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This Space Occupied

https://vimeo.com/519137167

1998 – DC 4th International Improvisation Plus+ Festival taking place in an evening-length performance in the Corcoran Gallery of Art, downtown Washington, DC.

Dancers and musicians, improvising artists from DC, NYC, Germany, England, South Africa, and France, occupy the entire Corcoran Gallery of Art building for the opening event of the DC 4th International Improvisation Festival.  Curated by Maida Withers, choreographer, and Jim Levy, jazz musician, this site performance is in the tradition of last year’s wildly successful Seeing Jazz Move at the Smithsonian.  The performance is produced by Maida Withers Dance Construction Company and presented by the Corcoran in association with The George Washington University, Department of Theatre and Dance and Department of Music, the Goethe-Institut, and the Embassy of France.

https://vimeo.com/519137167

Dance Works by International Women (Venezuela/DC)

October 31 to November 2, 1997
Maida Withers Dance Construction Company toured to Venezuela to perform with Taller Experimental de Danza Pisorrojo.  The Dance Construction Company invited Phffft Dance Company (Cyrus Khambatta) to join in the tour.  MWDCCo was honored to be the first American Company to perform at the famous Universidad Central de Venezuela.

Caracus, Venezuela – MWDCCo performed:
In Winds of Sands, solo by Maida Withers (see video above)
Nevertheless…Tenderness with Maida Withers and Sarah Slifer

1998 – An intimate evening of duets and solos by women choreographers and dancers from Washington, DC and Caracas, Venezuela.
MWDCCo performed:
Pitfalls – nose to cement and other falling tales (solo by Maida Withers)
Stirrings solo performed by Sarah Slifer
Nevertheless…Tenderness performed by Maida Withers and Sarah Slifer

Taller Experimental de Danza Pisorrojo performed:
En Blanco Instante
Emergency Exit
Moravia Naranjo and Ailed Izurieta:

Nose to cement and other falling tales told on the way down, GW dancers

*Please reference Pitfalls…nose to cement and fall tales told on the way down  (trio by members of Maida Withers Dance Construction Company)

GW Dancers:  The original performance was done by thirteen GW dancers. Stories about falling down were recorded by members of the cast and other international and national artists invited to be recorded describing a personal incident of “falling down” and played during the performance as the sound score.

The idea came for this dance when Maida, rushing out the front door of her house without tying her long shoe laces, crashed head first to the cement porch with her nose to cement with her shoe laces still stuck in the door when she slammed it shut in her rush to work.

Falling story contributors in the opening performance were: Ann Carlson, Andrea Cheatham, Dena Hawes, Rory Hiber, Alex Kalkines, Michael Laurino, Gilbert Nash, Vinu Vinayak Pillai, Jessica Phillips, Sarah Reis, Lily Ross, Sarah Slifer, Tish carter and Sidwell Friends 7th graders, Haruna Shiratori, Antoinetta Vicario, Kerry Washington, Wu Wenguang (China).

Seeing Jazz Move – Smithsonian International Gallery

https://vimeo.com/519283804

1997 – Seeing Jazz Move – Dance and Music Improvisation performance inspired by the exhibition “Seeing Jazz”  presented by the Smithsonian International Gallery – S. Dillon Ripley Center, Washington, DC, December 5, 1997 at 6:30 pm.  FREE

Dance and the event,  Maida Withers, Curator
Music, James Levy, Curator

Dancers and musicians from DC, New York, the Netherlands, and China improvised in 7 galleries in a performance curated by Maida Withers for the DC 3rd International Improvisation Plus+ festival.  Jim Levy directed the jazz music ensemble with diverse jazz musicians performed live in the galleries.

Artists/Guests:  Maida Withers, Joseph Mills, DC;  Wen Hui (China), Gloria McLean (NYC), Cyrus Khambatta (Seattle), Reginald Crump (DC/NYC),  Sarah Slifer (Boston), Daniel Burkholder, Sharon Mansur (DC);  Rob Kitsos (Seattle)Katie Duck Vincent Cacialano  (The Netherlands)

Jazz musicians:  James Levy, keyboard, Sharon Clark, vocals; Pepe Gonzalez, bass; ? , Drums;  Willfredo Cruz, Congas,  Ricky Loza, Drums.  Jim Levy, Music Curator.  Michael Vatcher, musician/composer (The Netherlands).

The exhibition was organized by Smithsonian Institution traveling Exhibition Service…A presentation of America’s Jazz Heritage, a partnership of the Lila-Wallace Reader’s Digest Fund and the Smithsonian Institution. Exhibition included: Romare Bearden, In E Sharp, 1981, Oil and Collage on paper.  Courtesy Estate of Romare beaden Rombare Bearden Foundation, Inc.  Seeing Jazz: artists and Writers on Jazz is published by Chronicle Books and is available in bookstores everywhere (c) 1997 Smithsonian Institution.  Poster Design by Kessler Design Group, Ltd.

The performance was billed with the DC 3rd International Improvisation Plus+ Festival, 1997.

 

Halda – a mound of waste (Bytom, Poland)

4 hang on pole.SMjpg1977 – An evening-length site performance commissioned by Slaski Teatre Tanca for the 1997 International Dance Conference and Festival in Bytom, Poland.  This outdoor performance was created with four Polish dancers from the Eksperymentalne Studio Tanca in Kracow, Poland and inspired by the devastation to the local environment of the Silesian region in Poland due to pollution and damage to the earth by digging coal mines under the city. of Bytom. The Fivenotten Group (visual artists) from the Academy of Fine Arts in Katowice, Poland created an installation of grass and a balanced pole used by the dancers during the performance.

Premiere performances for 1997 International Dance Conference and Festival:

(1) Bytom, Poland, Plac Kosciuszki
(2) Katowice, Poland, Plac Sejmu Slaskiego
(3) Krakow, Poland; Kazimierz, ul. Szeroka
1 hair pull up 4 women hang hair down1000 Haldahairfly4 outside look musician background4 in line with hand on shoulder

 

Nevertheless…Tenderness

1997 – Duet between Maida Withers and Sarah Slifer that features the relationship between a mature woman and a young woman.  Toured to Venezuela,  Korea, and Brazil.Maida lean back on SarahMaida Withers and Sarah SliferClose Maida behind looking as Sarah looks away

Nevertheless…Tenderness was performed at the Aula Magna Theatre, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela, (Nov 1 and 2) under  support of Taller Experimental de Danza Pisorrojo in 1997.  MWDCCo was the first American dance company to perform at the historic Universidad Central de Venezuela, known as the bastion of freedom during the Venezuelan revolution.  We were honored to perform at this location and conduct workshops.

The video shown here is of a performance in 1999  in Korea in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the founding of Taejon City.

Performances in Brazil, July 1999, were part of the 31st Festival de Inverno in Ouro Preto.  Performances occurred in Rio de Janeiro at Casa de Cultura.
Nevertheless_Tenderness_MRWonSarahSlifer4.

 

 

 

 

 

Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz

Above: Utah*Spirit Place*Spirit Planet*Tukuhnikivatz,  performance at Lincoln Center, GREAT DANCE IN THE BANDSHELL, shot by Adam Peiperl in the audience with restriction that he could not stand continuously by the camera due to blocking – 2500 patrons who attended the the out-of-doors performance.

Above: Tukuhnikivatz:  Film Installation projected on 60′ X 60′ Lincoln Center Bandshell in the stage work, Utah*Spirit Place*Spirit Planet*Tukuhnikivatz.  The film follows the mythical narrative of Utah*Spirit Place*Spirit Planet*Tukuhnikivatz.  The film was projected throughout the performance onto large movable canvas “buttes” on wheels and, also, on the stage backdrop.

