Sunday, December 15, 2013
julia sarr jamois love
http://juliasarrjamoislove.tumblr.com/http://juliasarrjamoislove.tumblr.com/page/2http://juliasarrjamoislove.tumblr.com/page/3
Saturday, December 14, 2013
obama morehouse speech
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2013/05/19/obama-morehouse-college-commencement/2324241/http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-addresses-morehouse-college-graduates/2013/05/19/484fd2a6-c0ae-11e2-8bd8-2788030e6b44_gallery.html#photo=9
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Monday, October 7, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
ladene clark beehive
http://www.flickr.com/photos/charlespickens/7998438777/in/photostream/http://the-divided.blogspot.com/2013/06/ladies-and-gents-ladene-clark.html
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Creative Control: DELPHINE DIALLO
http://www.delphinediawdiallo.com/#mi=1&pt=0&pi=2&p=-1&a=0&at=0
<script height="344px" width="610px" src="http://player.ooyala.com/iframe.js#pbid=ZmVkOTZlZDBiNzk1OWRkMDRjNmZjMzQ0&ec=x4NWJrMzqcuJP68gisZEkbbyxSm__fK-"></script> http://thisispaper.com/#Delphine-Diaw-Diallo-Highness
http://blog.photowhoa.com/delphine-diaw-diallo-interview-how-she-went-from-300-dollars-in-her-pocket-to-successful-photographer/
Saturday, September 28, 2013
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Monday, September 9, 2013
Monday, August 26, 2013
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Monday, August 12, 2013
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Kyle Abraham dance
Kyle Abraham brings ‘The Radio Show’ to Dance Place
By Rebecca Ritzel,April 27, 2012
Choreographer Kyle Abraham with dancer Rena Butler during rehearsal at… (Chris Cameron/MANCC/MANCC )
NEW YORK — It’s noon on a mid-April Monday, and Kyle Abraham is worried about money. Not because he hasn’t filed his taxes yet (though he hasn’t) but because he’s the artistic director of his own nascent dance company, and one of his dancers hasn’t shown up.
“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” the choreographer says. “I have six hours of studio time, but I’m down a dancer.” As he talks he has his feet crossed in third position, he’s slowly going up on his toes, arms arced above his head. He’s stressed, but he’s smiling.
Abraham is learning the hard way what it’s like to lead a dance company, which is making its Washington debut this weekend. There is no easy way.
He approaches his work — in this case creating a new evening-length piece — with the seriousness of a veteran artist, but a relaxed ease that’s rare in the self-serious world of modern dance. So today, even though his paid understudy has gone AWOL, Abraham will press on. He’ll just dance the no-show’s parts himself.
“I don’t know what I’m going to do,” the choreographer says. “I have six hours of studio time, but I’m down a dancer.” As he talks he has his feet crossed in third position, he’s slowly going up on his toes, arms arced above his head. He’s stressed, but he’s smiling.
- New York Film AcademyHands-on Film & Acting School. MFA & BFA Degree & Certificate Programs www.NYFA.edu
He approaches his work — in this case creating a new evening-length piece — with the seriousness of a veteran artist, but a relaxed ease that’s rare in the self-serious world of modern dance. So today, even though his paid understudy has gone AWOL, Abraham will press on. He’ll just dance the no-show’s parts himself.
At a boyish 34, Abraham can still do that. But he’s getting to the point where he’d rather not, calling himself an “old man” in front of his 20-something dancers. It’s not as much about physical durability as it is about multitasking. Today’s agenda at the Joyce Soho, a venerated (if rundown) dance rehearsal space, calls for Abraham to review 60 minutes of material, teach his dancers a new section, host a guest reporter, and sit down with the Joyce Foundation video crew to film his work for an education video.
“Where’s my hat?” he says, rummaging through his dance bag. “I was going to wear my hat today.”
Like Mark Morris and his scarf, or Peter Martins with his geeky IT glasses, Abraham knows he’s going to need an accessory to make it through this busy day of artistic directing. He pulls a plaid newsboy cap from a bag of notebooks, scarves and toe separators, and secures it on his head.
“There,” he says. “Now we can get started.”
Abraham is at work on his third evening-length piece, tentatively called “Pavement.” The dance is inspired by the 1991 film “Boyz N the Hood,” but set to baroque music, including Vivaldi arias and Bach’s violin partitas. He’s interested in juxtapositions, and “The Radio Show,” a 2010 work his company will be performing next weekend at Dance Place, is no exception. The piece loosely traces two narratives: the demise of two African American radio stations in Abraham’s home town of Pittsburgh, and his father’s descent into dementia. The soundscape is a mix of radio call-in shows, original house music and popular nostalgic tunes by singers such as Aretha Franklin.
