, 2006 in Lisner Auditorium, a 1490-seat theatre in downtown Washington, DC.  See Maida Withers: A Choreographer’s Life in the Archives – an exhibition in the Dimock Gallery during the premiere of Thresholds Crossed.

Anastasiya Oleynik and Konstantin Gross performed a duet version of segments of Thresholds Crossed in Norilsk, Russia for 3rd annual conference “Integrity of Cultural Space or Sum of Territories, November 2-5 , 2006 under the invitaTion of Irina Prokhorova, Institute Founder and Luba Kusovnikova, program associate.  This part of Russia required a special visa to get into this territory (historically rich area for nickel/gold and other important and rare metals and of military importance. Norilsk is one of  darkest and most polluted places on the planet.  Irina ran her brothers recent campaign when he ran against Putin.

Thresholds Crossed is made possible by the establishment of contemporary dance in Russia following perestroika in 1991/2 and is a direct result of eleven tours and residencies by Maida Withers and the Dance Construction Company in Russia since 1997. Important for the development of Thresholds Crossed was the Company’s performance for the 5th OPEN LOOK International Festival during the 300th anniversary celebration of the founding of St. Petersburg in 2003, the performance residency in Solovki Islands for Art Angar “Solosphere” Festival, the site of the first Soviet Era gulag in 2004, the creation of LENIN for the Lenin Museum in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia, Russia in 2005, and the three-week choreographic residency co-sponsored by TsEKh, Elena Tupyseve, Co-Founding Executive Director, in Moscow in the summer of 2005 along with the four day residency to reconstruct Thresholds Crossed in April prior to the Russian premiere and tour.

Thresholds Crossed has been generously supported by the Trust for Mutual Understanding, by the Ford Foundation in Russia, TsEKh, Elena Tupyseva, Founding Executive Director.  Dallas Morse Coors Foundation, the DC Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts, Meet the Composer, The Dance Construction Company, Equity Focus Group, Alpina Springs, among others.

These two great and strong peoples have long been fascinated by one another.  Our histories have been in sharp contrast at times.  However, we share deeply held values, values often won through struggles associated with conflicts and war, both historic and current.  Two monumental figures, The Statue of Liberty in the USA and the Motherland is Calling in Russia represent the equally confident aspirations of two powerful nations.  We can ask, what remains of the long history of fear and distrust between Russia and America, feelings we understand from the cold War years?  Whom can we trust and who can trust us?  How do we reconcile our need for privacy and the government’s need for surveillance and security?  What about displacement of values – the value of displacement?  How do we surrender to the will of the majority while protecting the voide of one?  How are propaganda art and political slogans in Russia and America, often couched in humor, used to persuade?
manmouth0041Motherland Russia, Volgograd, Russia; photo,Maida Withers, 1996
Parts I, III, & IVGTH_5368fist300GTH_5384Thumb300GTH_5391Lenin300GTH_5408yellow300GTH_5413RedWheelGTH_5458lineGTH_54522lifts300Motherland CallsIMG_3133P3270176Hat8956whisper89602armsreach3008940groupcircle300REvIMG_9350BushPutin200IMG_9267GooseStep200IMG_9227MareFeet200IMG_9056DanEar200IMG_9042DanUpIMG_8986Part I Pull_crop4

Part II – Abu Ghraib / Guantenamo Bay (Toured separtely)
GTH_5421AbuGhraibRevIMG_3083Thresholds Crossed5417_300moon theater200Moon Theatre, Moscow, Russia
A4-KrasnoyarskLudovic Label1RussiaHorsecard

Maida Withers: A Choreographer’s Life

April 13 – April 21, 2006 – An exhibition at the Dimock Gallery in Washington, DC – a retrospective of photographs, video, and costumes that celebrates 35 years of innovative works by Washington’s noted groundbreaking dancer and choreographer, Maida Withers.

A Choreographer’s Life showcases Maida Withers and her history as artistic director of the Dance Construction Company along with local and international collaborators and her role as a Professor, George Washington University. The exhibition celebrates work created over thirty-five years when Withers began to perform and choreograph in the mid-1960s in the nation’s capital. Her work parallels the development of the arts in Washington, D.C. The exhibition culminates with displays of propaganda art and other items related to the process involved in the creation of her latest work, Thresholds Crossed, premiered April 21, 2006 in GW’s Lisner Auditorium, 8:00pm.

Thresholds Crossed fearlessly explores the events, ideology, and humanistic issues that link the U.S. with Russia. This international collaboration of U.S. and Russian dancers combines original music and new technology to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the D.C. based Dance Construction Company.

See in Archives:  MWDCCo 1997-2006
Video excerpts of dances from Maida Withers Dance Construction Company archives.
Video currently on display on maidadance.com opening page.  Assembled for the Maida Withers: A Choreographer’ Life, Exhibition in the Dimock Gallery.”

TILT by mostly men..a spirited contest

2005 Performance at the Kennedy Center Millennium Stage related to the 11th DC International Improvisation Plus+ Festival.  The theme of the improvisation was “to tilt” the body.  Most of the people in the performance were men.  Who can tilt the most without falling?  Who?

 

Shocked and Odd – Live Art (Russia)

10591934535_721cd0f2d3_q2005 – Shocked and Odd – Live  Art was an idea encouraging extreme movement and character concepts for improvisation that took place in Russia with an American living in Amsterdam, two Americans living in the USA, and one dancer from Russia(2005).

A similar event was presented in Washington, December 3, 2004 for the DC 10th International Improvisation Plus+ Festival that included international, national, and local dancers.

The Russia performance was part of the programming for the International Festival of Modern Dance “Isadora” in Krasnoyarsk, Eastern Siberia, Russia where Maida Withers Dance Construction Company were guest artists (April 10 to 17, 2005). The improvisation performance took place April 16, 2005 outside the building but then  in the spectacular Ballet and Opera House in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia, Russia.
203106Jack Gallagher, American living in Amsterdam
264925182519

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
305202