Other videos related to the stage work: Utah*Spirit Place*Spirit Planet*Tukuhnikivatz:
Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz 1996
Excerpts 30:00 min (26:58) https://vimeo.com/7984525

Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz  (18:45)   2020 Amazing Earthfest presented by Maida Withers  https://vimeo.com/7983497

Tukuhnikivatz (Excerpts) (12:46) https://vimeo.com/464010414  (Projection story for stage work

Other videos/films related to the projected film installation for Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz edited and reduced in length for other film presentations:
TUK (Tukuhnikivatz (FILM 18:04) Ludivik Jolivet, Editor https://vimeo.com/31371574

Tukuhnikivatz (FILM 39:58) I returned to the land of my birth in Utah (dancers in hole) Jamille Wallick, Editor https://vimeo.com/468693246 

TUK (Tukuhnikivatz) Trailer (00:52) https://vimeo.com/127958843/

Tukuhnikivatz (FILM Story 12:46) Stephani Altomare, Editor https://vimeo.com/464010414/

Note: Videos/films not specifically related to the stage work, but shot during the Utah Residency:
TUK l:  Maida/Tim/Christy on roadside rocks, Bears Ears, Utah (02:29) https://vimeo.com/99726485/

Utah/Tuk:   Maida talk/visuals (03:03) https://maidadance.com/561830993/  (wrong #)

ITVS_worksample_tuk_aurora_icebergs_collision_cours (13:50) Maida narrates, https://vimeo.com/561830993/ (wrong #)

Performance photograph: live dancers (backlight casts image on movable “canvas buttes” on wheels)

1996 – an evening length multimedia installation and performance based on ancient and contemporary earth consciousness commissioned by  Lincoln Center for Lincoln Center Out of Doors, GREAT DANCE in the Band Shell Series, Damrosch Park, New York City, NY.   Research took place over a period of 6/7 years with Maida Withers and Verabel Call Cluff engaged in on-site research in Utah and the Four Corners Area of the Southwestern United States (Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona). Time was spent with the Hopi, Navajo, and other indigenous peoples living in the region to understand the their “earth” and “origin” philosophies. Great respect is given to the sacred pictographs and petroglyphs (rock art) in the region. Video was obtained by hiking into various locations – mostly in obscure places in Utah. These sacred images have often been destroyed and disrespected so we were careful and respectful in our search.  A six-week residency of dancers and filmmakers at four Earth sites in Utah provided the primary footage of dancers on landsites.  Many of the ideas for the work were spawned by Maida’s family history, early pioneers who settled in southern area of what later became Utah. The Rust family respected and had interest in the land, including the Green and Colorado Rivers and, especially, the Grand Canyon. Maida’s father and grandfather built and operated the Kaibab Lodge  (VT Ranch)18 miles from the North Rim of the Grand Canyon.  The Lodge continues today.

Pioneer ancestors of Withers settled in southern Utah in the 1860s.  Spirit Place * Spirit Planet refers both to her ancestors love of the land and Native American peoples who resided in the region, past and present.  Mount Tukuhnikivatz is a triangle-shaped sacred sacred mountain. Maida found the mountain originally on a map in a restaurant known as the place at “end of time” where people will gather, the place where the “Sun last sets” in the La Sal Mountains in Utah.  Sunny and Hardy Redd made our residency possible by providing their winter home and 15 passenger van for our use for six weeks. We honor and recognize the importance of these lands to Anasazi (ancestral Puebloan), Navajo Nation, Zuni, Hopi, and Ute and the Gteat Gallery, Barrier Canyon Style of the Desert Archaic culture.

The immensity of the project made additional performances of the entire work almost impossible.  We were honored to have 2500 people attend the Lincoln Center Out of Doors performance. The work was conceived, choreographed and directed by Maida Withers.  Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation, composed and directed the music with his Blue Butterfly Group musicians and Will Goins, singer, Cherokee;  Bruce Hucko, Earth photographer,  Verabel Call Cluff and James Byrne, filmmakers responsible for the landsite projections throughout the production, Turker Ozdogon and GW MFA ceramic students designed/created masks;  Tom Fiocchi fabricated  “moving buttes” and stilts for “night figures,” many others.

History:
“In 1988, I returned to the land of my birth in Utah with a group of artists for a five-week experiment of living and dancing on selected land sites to create a dance video.  Each day we understood better how to join with the forces of nature.  We experienced the extraordinary physical and spiritual powers of this place and its inhabitants, and we glimpsed our most inward selves.  Slowly I began to make linkages between my concern with new art, my own culture, and these ancient sites and people.  The connections involve the relationship of nature and culture and, more importantly, raise questions relating to the very meaning and function of art.”  Maida Withers, 1990.

Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit  Planet * Tuhnikivatz is a co-collaborative undertaking that fearlessly moved forward in a bold trajectory, knowing there will be only one performance for one time and one space.

Object Label
#1
Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz
(1996)
Concept, Choreography: Maida Withers

Music Composition: Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation
Musicians:  Blue Butterfly Group – Brent Michael Davids (Mohican Nation), flutes and percussion; Will Goins Moreau (Cherokee Nation), vocals; Dasha Hlavenka, violin and percussion; Joe Myers, acoustic and electric guitars, Will Goins Moreau (Cherokee Nation) vocals and drum
Dancers on Stage:  Giselle Ruzany, Helanius Wilkins, Joseph Mills, Maida Withers, Monstah Black (Reginald Ellis
Crump), Sarah Slifer, Vincent Cacalano.
Dancers on Video Installation: Cristy Lamb, Emily Ojala, Maida Withers, Tim Harling, Will Goins Moreau (Cherokee Nation)
Spirit Figure Dancers: Alesia Young, Allen McDermott, Catherine Cacho, Elana Lanczi, Heather Pultz, Iwonka Swenson, Lily Ross, Michelle Higgins, Nancy Menapace, Teshina Wilson
Earth Photographer: Bruce Hucko
Photograph Installation:  Bruce Hucko, Jennifer Kinloch
Costume Design: Kelli. K. Owens
Mask Design: Turker Ozdogan
Light Design: Spencer Brown
Visual Installation: Jennifer Kinloch
Principal partner/road warrior:  Verabel Call Cluff,
Guide: Joe Pachak
Documentary Video:  Adam Peiperl
Sponsors: Sunny and Hardy Redd, LaSal Ranch; GW Television; KUED TV; At the Canyon’s Edge; Canyonlands Field Institute; White Mesa Institute; Forest Service;  US Department of Interior

Sources:
https://maidadance.com/works/utah-spirit-place-spirit-planet-tukuhnikivatz/
https://vimeo.com/7983497

https://vimeo.com/468693246

We honor and recognize the importance of these lands to Anasazi (ancestral Puebloan), Navajo Nation, Zuni, Hopi, and Ute.  Of particular influence is the Great Gallery rock art panel and others in the vicinity generally called the “Barrier Canyon Style” and are attributed to the Desert Archaic culture who lived in Utah from 8000 BC through 500 AD.

