In a final section, 12 of the dancers brought chairs into the littered space. They conducted members of the audience to the chairs, then performed deadpan seductions that involved the removal and brandishing of underpants, and the serving of apple slices. After a revel in the accumulated debris, the whole cast advanced on the audience to meditative music, making earnest but cryptic finger gestures.
Related:
Who's next?, Slideshow: Chunky Move at ICA, Phantoms and fantasy, More
- Who's next?
If Melvin B. Miller has his way, last week's shutdown of the Bay State Banner — the African-American-focused weekly paper Miller ran as editor and publisher for nearly half a century — won't be the end.
- Slideshow: Chunky Move at ICA
The Australian troupe Chunky Move performed its 2004 work I Want to Dance Better at Parties at Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art from March 27 to 29.
- Phantoms and fantasy
Poetry and dance have some common traits.
- Terpsichore's delight: Boston's Spring dance preview
Ballet, international dance, dance filmmakers, popular dance, and more -- there's something for every fan of dance in Boston this Spring.
- Review: Rubberbandance at the ICA
Hip-hop, in common with tap dancing, can look like a succession of tricks when it's not grounded by a story or a great personality.
- Photos: Summer Reunion: Alumni of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company at the ICA
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company presents an alumni reunion show at the ICA theater on July 15, 2011.
- Review: Caitlin Corbett, Daniel McCusker, and Kelley Donovan at the ICA
The title of Daniel McCusker's premiere at the Institute of Contemporary Art last weekend was Hidden Noise , but the sound template for the five works on the program was noise in plain earshot.
- The Floordlords celebrate 30 years
B-boys — b-girls had scant presence on this program — have gone commercial, but today's freestyle breaking technique builds on moves cut three decades ago (although a grainy Floordlords video indicates that the current generation has discarded stirrup pants for profanity-laced t-shirts).
- Assaf Kehati Quartet | Flowers and Other Stories
The Boston-based Israeli guitarist Assaf Kehati and his quartet know how to straddle the great divide.
- Identity Festival rocks out the dance party
Genre predictions are dumb, but there is one thing absolutely certain in music: rock music is dead, and the era of electronic dominance is finally here.
- Eva Hesse at the ICA and Tory Fair at the deCordova
Hesse's ability to imbue her art with body and blood and gravity anticipated the kinder, gentler minimalism of today's Anish Kapoor, Rachel Whiteread, and Roni Horn, as well as the fleshy fairy-tale figures of Kiki Smith. Boston sculptor Tory Fair has descended from Smith's family tree, with glossy resin or lumpy rubber casts of her own nude body uncannily sprouting vines and flowers.
- Less
Topics:
Dance
, Boston, Dance, diverse, More
, Boston, Dance, diverse, Institute of Contemporary Art, John Slepian, Daniel McCusker, David Parker, Kelley Donovan, museum, Richard Colton, Less