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Posts Tagged ‘ Busk ’

BUSK in Italy

Just a quick DANCEworks update: Aszure Barton & Artists are in Spoleto, Italy this weekend, performing at the Festival dei Due Monde. This is just another step in Busk’s world domination tour. In other news, Larry Keigwin opened Jacob’s Pillow last month, and Doug Elkins just performed this past weekend at The Yard in Martha’s Vineyard. We are so proud of all our Choreographers-in-Residence!

We want to again thank our DANCEworks supporters. Our residency is having a national and international impact, and helping these wonderful choreographers to build their repertoires and careers. We look forward to sharing the coming year (featuring Brian Brooks) with you and with the community of Santa Barbara!

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A Rush to Revisit Busk


Like a child before a birthday, for much of December I’d been counting down to the NYC debut of Aszure Barton’s Busk.  The day finally arrived, as they have a habit of doing.

We had carefully strategized the pre-theatre flow of the evening so that we would have ample time for dinner and then a taxi ride to the theatre for an 8 O’clock curtain. We neglected to factor in unusually slow restaurant service and chaotic holiday traffic. At 3 minutes to 8 we were still blocks away from the theatre caught in bumper- to- bumper traffic.

Initially, I was able to contain my frustration, but ultimately, as the seconds ticked by, I decided it would be faster to walk.  Leaving the car, I started my version of a  run.  After an initial burst of energy which carried me about ten feet, I remembered, that as an aging asthmatic running in 20 degree weather, I’d have done better staying inside the car!  I called choreographer/dancer Nicole Wolcott who was waiting for me in the theatre. She let me know there would be no late seating.  No, I told myself, this will not happen to me! And it did not. Somehow, I gratefully made it to my seat in the Jerome Robbins Theatre on the third floor of the Baryshnikov Art Center just as the lights began to dim.


This was not  just any performance for me, but the long awaited and highly anticipated NYC debut of busk. The work was begun during the first season of Danceworks at the Lobero Theatre in Santa Barbara in the winter of 2009. Busk had toured internationally for the last year, and now was beginning its U.S. engagements. Two shows were added to two sold- out performances in NYC.

During Aszure’s month-long residency in Santa Barbara, she was exquisitely tuned into her surroundings and strongly influenced by the late winter persona of the town . Once the din and gloss of tourists are removed from our otherwise lovely downtown, a hidden and darker side of the population becomes apparent. The homeless are revealed in small groups, as loners lost in their own interior worlds, or for those with some talent, entertaining on State Street(the main drag) or at the Farmer’s Markets. The latter are the buskers.

Each day on their way to and from the theatre, Aszure and her company of remarkable young dancers passed by those living on the fringes of society who try to survive by busking or often downright begging.

The black costumes and black hoodies (designed in SB by Australian designer Michelle Jank) that the dancers wore during  most of the performance, captured the anonymity that the homeless have in our relatively affluent community.  They are here, but they are apart. Their culture is alien, but their need to be seen and acknowledged is ever present. Busk has moments of tenderness and comraderie, but also moments of isolation, rejection and struggle, that mirror the human condition. Opportunities for the performers to reveal and conceal their true selves are in constant opposition and provide opportunities for breathtaking solos and duets.

The live, sweet, intoxicating and beguiling gypsy music of Ljova Zhurbin was a perfect vehicle that enabled the audience to enter the mysterious, dark and occasionally exhilarating world of buskers, theatrically created by Aszure and Artists.

My revisit to the ever evolving Busk reinforced my opinion of Aszure Barton as a daring, inventive, thrilling and perceptive observer of our times. For the running time of the performance, I was suspended in a sometimes dark, sometimes glittering, but always carefully crafted, alternate universe.  We can ask no more of theatre and dance.

Congratulations to Aszure, to Ljova, the technical team, and  to  committed and fabulous dancers who helped create Busk.  Congratulations also to everyone everywhere who has supported and encouraged this choreographer’s nascent and stunning  career.

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Review of Aszure Barton’s BUSK

Here’s a review from January’s Dance Magazine of Aszure Barton’s BUSK, which began at Aszure’s 2009 DANCEworks residency.

Aszure & Artists
Mertz Theatre
Sarasota, FL
October 8–10, 2009

Reviewed by Eva Yaa Asantewaa

Busk. What a great title for Aszure Barton’s spanking new ensemble dance, a world premiere at the inaugural season of the five-day Ringling International Arts Festival in Sarasota, FL, co-presented by the Baryshnikov Arts Center and the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art. I can just imagine the gifted Canadian choreographer mulling over this commission, licking her chops, thinking about all the things buskers—street performers—do to lure audiences and earn a little cash.

Wikipedia spells it out: acrobatics, animal tricks, balloon twisting, card tricks, clowning, comedy, contortions and escapes, dance, fire eating, fortune-telling, juggling, magic, mime and a mime variation where the artist performs as a living statue, musical performance, puppeteering, snake charming, storytelling or reciting poetry or prose as a bard, street art (sketching and painting, etc.), street theater, sword swallowing, or even a flea circus. And, let me tell you, that’s just the brilliant opening solo danced by Kyle Robinson, who looks like a young Brad Pitt.

The notion of entertainment to charm a distractable, fickle public—and of entertainment as survival strategy, with performers at the edge of desperation—seems right for our times and especially right for Barton. (It also links in, in its funny way, with the Ringling circus tradition.) Championed early in her career by Baryshnikov, Barton has made works that combine popular accessibility and melancholic darkness in equal measures. And she regularly treats her “pitch”—the busker’s territory—as a gallery for monumental kinetic art.

It is no different in this mysterious new abstract piece where, as is Barton’s way, costumes merely offer hints of narrative possibilities. Huddling dancers in dark hoodies, in one section, could signal everything from homeless street kids to a death-spooky group of monks, but no matter. We’re not meant to hold onto any identification long enough to pin it down.

Dancers’ bodies move like bold splashes of paint, match the slippery suppleness of clay, shimmer and resonate like stringed instruments, sing in overtones, and emote in a multitude of tongues. Today, many dance artists collaborate widely and consider their productions to be multidisciplinary. Barton—with an assist from her dancers, among the most magnetic and psychologically expressive performers onstage today—delivers the multidisciplinary, and multivalent, body.

A dancer’s long frame undulating, while one hand—adjoined to and splaying out from a hip—wriggles like a sea anemone, is at once human, not quite human, and a collective of humans, or perhaps a collage of human experience. Barton, who famously builds on each of her dancer’s individual strengths, also seems quite confident and happy deploying a large group across sizable space. It’s amusing to realize that she can sneakily multiply a group even further by turning each one into many. This busker gives plenty of value for your money.

Busk is set primarily to gypsy music by Lev ‘Ljova’ Zhurbin. Nicole Pearce’s hazy lighting provides good atmosphere. Costumes are by Michelle Jank and projected visuals by Kevin Freeman and Shannon DMOTE Peel. Besides the stunning Mr. Robinson, Barton’s laudable corps includes Jonathan Alsberry, Collin Baja, Charlaine Katsuyoshi, Andrew Murdock, Reed Luplau, Emily Oldak, Banning Roberts, and Cynthia Salgado.

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HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM AB & A!!BUSK!  Happily begun at and co-commissioned by DANCEworks 2009.

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