Deemer - MRW close with deer shadow behindTGAjpg72.
Aaron Deemer, Black and White Photographer (GW Alumni)
Bruce HuckoJPG72.
Bruce Hucko,  Earth Photographer

NYC PT 1 - Earth slides of red rockTGA72.
Bruce Hucko, Projected Utah Earth Photograph/Slides
NYC Pt 2 Sarah Slifer & Alesia Y parallel with arm outTGAjfp72.
Sarah Slifer and  Alesia Young,  Water Women
, Spirit Figure
willjpg72
Will Goins Moreau, Singer; Bruce Hucko, Photorgraphs/slides projected on 60′ x 60′ Lincoln Center –  Great Dance in the Bandshell, NYC
NYC Pt 2 -Buffoon Character with groupTGAjpg72.
Joseph Mills, Trickster;   (name?. Goon),  Vincent Cacalano
scan0018_BrentDavidsCropjpg.Brent Michael Davids, Mohican, Musician and Composer
Alesia Young raise arm SS behindJPG72.
Alesia Young (Water Woman, Spirit Figure) and Sarah Slifer
Deemer - MRW close with deer shadow behindTGAjpg72.
Maida Withers, projected photograph, Shaman, shot on location, Verabel Call Cluff

MRW 2nd position in Bluejpg72.
Maida Withers
NYC pt2 Joseph Mills & Giselle R masks, each leg liftTGAjpg72.
Joseph Mills, Trickster,  and Giselle Ruzany, Angel Messenger

Will Goinsjpg72. Will Moreau Goins, Singer & Dancer, Cherokee NationNYC Pt1 Joseph Mills reiding on Reggie CrumpTGAjpg72.
Reginald Ellis Crump and Joseph Mills

Deemer - 5 dancers, fingers touch at chestTGAjpg72.
Helanius Wilkins, Giselle Ruzany, Vincent Cacalano, Reginald Ellis Crump, Giselle Ruzany

*UTAH * SPIRIT PLACE * SPIRIT PLANET * TUKUHNIKIVATZ (Ute)
Tukuhnikivatz, a futuristic evening-length multimedia dance performance, maps a trajectory from the past to the future in a way that universally links us to the mystery and power of the wilderness lands in the Four Corners Area of the United States – and the Native American spirit and ancestral voice that reside there ‑ tracking and redefining this spirit for modern times to renew and celebrate our consciousness and connection to the earth and planet.
Concept and Choreography:  Maida Rust Withers
Music Composition: Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation
Dancers on stage: Reginald Ellis  Crump, Joseph Mills, Sarah Slifer, Helanius J. Wilkins, Maida Withers (solo)
Dancers on film: Maida Withers, Tim Harling, Cristy Lamb, Emily Ojala, and Will Goins
Musicians:  Blue Butterfly Group – Brent Michael Davids, flutes and percussion, Will Goins (Cherokee Nation), vocals and drums; Dasha Hlavenka, violin and percussion; Joe Myers, acoustic and electric guitars
Visual Artists:  Bruce Hucko, photographs; Verabel Cluff, video; Adam Peiperl, Kinetic light sculptures; James Byrne, video; Stefani Altomare-Sese, video editing; Jennifer Kinloch, design; GWTV assisted with the editing of the projected video.
Program
Part I:  “Earth/Spirit” Dancers in the guise of future and past spirit figures based on ancient rock art (light, darkness, water, messenger eagle, angel messenger, spider woman, noble warrior, trickster, wisdom, and shaman) emerge from continually changing projected environments.   These figures reflect centuries-old rock art carved or painted on the canyon walls in Utah.
Part II: “Passage”  Dancers, man and woman, move as earth and landscape, rock and moving earth/dunes ‑ sounding the environment, signaling, and aerial dancing in earth’s deep belly ‑ marking the sun by creating shadows in a human chain as living petroglyph ‑ migrating, partnering and working together creating a metaphor for the survival of all life.
Part III: “Transformation” (three segments) Dancers, moving with vibrant energy, combine the ancient with the future, and eventually come to a profound unison and simplicity, a peaceful transforming and knowing as they adopt the masks of the spirit figures.

*Utah*TUK was first presented by The George Washington University Department of Theatre and Dance in April 1996 and premiered at Lincoln Center GREAT DANCE in the BAND SHELL in August, 2006. Utah*TUK is a Maida Withers Dance Construction Company Production.

The original music created for Utah * Tukuhnikivatz contains elements of Native American tribal music combined with Western experimental traditions and techniques. The music, under direction of Brent Michael Davids, is played live by a four-member ensemble of men and women.  The music includes soprano and bass flutes (crystal quartz), percussion, double bass, classical guitar, traditional Native American instruments, as well as unique instruments designed by Brent Michael Davids, Native American composer.  The human voice is featured and includes a wide range of sounds, Native American songs, language, and text.  Dancers use voice and movement sounds on stage as well.

Credits:   Utah *Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz (1996)
Concept / Choreography: Maida Withers
Principle partner/road warrior: Verabel Call Cluff,
Visionary guide, Joe Pachak
Documentary Video by Adam Peiperl
Music Composition: Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation; Musicians:  Blue Butterfly Group ( Brent Michael Davids (Mohican Nation), flutes and percussion; Will Goins Moreau (Cherokee), vocals; Dasha Hlavenka, violin and percussion; Joe Myers, acoustic and electric guitars

Dancers on stage:  Giselle Ruzany, Helanius Wilkins, Joseph Mills, Maida Withers, Monstah Black (Reginald Ellis Crump), Sarah Slifer, Vincent Cacalano
Dancers on Video Installation: Cristy Lamb, Emily Ojala, Maida Withers, Tim Harling, Will Goins Moreau
Spirit Figure Dancers: Alesia Young, Allen McDermott, Catherine Cacho, Elana Lanczi, Heather Pultz, Iwonka Swenson, Lily Ross, Michelle Higgins, Nancy Menapace, Teshina Wilson.
Earth Photographer: Bruce Hucko
Photographic Installation:  Bruce Hucko, Jennifer Kinloch
Costume Design, Kelli. K. Owens; Mask Design: Turker Ozdogan; Light Design, Spencer Brown; Visual Installation: Jennifer Kinloch
Sponsors: Sunny and Hardy Redd, LaSal Ranch, GW Television, KUED TV, At the Canyon’s Edge, Canyonlands Field Institute, White Mesa Institute, Forest Service, US Department of Interior

Premiere: Lincoln Center Great Dance in the BandShell, NYC, NY, 1996

Music Performance:  Brent Michael Davids,
In Utah * Tukuhnikivatz, the instrumentalists regard their instruments less as musical instruments and more as talking sticks, singing reeds, pounding heartbeats, rustling winds, swarming voices, shooting thunder and breathy whispers.  Artists strong in indigenous and shamanistic musical traditions who are also engaged in experimentation form a collaborative team under the direction of a Native American composer.  The music makes connection with the choreography and the projected visual images.
Set Concept:  Maida Withers
Set Design: Thomas Fiocchi
Film and Visual Images:  Adam Peiperl, James Byrne, Verabel Cluff,  Earth Slides: Bruce Hucko
Set and Visual Element:
The stage setting for Utah * Tukuhnikivatz is a visually stunning and technically compelling work, with the latest multimedia techniques creating a modern and futuristic scenario for our timeless spirit.  The multimedia installation includes images, in video format, projected on 16-foot high movable “buttes” on stage with a possible slide installation on surrounding surfaces.  The performance video combines images of ancient Utah rock art (petroglyphs and pictographs) with daring earlier footage of the dancers at the Utah earth sites, art photographs of sandstone earth (an ancient sea bed), images of soaring eagles, animals, abstract landscapes and kaleidoscope images in motion, and NASA films of planet earth and space voyages with footage of a galaxy being born, and an all-consuming black hole.  Interaction of projected images and movement of the sets (five 16-foot-high movable “buttes” and hand-held screens) creates a magical interplay between the dancers and images (both static and moving), creating a fantastic manipulation of time, space and reality.

Projected images of video and slides establish the land as the spirit of place.  The stage becomes earth’s interior, abstract canyon, a ledge, mountain birthing, stone cities, sand, earth and sky.  Dancers create spirit forms, ceremonial figures based on ancient rock art, with use of exaggerated costumes, headgear and body paint,.  Masked performers on stage are juxtaposed with projected images of dancers as they weave time and space, past and future, in the guise of moving shadows, squatting figures, eagles, stampeding migratory animals, people, and ancient/futuristic spirit figures.  Finally in a stage bathed in swirling light, the transformation is complete for arrival to the new world, the Fifth World, Tukuhnikivatz.

