(idm) O'Rourke/Marclay/Kosugi > Minneapolis

From dave
Sent Thu, Aug 27th 1998, 07:34

The first thing...

This event was alluded to in an earlier message. The details:

Jim O'Rourke, Christian Marclay, and Takehisa Kosugi will be providing live
accompaniment for a performance of the Merce Cunningham Dance Co. in the
Minneapolis Sculpture Garden adjacent to the Walker Art Center on Saturday,
September 12 at +/- 2:15pm. The event is free and is part of a day-long,
outdoor celebration. (Note: At one point Thurston Moore was slated to play,
but the Cunningham Co. has reconfigured the bill and Marclay will take up the
reins instead.)

For additional info, including background data on the artists, read on
(extracts from the press release)...

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EVENT FOR THE GARDEN: LEGENDARY CHOREOGRAPHER MERCE CUNNINGHAM AND
COMPOSER JIM O'ROURKE CELEBRATE THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE MINNEAPOLIS
SCULPTURE GARDEN

Celebrating both the 10th anniversary of the Minneapolis Sculpture
Garden and a 35-year relationship with the legendary world-renowned
choreographer Merce Cunningham, the Walker Art Center presents Event for
the Garden at 2:15 pm Saturday, September 12...  (cut)

The Merce Cunningham Dance Company visits Minneapolis in conjunction with the
Walker exhibition Art Performs Life: Merce Cunningham/Meredith Monk/Bill T.
Jones, on view through September 20...  (cut)

Cunningham's signature Events are performances by the Merce Cunningham
Dance Company that combine sections from existing repertoire, rearranged
with newly composed music and decor. Event for the Garden is a special
tribute to the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden and incorporates Jasper
Johns' set pieces for Walkaround Time (1968), after Marcel Duchamp's
Large Glass. The music is created and performed by Merce Cunningham
Dance Company  Musical Director Takehisa Kosugi, experimental composer
Christian Marclay, and Chicago-based composer-performer Jim O'Rourke. In
case of rain on both Saturday and Sunday, The Event will be performed at
Northrop Auditorium at 2:15 pm on Sunday, September 13.
 
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Merce Cunningham changed the language of
contemporary dance by experimenting with chance arrangements and
incorporating everyday movements into his choreography.  His experiments
were extended to his collaborators - Jasper Johns, Robert Rauschenberg,
John Cage, David Tudor, and Andy Warhol, among myriad others - in music
and the visual arts, breaking down the hierarchy between these
disciplines and freeing dance from its traditional molds.
 
Cunningham was born in Centralia, Washington, and received his first
formal dance and theater training at the Cornish School (now Cornish
College of the Arts) in Seattle. From 1939 to 1945, he was a soloist
with the Martha Graham Dance Company. At the same time, he began to
choreograph independently, presenting his first New York City solo
concert with John Cage in April 1944. Since forming the Merce Cunningham
Dance Company at Black Mountain College in 1953, he has created nearly
200 works for his company. In addition his works have been included in
the repertoires of numerous ballet and modern dance companies around the
world.

Cunningham has collaborated on two books about his work: Changes: Notes
on Choreography, with Frances Starr (Something Else Press, New York,
1968) and The Dancer and the Dance, interviews with Jacqueline
Lesschaeve (Marion Boyars, New York and London, 1985). The latter,
originally published in French, has also been translated in German and
Italian. Merce Cunningham/Dancing in Space and Time, a collection of
critical essays edited by Richard Kostelanetz, was published in 1992 by
A Cappella books. A chronicle and commentary by dance historian David
Vaughan - Merce Cunningham: Fifty Years - was published in 1997 by
Aperture.

Jim O'Rourke was born in Chicago in 1969. His career activities include
work as an improvisor, with Derek Bailey, Mats Gustafson, Henry Kaiser,
Gunter Miller, Eddie Prevost, and Voice Crack, among others; as a
collaborator, with Tony Conrad and John Fahey; and as a performer with
groups including Gastr del Sol and Red Crayola. He has remixed the music
of Microstoria, Smog, and Tortoise, and recorded music by Maple, Palace,
and U.S. His music can be heard on the soundtrack recording Picture of
Light.

Christian Marclay was born in San Rafael, California, in 1955 and grew
up in Geneva, Switzerland, where he studied at the Ecole Superieur d'Art
Visuel. In 1977, he moved to Boston and attended the Massachusetts
College or Art, where he took sculpture and performance courses. In 1979
he began using phonograph records as "musical instruments." Throughout
the 1980s, he performed as a soloist and in groups, mixing records on
multiple turntables, fragmenting and repeating sounds, playing the
records backwards, altering speeds, etc., in a display of precise and
abusive manipulations. In addition to recording his own compositions, he
has collaborated with many "downtown" composers and improvisers, such as
Elliot Sharp, John Zorn, Lawrence "Butch" Morris, David Moss, and
others. Parallel to his musical activities, Marclay's sculptures and
sound installations, which focus on the meeting place of sound and
sight, have been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally. 

Born in Tokyo in 1938, Takehisa Kosugi graduated from Tokyo National
University of Fine Arts and Music in 1962. From 1965 to 1967 he lived in
New York, creating multimedia performance works and giving concerts with
Nam June Paik and other Fluxus members. In 1969 he founded the Taj Mahal
Travelers in Tokyo, a collective improvisational group giving intermedia
presentations. He has been a composer/performer with Merce Cunningham
Dance Company since 1977. In 1991 Kosugi received the John Cage Award
for Music from the Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts .

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As noted, the event is *free* and outdoors and a sizeable crowd is expected.
If anyone needs additional info, feel free to get in touch. (I note that
Savage Aural Hotbed are performing earlier in the day, at approx. 12 noon, if
you happen to arrive early...)

I'll post info about the upcoming Pan Sonic appearance too (forthcoming)...

-- 

/  dave  /