The movement is equally bifurcated, indebted to hip-hop in the looseness of the shoulders and the casual jumps, but delivered with balletic precision. One of his signature moves, for example, is a little sideways jumps he calls the Jigga-Basque. (“A little Jay Z reference.”) The movement is playful in places, but luscious overall, as if with each arm gesture the dancers are parting a substance that’s thicker than air.
“It’s not like anything I’ve ever seen. Structurally, choreographically, it’s the first of its kind,” said Chalvar Monteiro, one of the dancers who will be performing with “Abraham.in.Motion” this weekend. Monteiro, a SUNY Purchase graduate who left Elisa Monte’s decades-old company to focus on dancing for Abraham, is quite forthcoming about why. “He has a new, fresh take on the human experience and how that translates into dancing,” Monteiro said. “It was hard for me to chose, but the factor that kept me here is that I love Kyle and that he always makes a point to make works that are socially relevant, but also timeless.”
“Where’s my hat?” he says, rummaging through his dance bag. “I was going to wear my hat today.”
Like Mark Morris and his scarf, or Peter Martins with his geeky IT glasses, Abraham knows he’s going to need an accessory to make it through this busy day of artistic directing. He pulls a plaid newsboy cap from a bag of notebooks, scarves and toe separators, and secures it on his head.
“There,” he says. “Now we can get started.”
Abraham is at work on his third evening-length piece, tentatively called “Pavement.” The dance is inspired by the 1991 film “Boyz N the Hood,” but set to baroque music, including Vivaldi arias and Bach’s violin partitas. He’s interested in juxtapositions, and “The Radio Show,” a 2010 work his company will be performing next weekend at Dance Place, is no exception. The piece loosely traces two narratives: the demise of two African American radio stations in Abraham’s home town of Pittsburgh, and his father’s descent into dementia. The soundscape is a mix of radio call-in shows, original house music and popular nostalgic tunes by singers such as Aretha Franklin.
The movement is equally bifurcated, indebted to hip-hop in the looseness of the shoulders and the casual jumps, but delivered with balletic precision. One of his signature moves, for example, is a little sideways jumps he calls the Jigga-Basque. (“A little Jay Z reference.”) The movement is playful in places, but luscious overall, as if with each arm gesture the dancers are parting a substance that’s thicker than air.
“It’s not like anything I’ve ever seen. Structurally, choreographically, it’s the first of its kind,” said Chalvar Monteiro, one of the dancers who will be performing with “Abraham.in.Motion” this weekend. Monteiro, a SUNY Purchase graduate who left Elisa Monte’s decades-old company to focus on dancing for Abraham, is quite forthcoming about why. “He has a new, fresh take on the human experience and how that translates into dancing,” Monteiro said. “It was hard for me to chose, but the factor that kept me here is that I love Kyle and that he always makes a point to make works that are socially relevant, but also timeless.”
- Custom Air Dancers $179Printed Letters, Logo or Graphics Attract and Get more Traffic! www.SkyPuppet.com
That’s high praise for a choreographer whose company repertory is essentially just two works. Abraham spent his 20s dancing for the likes of Bill T. Jones and David Dorfman. In 2008, he started taking more guest artist and temporary teaching gigs, with the goal of not only making his own living, but funding his own company. “Radio Show,” which was partially funded by the Heinz Endowments, premiered in Pittsburgh, and debuted in New York a month later, in the middle of a snowstorm. Abraham remembers looking out at the audience, and thinking it was a decent house for Danspace Project. The next day, the New York Times ran a positive review. “After that review, it was so sold out. I started the show, and I just started crying,” Abraham said. “Now, me crying is just part of the show. It was overwhelming, that support. I was thinking, ‘Wow. People came to see my work.’”
- Wedding danceArthur Murray Royal Oak Tango, Salsa, Swing And More! www.arthurmurrayroyaloak.com
FEATURED ARTICLES
More:
0
Comments
More from The Washington Post
- The Washington Monument looks broken. Let’s keep it that way. Featured Articles From The Washington Post
- Racism vs. reality Featured Articles From The Washington Post
- AT&T introduces option for faster phone upgrades, much like T-Mobile Featured Articles From The Washington Post
- Manning-WikiLeaks trial winding down after 90 witnesses in 4 weeks Featured Articles From The Washington Post
- Zimmerman found not guilty in killing of Trayvon Martin The Washington Post - National News
Sponsored Headlines
- World's Wackiest Road Signs Travel Channel
We Recommend
- Going Out Guide for the District of Columbia, May 9-15
May 8, 2013 - More Fond Memories of Fave Bygone Places
October 16, 2009 - Fundraising for Nigeria: Changing the world, one dance at a...
June 20, 2011
Find More Stories About
© 2013 The Washington Post
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)