ARTIST COLLABORATORS
Artists involved in Tukuhnikivatz share an aesthetic and a commitment to the survival of our planet and the renewal of spirit through art.  These artists of international stature speak personally and intimately to audiences by appealing to what is our common, and precious, heritage.
DIRECTOR, CHOREOGRAPHER, AND VIDEOGRAPHER
Maida Withers Dance Construction Company
Maida Withers, Founder and Artistic Director of Maida Withers and Dance Construction Company, and professor in the Department of Theater and Dance, The George Washington University in Washington, DC, is recognized as a powerful and commanding performer known for the beauty and innovation of her choreography, her daring in movement and exploration, and her role as master teacher. Involved in numerous collaborations with artists internationally, Withers creates work for stage, sites, and video. Withers was born in Kanab, Utah, the youngest of 8 children, a sixth generation pioneer descendant from settlers in southern Utah.  Her great uncle, David Rust, and her grandfather, William Rust, were instrumental figures in the early exploration of southern Utah lands, Colorado River (David, wooden boat guide) and rock art (pictographs and petroglyphs). Withers earned an MA at The University of Utah and a BS at Brigham Young University.  Withers started her career in the 60’s.  Inspired by the likes of Anna Halprin and John Cage, Withers soon took her own style, influenced by Merce Cunningham, Erick Hawkins, and Mary Wigman, from Germany.  In 1974, Withers established Maida Withers and The Dance Construction Company, a nonprofit tax‑exempt organization created to produce original dance works for stage, sites, and video in a collaborative process with visual and performing artists.  Experimentation, innovation, and collaboration are hallmarks of the company.  Generally, music is commissioned for all work and played live in performance.  Withers, through The Dance Construction Company has created over 75 distinctive works and events for stage, environment, architectural sites, and video, many of them evening-length performances.
Maida Withers and The Dance Construction Company tours extensively internationally.  While the 1970s and 80s were largely focused on experimentation with technology and the contemporary scene, with productions such as Stall. (a dance and rotating loudspeaker installation that premiered in West Berlin, Germany at the Akademie der Kunst Festival in 1981) the late 80s and early 90s witnessed a move towards environmental activism, and consciousness raising.
Participation with international artists for ecology led Withers and the Company to Brazil for six weeks, in 1992, to participate in the historic United Nation’s Conference on Environment and Development.   Rolling Thunder premiered at the National Theater in Brasilia during the Omame Projecto, an international congress of artists for ecology.    In Rio de Janeiro, Withers created a work in the stone garden for the Museo de Arte’s modern international exhibitions for UN Earth Summit 1992.  The Company performed on two occasions at the Global Forum in Rio de Janeiro for UNCED.  The Company toured Mexico and Central America in 1987, premiering Obsession, and returning to Mexico City to perform Ledge for the 1988 International Festival of Dance.|

Increasingly, Withers’ focus has moved to the East with a growing interest in shamanism.  Since 1993,  her international focus has been on performances and choreography in Asia, including performances in Seoul, Korea (Munye Theater, 1993; 13th International Korean Dance Festival, 1994; Jooksan Festival and Taejon Dance Festival, 1995); Hong Kong (Academy for Performing Arts, 1994); China (Guangdong Academy, Guangzhou, 1994); Malaysia (National Institute for the Arts, 1995, and Kuala Lumpur Ballet Company, 1994, 1995); and Japan (Beam Theater, Tokyo, S.T. Spot, Yokohama, Mariko Dance Theater, Kyoto, 1995, and Kansai University, Osaka, 1993).  Withers was guest artist for three weeks at the international festival, Bodies of Influence, and the International Theatreschool Festival, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1996.
In these and earlier works, Withers has always retained an interest in the use of modern technology, mixing imagination and daring with a keen sense of formal structure and beauty. Dances such as In Winds of Sand, 1993, and Damned Rivers, 1993, involve dancers performing with video art projected into the stage arena and the use of live camera during performance.
Withers’ dances are often epochal in scale.  Laser Dance, 1985, where dancers interact with argon laser beams affecting both the sound and the three dimensional laser design on stage and above the audience, and Stall., a performance with a rotating loudspeaker set and animation by composer/sculptor, John Driscoll, are examples of Withers’ involvement with high technology environments.  Her ongoing interest in social issues is reflected in thought-provoking narratives such as Rolling Thunder, a new myth for the 21st Century, Obsession…America’s Obsession with Sex, and Woman See, a  coming-of-age view of the roles of men and woman.  Yesterday’s Garlands and Yesterday’s Kisses and Time Dance are dadaist expressions of wit and humor.
In Withers’ most recent work, including Utah * Tukuhnikivatz, the earth is the primary source, subject and process for Withers’ creative projects, collaborating with similarly committed artists and indigenous peoples around the globe.  Through this work, Withers has continued her link to the international movement of artists for ecology and nature that celebrates and renews consciousness of the earth and the transformative and healing powers of art.  Current projects involve the video camera as a collaborator in a landsite process that involves interaction with artists at earth sites, with indigenous peoples, location history, mythology, and other cultural aspects. Resulting stage works often include the site video, bringing the earth to life on stage.

Company tours in the United States include performances in Santa Fe, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Salt Lake City, Boston, New York City, Virginia and the Mid‑Atlantic Region. In 1995, Withers performed at the Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors Festival for two projects in New York City.  In 1989, Path was created during a residency at the Yellow Springs Institute for Art and Ideas in Philadelphia. Performances in the nation’s capital include presentations by the Smithsonian Institution, The Corcoran and Renwick Galleries, the Pension Building and Warner Theater (Washington Performing Arts Society), Kennedy Center, Lisner Auditorium (District Curators), Public Playhouse, the Dance Place, Washington Project for the Arts, and home seasons in The George Washington University’s Marvin Center Theater.  Since the 1960’s, Withers has also created dances and site-specific including performances at Theodore Roosevelt National Park, National Plaza on Pennsylvania Avenue, Holy Rood Cemetery, and museum and gallery settings, others.

In her role as resident teacher and artist at The George Washington University, Withers has produced three “Washington Dance Direction Festivals” and presented concerts by international artists, Yamada Setsuko (Japan), Kim Je Young and Kim Hyun Je (Korea) and residencies involving American icons such as Yvonne Rainer, Kei Takei, Rudy Perez, Anna Halprin, Marta Renzi and others.  Withers was on the Board of Directors of Washington Project for the Arts for eight years, Program Chair for three years, and served a 3‑year term on the Kennedy Center Education Committee. Withers has been on the faculties of Purdue, Howard, and The George Washington Universities, and previously taught throughout the United States as a dance specialist with the NEA Artists‑in‑the-Schools program.

Awards received by Withers include those from the National Endowment for the Arts, Choreographer’s Fellowship; NEA Inter‑Arts; NEA Visual Arts in Performing Arts; DC and Virginia Commissions for the Arts; Dilthey Fellowship; The George Washington University Faculty Research Awards; Washington Area Studies Grant for Cultural Preservation and Archiving; Fulbright Travel Award to Taiwan; Kansai University Exchange to Japan; Washingtonian Magazine Award to Outstanding Women; and others.

Withers has also received national and international acclaim for her dance videos which have been shown in many countries. SandS CycleS, a landsite video created at White Sands, New Mexico, and Coral Dunes, Utah, has toured with Withers’ work: In Winds of Sand – in China, Korea, Hong Kong, and Malaysia.  Orbit, a dance video, directed by Withers, was selected for showing at the 1990 DC Film Festival, the 1991 Women In Film Festival, Kennedy Center, and exhibited in Frankfurt, Germany at 1992 IMZ Dance Screen.  State of the Art, a video art documentary, received national recognition for innovative local cable programming.  Withers narrated Dance, Dance, Dance, in 1978, a ten‑part series for NBC‑TV, broadcast in five major US cities.

COMPOSER and MUSICIANS
Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation
Davids (composer and musician) is a nationally acclaimed composer whose commissions include compositions for the Joffrey Ballet, the Kronos Quartet and the National Symphony Orchestra.  His music has been performed at Lincoln Center in New York, the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC, and major cities across the US as well as England, Germany, Italy, Portugal, France, Austria, and the Netherlands.
Davids has received numerous awards from organizations such as the National Endowment for the Arts, Meet the Composer, American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, and the most prestigious composition award given in the State of Arizona: the Arizona Commission on the Arts Award. David’s appetite for experimentation and deep intimacy with indigenous music, in combination with his 19 years as a composer, explains why he receives commissions from the nation’s best known ensembles.  Davids holds a Bachelors degree and a Masters degree in composition from Northern Illinois University and Arizona State University respectively. Davids, an enrolled member of the Mohican Nation, is one of the very few classically trained Native American composers working today.  His music contains elements of Native American tribal music combined with Western compositional techniques.  Davids promotes cross‑cultural understanding and appreciation for indigenous life styles.  His Voices of Shadow Canyon, for example, conveys his encounter with the people and petroglyphs of Canyon de Chelly in Northern Arizona.  The Singing Woods, written for the Kronos Quartet, and Moon of The Fallen Leaves, for the Joffrey Ballet, were influenced and inspired by traditional Mohican life.  Davids often uses traditional Native American instruments, as well as instruments of his own design, in his compositions.  Original instruments include soprano and bass flutes made of quartz crystal.
Davids has composed for very different ensembles and genres demonstrating his skill and versatility attained from his classical training.  His works include choir pieces performed by the Dale Warland Singers, Native American Suite, ’95; chamber works for the Kronos Quartet, The Singing Woods, ’94, and Turtle People, ’95, featuring the Mohican creation story and turtle water drum, and Native American Anthem, ’96;  ballets for the Joffrey Ballet, Moon of the Falling Leaves, ’91, and Maida Withers Dance Construction Company, Tukuhnikivatz, ’96; as well as works for mixed small ensembles ranging from a trio for two double basses and crystal bass flute, Petroglyph, ’94 to a work for his own instrument, crystal flute, and voice In Wisconsin Woods, ’92.
Basic Native American Philosophy:  Everything is related.  We are all related, a family – even non-human “people” (i.e. rock people, bird people, etc.).
Traditionally, Native Americans used instruments to “talk” with nature.  This talking music approach is a dynamic way of understanding how everything is connected and how Native Americans share with the earth.
Native American music and instruments generally serve a specific and small community of indigenous people that participate in public performances or ceremonial observances.  Tukuhnikivatz expands the usual domain of Native American contemporary music, dance, and art to connect to a much wider community  around the world.
When we collaborate and experiment, we discover life benefits as well as musical and artistic ones.  Our interactions as composer, dancers, children, and adults build important relational skills.  This experience benefits all children and adults alike.  If we are able, as are Native American traditions, to excite cooperation in each other, we have accomplished a great thing.  Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation

Joe Myers
Myers (acoustic and electric guitars) music encompasses not only a variety of influences and styles, but often art forms as well — a kind of acoustic and electric soup — with hart guitars, drop tunings and poetic lyrics. Myers is a physical and percussive player, absolute energy through an instrument.  This dynamic of songwriter and singer, his instrumental acuity, and the spirit and vitality of his music are what make Myers so distinct as a soloist.  His versatility is evident in the range of players Myers has opened for, including Adrian Belew, the Neville Brothers, Steve Morse, Adrian Lang, and Tori Amos.
Following Myers most recent CD, Sonoran Snake Lady (August 1994), he has been featured in newspapers and entertainment magazines, on radio and in television shows.  The album, which is bound in a wooden box, has nearly sold out in less than a year.  Myers is a featured artist in KZON’s Studio Z Live program and regularly on the play list with cuts from both of his albums including songs from his first CD House with Nine Rooms.  Myers was named “Experimental Artist of the Year” by Arizona Entertainment Awards (1991), and voted “Best Male Soloist” (1993) as part of the prestigious “Best of Phoenix” Awards published yearly in the “New Times, Arts and Entertainment” magazine.

VISUAL ART |Bruce Hucko
Hucko (photographer) is an independent photographer living in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  He is known for his earth photographs and photographic documentation of archeological expeditions in the Southwest, and for his educational work with Native American peoples, and children, in visual art and photography in the Southwest (as Director of Educational Programs and Serendipity, Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, in Santa Fe, New Mexico).   His work is consistently shown nationally in landscape related calendars and books, including  National Park Service slide shows for Arches National Park and Organ Pipe Cactus, New Mexico.  Hucko produced the nationally acclaimed, 40-minute, 8‑projector The Canyon’s Edge, a multimedia slide presentation about the Colorado Plateau seen through the eyes of Native Americans.  A recent book on the Santa Fe trail and numerous postcards, posters and book publications round out his landscape work.  Hucko’s most current work combines producing an educational exhibit about the Southwest’s cultural resources with the Grand Canyon Trust and writing contemporary poems and essays to educate people about the issues facing  the Southwest.
From 1978 until 1989, Hucko lived on the Utah Strip of the Navajo Reservation, where he served as classroom teacher and artist‑in‑education.   That began an involvement with the  Navajo people  that continues today.  Hucko directed the Navajo children’s art project,   Have You Ever Seen a Rainbow at  Night?presented at Festival  2000, and  Children of  Light.   Hucko guides trips designed around the theme of cultural sharing, to the Navajo Mountain and Bluff‑Montezuma Creek, in the Utah area for the Four Corners School of Outdoor Education and Canyonlands Field Institute.  Hucko currently divides his time between working as a photographer and as an art educator for the School of American Research Press  working with the Native American communities of San Juan, Santa Clara and San Idefonso Pueblos, producing a book of children’s art combined with text that shares the Native American children’s perceptions, Where There Is No Name for Art, 1996.
Hucko was cited for Excellence in Arts Education by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Awards in Arts Education Program in 1984.  He is photographer for the Wetherill‑Grand Gulch Research Project, a documentary and aesthetic interpretation of Anasazi culture in southeastern Utah.  Hucko’s photographs have been exhibited at Desert Images, Bountiful Art Center, Navajo Tribal Museum, Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian, and Utah Museum of Natural History.  Photographs and writing have been published regionally and nationally in Utah Holiday Magazine, New Age Magazine, Rocky Mountain Magazine, Backpacker, NEO, Journal of the Heard Museum, “Native Peoples,” High Country News, Utah Arts Council Publication and others.  He has been instrumental in documenting Native American artists on video for public presentation.
Primary themes in my work are those of indigeneity and the environment.  I am deeply concerned and interested in the relationship that people develop with the land around them ‑ the land that sustains and shapes who they are.  My areas of interest begin with the ancestral Puebloan (Anasazi) people who once lived upon this land and includes its current inhabitants.  A necessary aspect of my work lies in the field of environmental activism to preserve both the land and lifestyles that characterize the West.  I see all of my work as being engaged in the continuum of human expression on the Colorado Plateau.  I practice reciprocity, giving back to the land and the people some of what I have gained by knowing and caring for both.    Bruce Hucko

Turker Ozdogan
Ozdogan (ceramic artist) has received national and international recognition through a variety of research grants and awards, juried expositions, and one-person exhibitions.  His ceramic art has been reviewed and featured on television and in newspapers and periodicals as well as reproduced in texts on ceramics.  Ozdogan received his initial ceramics training and master of ceramics diploma at the Applied Fine Arts School, Istanbul, Turkey.  In his ceramic work, Ozdogan links Turkic and North American Indian peoples through color and decorative motif.  Ozdogan brings together favorite forms and themes to express his fervent belief in a common heritage of these peoples.  GWU Art Department, Ceramic Program, MFA candidates, Colleen Schneider and Mizue Croswell, will collaborate to create  masks worn by dancers and “spirit figures” for Utah * Tukuhnikivatz.

Adam Peiperl
Peiperl (kinetic light sculptor) works with polarized light, as seen in Utah * Tukuhnikivatz in video sequences of evolving abstract landscapes, sculptural forms, and kaleidoscope-generated images.  He has previously collaborated with Withers on Stirrings (1994) and Light Suite (1987).  His kinetic sculptures are included in the permanent collections of the Hirshhorn Museum, Kreeger Museum, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Museum Boymans-van Beuningen (Rotterdam), Smithsonian Museum of American History, and others.

VIDEO
James Byrne
Byrne (videogapher), of New York City, is nationally recognized for film and video art works with dance, and has been presented on the PBS award-winning show, “Alive From Off Center,”  WNET in New York City and WGBH in Boston.  Byrne has taught at New Jersey State College.  His video work with dance artists including Eiko and Koma and Susan Hadley.  Byrne is currently working as an independent film maker.  Byrne was videographer for the earth site project by Withers in the Four Corners Area in 1988, work included in Utah * Tukuhnikivatz.

Verabel Call Cluff
Cluff (videographer/photographer), an independent television writer and producer in Utah, has been engaged in research and development for Tukuhnikivatz and companion for eight of Withers’ ten expeditions in the Southwest.  Cluff graduate with honors in television and film from American University in Washington, DC.  Showings of Cluff’s art environment video, SandS CycleS, include the Earth Summit International Conference on Environment and Development, Rio de Janeiro, in 1992, Artist’s Forum, Women Make Movies VIII, Washington, DC (1993),  IMZ Dance Screen in Lyon, France (1994), Utah Film and Video Short Festival (1993), and Mid‑Summer’s Eve, Women’s Festival, (1993), SLC, Utah and four tours in Asia as the centerpiece of Withers’ In Winds of Sand. SandS CycleS, A Meditation, an installation exhibition was presented at the University of Utah Art Gallery (1995).

Stefani Altomare-Sese and Jennifer Kinloch
Altomare-Sese (AVID editor and image design) is a video producer, director, and editor and has been on the staff of GWTV for the last six years.  She was a ten‑year founding member, producer, and actress with Teatro Nuestro, a Washington, DC Latino theater group active during the Popular Theater movement that spanned 1960‑1980.  Kinloch (editor and slide installation design) has a degree in art history and has also studied design, film, and photography.  She has worked on several video pieces including an ongoing documentary project.

DANCERS
Maida Withers (dancer, spirit figure “shaman” ) see bio under choreographer/director.
Reginald Ellis Crump
Crump (dancer) is known for his highly theatrical dance and performance-art works.  He is currently artistic director of Bedrock Goes Ka-BOOM and OUT US THAH PALACE (a multimedia performance art-rock band).  In 1994 and 1996 Crump was guest artist at The George Washington University.  In 1995 Crump was awarded a fellowship grant from DC Commission for the Arts.  Crump studied choreography and performance at Virginia Commonwealth University and was a four-year full tuition scholarship recipient at the ADF.

Sarah Slifer
Slifer (dancer), originally from Boston, Massachusetts, has performed in the last three dances created by Withers.  Slifer has performed in works by international artists Katie Duck, Kim Je Young, Kay Izlar, in works by Li Chiao Ping, and with the Ballet Theatre of Boston.  Slifer studies modern dance with Maida Withers and ballet with Janet Shibata and Brian Roberts. She earned a BA degree at GW with a major in the philosophy of science and a minor in dance.

Helanius J. Wilkins
Wilkins (dancer), a native of Lafayette, Louisiana, is a choreographer, performer, and teacher.  Choreographers Wilkins has worked with include Joy Kellman, Sandra Fraleigh, Kista Rucker, Santo Giglio, Beth Bauman, and Anne Horris Wilcox.  He danced with Present Tense Dance Company (Rochester, NY) and DANSCORE (Rochester, NY).  He is the founder and artistic director of Helanius Wilkins Dimensions, a DC-based modern dance company.

Tim Harling
Harling (dancer – performance video), born in Montreal, Canada, graduated from the North Carolina School of the Arts where he received the Nancy Reynolds Merit Award.  He toured with  Nikolais Dance Theater throughout North and South America, Europe, Asia, North Africa and Australia, 1982-87.  He toured in the US, Japan, Western and Eastern Europe with Tandy Beal, 1988-89, under sponsorship of USIA.  In 1990 he joined MOMIX for tours in Greece, Spain, Brazil, Taiwan and the US and currently is associate director of Motion Pictures Movement Theater in New York City.

Cristy Lamb
Lamb (dancer – performance video) as a member of Nikolais Dance Theatre, New York City, 1984-87, performed on every continent except Antarctica.  She has been collaborating and performing since 1987 with her husband, composer William Eaton.  Lamb currently dances with A. Ludwig Dance Theatre in Tempe, Arizona and Ords Theatre of Dance in Tucson, Arizona.  Cristy and William both participated in the 1988 eight-week video land site residency in Utah.

Emily Ojala
Ojala (dancer – performance video) holds a BFA in modern dance from the University of Utah and an MA in dance movement therapy from Antioch New England.  She was a member of Ram Island Dance Company of Portland, Maine, from 1985 to 1992 under the direction of Daniel McCusker.  Ojala teaches dance at the University of Southern Maine.  She made significant contributions to the Utah video project in 1988 as seen in the water solo on the video.

Spirit Figures:
Choreography for Utah * Tukuhnikivatz is constructed in such a way as to include five to eight additional dancers in supporting roles as spirit figures when the project is on tour, if such an arrangement is of interest to the sponsor.  Local professional dancers may be auditioned to fill the roles of wisdom/stiltwalkers (two), painted women/water (three), noble warrior (one), innocence/goon (one), and petroglyph/holy ghost (one).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
World Premiere
Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz was specifically commissioned by Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts for Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors.  The work had its premiere on August 20, 1996 as part of the GREAT DANCE in the BANDSHELL series for Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors at Damrosch Stage and Bandshell at Lincoln Center in New York City (see video).

Contributors
Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz is made possible, in part, by the generous contributions of Maida Withers, The Dance Construction Company, John Alahouzos, Market Development Group, Inc., Jay W Glasmann and the Glasmann Foundation, Geraldine Lenvin, Sunny and Hardy Redd, the Redd Foundation, US air, and individual friends of the dance company.  Tukuhnikivatz was produced, in part, during a residency at The George Washington University, Department of Theatre and Dance, with support from the Office of Sponsored Research, Summer and Experimental Programs, and GW Television.  The performance video was made possible by the generous support of GWTV and staff, Ted Christensen, Paul Caffrey, Mike Rosetti, Stefani Altomare-Sese and others.

Artist Contributors
New York Notes: Music and Fractals, Benoit B. Mandelbrot, Charles Wuorinen, Richard F. Voss, F. Kenton Musgrave; KUED Television, Utah; At the Canyon’s Edge, Bruce Hucko and Canyonlands Field Institute; artists: Joe Pachak, Tony Anderson, Craig Law, Becky Knouff, Cristy Powell; NASA; USDA Forest Service; Interior Department; Andrew Cacho Dancers and Drummers; Yordanos Baharu; Adam Peiperl’s continuously moving kaleidoscope images are taken by permission of Prime Lens Productions, Inc. from the video “Barbara Mitchell’s SPECTRASPHERE.”

Residency at Utah State University:
Artemis Preeshl, professor of dance and theatre at Utah State Univeristy , presented the following with the support of a grant from Marie Eccles Caine Foundation to host Maida Withers Dance Construction Company in the Utah premiere of Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz (work in progress) an epoch work commissioned by Lincoln Center for Lincoln Center GREAT DANCE in the BANDSHELL, NYC.
This work was part of the inaugural season of The Performance Hall in the Caine Center for the Arts in 2006 where Artemis was part of the curating team at USU.
The residency included a significant scholarly lecture and performance along with teaching.

“Withers is a brilliant teacher.  Her students were very intelligent and responded to all of our movement improvisation and composition problem solving related to Earth mythology of historic Utah indigenous peoples.”
PROGRAM DRAFT



 



Tukuhnikivatz: Film Installation (60:00)

 

1996 and 1997 – Tukuhnikivatz (film) (01:03:45) – created for projection  on the 60′ x 60′ Band Shell as part of the evening-length multimedia production Utah * Spirit Place * Spirit Planet * Tukuhnikivatz at Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors GREAT DANCE in the BANDSHELL. Dancers were filmed on location at Muley Point and Butler Wash, Canyonlands, Arches, Utah and other locations in the Four Corners Area of the Southwest, USA; earth slides by Photographer Bruce Hucko. Tukuhnikivatz has been edited and shortened for submission to film festivals under the names TUK I and TUK II.and TUK (Tukuhnikivatz).

The three film versions include:
Original Documentary 01:03:45
(See above video)
Jamille Wallick edit,   00:39:58

Ludovic Jolivet edit, 18:04:

CREDITS:  Tukuhnikivatz – Film Installation:
Concept / Director / Choreographer: Maida Withers
Video by James Byrne and Verabel Call Cluff
Music Director: Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation
Earth Photographs: Bruce Hucko
Kinetic Light Sculptor: Adam Peiperl
Camera: James Byrne and Verabel Call Cluff
Editor: Stefani Altomare-Sese (original version, 1:03:45); Ludovic Jolivet (00:18:04; Jamille Wallick (00:39:58)
Production of Maida Withers Dance Construction Company
Dancers: Will Moreau Goins, Timothy Harling, Cristy Lamb, Emily Ojala, Maida Withers
Musicians: Brent Michael Davids, Mohican Nation, Crystal Quartz Flute; Melissa Angel, Double Bass; Will Moreau Goins, Vocalist; Dasha Hlavenka, Violin; Joe Myers, Classical and Acoustic Guitars.


Sponsors:  Sunny and Hardy Redd, LaSal Ranch, GW TV, KUED TV, At the Canyon’s Edge, Canyonlands Field Institute, Forest Service, US Department of Interior.

Premiere: Visual installation, Lincoln Center Great Dance in the Bandshell, NYC, NY 1996
Adaptation as independent film, 2011.

Tukuhnikivatz (Ute: Tukuhni-kivatz) is a name given by the Ute Nation to a perfectly triangular mountain in southeastern Utah, a future gathering place of the ancients at end time. Of particular influence is the Great Gallery rock art panel and others in the vicinity generally called the “Barrier Canyon Style” and are attributed to the Desert Archaic culture who lived in Utah from 8000 BC through 500 AD.  We honor and recognize the importance of these lands to Anasazi (ancestral Puebloan), Navajo Naion, Zuni, Hopi, and Ute and the Great Gallery, Barrier Canyon Style of the Desert Archaic culture.

Supported, in part, by Sunny and Hardy Redd, GW Television, Joe Pachak, Bruce Hucko, Tony Anderson, Craig Law, Cristy Powell, Becky Knoff, Maida and Arlen Withers, DCCo Board of Directors, Nancy Tartt, Paul Caffrey, Yordanos Baharu, KUED Television, At the Canyon’s Edge, Canyonlands Field Institute, NASA, USDA forest Service, US Department of Interior,

Adam Peiperl’s Kaleidoscope images by permission of Prime Lens Productions Inc. from the video of Barbara Mitchell’sSpectrasphere

Maida Withers
Copyright (c) 1996
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

TiminRock_Edited_72.
Bruce Hucko, photographs morning Sun behind dancers – sunlight throwns shadowMaidaSquatElbows8x11Maida Withers on ledge of a rock, shot by Bruce Hucko @ early village site

Tim Harling holds Cristy Lamb open arms on rock8x10
Crissy Lamb & Tim Harling, dance; Bruce Hucko, photographer
MRW - Perch on rock with two arms held8x10Maida Withers on rock near Bear’s Ears, 2 flat mountainsBruce Hucko JPGBruce Hucko, Earth Photographer, Collaborator, Moab, Utah
MaidaArmsUpShadow_EditTIF
Maida Withers shadow, photo by Bruce Hucko
MaidaLungeRock_EditTIF
Maida Withers, Muley Point, photo by Bruce Hucko

MaidaStandHoleTIF
Maida Withers in silhouette, at Utah habitat site, photo by Bruce Hucko

 

Dance In – Art Museum of the Americas and OAS

2001 – Dance In – an evening-length site performance at the Art Museum of the Americas and site work in the Garden of the Organization of American States in Washington, DC with 30 Washington, DC dance and music artists that took place in conjunction with  the  “Artistic Imaginings in Clay” exhibition, December 1, 2001. Dance Artists: Daniel Burkholder, Sharon Mansur, Cyrus Khambatta, Heidi Rauch, Maida Withers, GW Dancers (USA). Musicians: Jim Levy, Ben Takis, Peter Fraize (USA).

Dance In was part of the DC 7th International Improvisation Plus Festival that involved over 5 distinct performance events.

us+ Festival – an International multidisciplinary annual festival in Washington, DC that was co-curated by Washington, DC artists – dancers and musicians. The festival brought together groups and individual dance artists, performance artists, and musicians locally and internationally to perform and teach workshops related to the art of improvisation.  The Festival was founded by Maida Withers in 1995 as an annual festival featuring dance, performance art, music, and theater improvisation with local and international artists. Embassies located in DC were instrumental, annually, in providing support for international artists to participate in the annual festivals.

Heidi Rauch was important in making this performance possible at the Art Museum of the Americas and the OAS Garden.

DC 7th Int’l Improvisation Plus+ Festival

Dance_IN compiled photo

 

Stone Circle

Japan - MRW close two hands - fabric over mouth72

1995 –  Stone Circle (performance prepared in Washington, DC  as Stone Ring with the principal collaborators and several GW MFA / BA dancers (See Stone Ring work in archive).
On arrival in Tokyo, several costumes had been prepared by an associate of Marilia’s so Maida changed her costumes from tubes (see photos) to the high collared dress and others.

1995 – Evening length multimedia collaboration of Maida Withers, choreographer and performer (American), with vocals by Marilia (America/Brazil/Japan/France); Piano by Stephen Lockwood (American); colorful visual/sculpture  elements by Francois Perez (Australia, France/north Africa).  Marillia’s songs are based on epoch poetry by Gozo Yoshimasu (Japan).  The work premiered in Beam Theatre, Tokyo, Japan. Music, vocals, and piano were performed for all segments – live.

Stone Circle was “extreme” in every art form.  Withers performed in her Earth/Shaman period; Marilia voice is demanding in Western musical terms vascillating between a “club” feeling to wailing/screeching; Gozo’s poetry ancient and futuristic at the same time.

Program
Overture
Prologue
Stone Circle
Yuki / Yuki
Stone Circle II

Additional Activities in Japan:
An evening of dance improvisation took place with epoch Japanese poet, Gozo Yoshimasu, in the club S.T. Spot in Yokahama, Japan.

It was on the occasion of this particular trip to Japan that Maida met legendary Butoh founder,  Kazuo Ohno.  Maida was allowed by Kazuo Ohno to  video tape him teaching his weekly workshop in Butoh philosophy and technique. (See Video under Kazuo Ohno.  That video tape was donated to the GW Gelman Library.

Stone Ring was a work created by Maida in Washington, DC prior to the trip to Japan.  In addition to the performance in building J studio theatre, artists gave a performance in Lisner Auditorium as a lunchtime concert featuring dancers Sarah Slifer and Stacy Palatt.  Hiro, Japanese visual artist, painted a painting during the 30-minute brown bag luncheon.
Japan - MRW lift skirt in motion72.
Japan - MRW side stretch - fabric over mouth72.
Japan - MRW one arm up one down, mouth open72.Japan - MRW side view prance position72.Japan - MRW push heel of hand toward camera72.Japan - MRW squat and lean back on hand72Japan - MRW stands hands to check mouth covered72.MRW rmor close72
DC - MRW TUBES - standing on rocks72

Promo Photo never used for Japan, Beam Theater

Stone Ring

1995 –  Residency with international artists, Maida Withers, Marilia (Japan/Brazil/America), and Stephen Lockwood in Washington, DC to create an evening-length work performed in Studio J Theatre at GW.  The residency was held for the major artists to explore ideas for a performance, Stone Circle, to be presented in Tokyo, Japan June 3, 1995.   Stone Ring and Stone Circle eventually had nothing in common except the primary collaborators and some of the songs Marilia sang.  Dancers were BA and MFA students at George Washington University.

The rope and the rock were the visual elements for Stone Ring and, also for Stone Circle.  The ropes could drag the stones with ease to change location.  The rocks were used also as a place of refuge during performance.

We regret the inconvenience of the pole as an obstacle in the video.
We apologize if there is inaccurate listing of names or omissions in Dancers in Boots.
DC - Sarah Slifer - rope & rock, lunge & reach72.
Sarah Slifer

One Too Many (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)

Work created by Maida Withers for the Kuala Lumpur Ballet Company, Kuala Lumpur, West Malaysia under the direction of Lee Lee Lan.  (no documentation)

 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (May 22 -29, 1994)
Kuala Lumpur Dance Theatre, Director and Founder Lee Lee Lan; Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
▪   Create Dance:  One More Time (Kuala Lumpur Dance Theatre – 10 women and 1 man)
▪   Perform:  Maida, guest artist (May 27)
▪   Workshops: dance technique and improvisationOneTooMany_Malaysia

Ancient Lands – Ancient Peoples

Maida performed Ancient Lands and Ancient Peoples in 1984 in Guangzhou, China (In Winds of Sand at the Hong Kong Academy on that tour) and then performed Ancient Lands – Ancient Peoples in Seoul, Korea. In 1995 on another Asian Tour, Maida performed Ancient Lands – Ancient Peoples for the Jooksan Festival, one hour from Seoul, Korea directed by Hong Sin Cha, historic figure in post modernism in Korea.  That performance was on a red earth stage. Maida thinks of this work as part of her SHAMAN series.

To view the RED EARTH PERFORMANCE: http://vimeo.com/540160659  (put video here)

1994  and 1995 – Ancient Lands – Ancient Peoples was an important early part of the development of MWDCCo environment initiatives. The specific concept of Ancient Lands – Ancient Peoples for solo expression emerged for her individual explorations on land sites in the Four Corner’s area with Vera Belle Call Cluff, several trips in the Southwest over a six year period (1996).  She explored and improvised while Verabel Call Cluff, filmmaker, documented on camera.  This work developed an association with shamanic powers and their role in more ancient cultures.   Maida’s tours in Asia coincided with these notions.  Several performances emerged.  Parallel to this was the filming of SandS CycleS on the Coral Dunes, Kanab, Utah, and the White Sands, National Park in New Mexico.  Each performance of Ancient Lands – Ancient Peoples was unique but essentially the same movement materials. The earliest ideas developed around research related to the Utah Project (1988-1996).  Path, 1989 during the two-week Yellow Springs residency in Philadelphia, Spirit Path / Migration duet by Withers and Mark Thompson, and Spirit Path / Migration / Remains, quartet generated the movement style and primal intention. In 1993, Maida’s monumental solo, In Winds of Sand further revealed Withers interest in dance and shamanic ideas and practice.   The work was developed as a ritual duet and then as solo. In this dramatic work, grounded by the association with the Earth, Maida performs as a primal figure sometimes with painted white face while employing rocks and even plastic tubes flowering from her head as a shaman figure – the power of female creativity emerging from the hole in her head.  Early performance was in 1994 was in  1994 in Seoul, Korea for the 13th International Korean Dance Festival, Munye Thaetre.  Music was by Kang Tae Hyun, Saxophone (on the video above), and Marilia (extreme, experimental vocals recording and live) with projection of Utah Project film footage of the earth shot by James Byrne,  and earth photos by Bruce Hucko.  Variations of the  work were  performed in Tokyo, Japan, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China; and the spectacular performance at the Jooksan Festival, Ansung, Korea (Asia Tour, 1995) on a red earth stage.

Tubes did not actually make it into the performance but the white painted face was present and important.

Japan - MRW blue tubes lifted on head Japan- MRW tubes swing - full body

Stirrings (Sculpture)

1994 – Stirrings was created, originally, as a multimedia solo for Korean modern dancer, Je Young Kim and performed in Washington, DC with the world premiere in Seoul, Korea at the 13th International Modern Dance Festival, May 2 to 5, 1994 in Munye Theatre.  The original work featured the following: choreography by Maida Withers; a video of exquisite polarized light sculpture by Adam Peiperl (“A Hole in the Sky), projected on stage with the dance; music by  Korean saxophonist Kang Tae Hwan (performed “live” in Korea);  costume by Bill Pucilowsky was designed by Maida Withers. Regrettably, due to the lighting and the quality of the camera used in the theatre lighting, the video projection behind the dancer is not fully visible.

Stirrings was also performed as a solo by Sarah Slifer that premiered May 1 & 2, 1998 at the performance Washington DC-Venezuela, Dance Works by International Women in Washington, DC  with music by Rob Orwin using a wind synthesizer at.  The performance was at GW’s Dorothy Betts Marvin Theatre. Stirrings also performed as a duet by Sarah Slifer and Giselle Ruzany in Paris in a performance curated by Cyrus Khambatta.  The solo was performed as a duet in 1997 by Sarah Slifer and Giselle Ruzany (one facing upstage and one facing downstage during the performance) at Theatro Dunois, Paris. France, July 8 & 9, 1997.    They also performed spontaneously in the plaza of the Louvre in Paris.
Adam P JYK 10 reduced
Sculpture by Adam Peiperl_Performance in Washington, DC
Je Young Kim arms open wide side272. Je Young Kim arms diagonal tilt72. Je Young Kim arms up looking down72.
Adam P JYK 7
France_Louvre72
Sarah Slifer and Giselle Ruzany improvising in the plaza at the Louvre. Dancers performed Stirring in Paris.  Cyrus Khambatta (combing hair) arranged for the performance in Paris.

Adam Peiperl’s Sculpture

 

Fascination – Improvisation in Concert

1994 -Jey Young Kim and Maida Withers improvise in concert  in Washington, DC to a poem Fascination,  by Young Tai Kim, Korea, that “expresses our inner feelings-sometimes kin and on other Maida kneel smoccasions, cruel.  As in life we go through a series of unexpected turbulence.  A single moment may bring about supreme joy or utmost depression! – Poem in the background.

Vincent Cacalano and Martin Sonderkamp also participated in this international performance .  Maida Withers also performed In Winds of Sand.

MRW recline color smFascination was also performed in Seoul, Korea, for the 13th International Modern Dance Festival. See the booklet published.


https://vimeo.com/101482879