MR. TOL E. RANCE, MANIAC SHADOWS, HABITAT and More Set for The Kitchen's Spring 2013 Season

By: Mar. 04, 2013
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The Kitchen has announced its Spring 2013 (April - June) Season. Details below!

SPRING 2013 PROGRAMMING HIGHLIGHTS

DANCE

Camille A. Brown and Dancers' Mr. TOL E. RAncE Tuesday - Saturday, April 2 - 6, 8:00 P.M.
Tickets: $15

March 4, 2013

Inspired by Spike Lee's controversial movie Bamboozled and Mel Watkins's book On The Real Side: From Slavery to Chris Rock, Camille A. Brown's Mr. TOL E. RAncE celebrates the humor and perseverance of the black performer while examining stereotypes that still dominate popular Black culture. Brown employs comedy, live original music, animation, theater and poignantly retrospective dance vocabulary in this very personal work, which also addresses the issue of tolerance - looking at what black performers have tolerated in the past and the forms of modern-day minstrelsy we tolerate today. Blending and contrasting the historical with the contemporary, this work seeks to engage the community in a dialogue about where we have been, where we are and where we might want to be.

MUSIC/FILM

Sam Green and Yo La Tengo's The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller, Tuesday and Wednesday, April 9 and 10, 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. each night Tickets: $25

The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller traces the career of the twentieth-century futurist, architect, engineer, inventor, and author - an early advocate for design and architecture's ability to tackle issues of sustainability and conservation, and to stimulate radical societal change. Drawing inspiration equally from old travelogues, the Benshi tradition, and TED talks, director Sam Green narrates the film in person and cues images from a laptop, while legendary indie-rock band Yo La Tengo performs their original score.

EXHIBITION

Chantal Akerman's Maniac Shadows
April 12 - May 11, 2013
Opening reception: Friday, April 12, 6:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
Exhibition Hours: Tuesday - Friday, 12:00 - 6:00 P.M.; Saturday 11:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Curated by Tim Griffin and Lumi Tan
FREE

Playing on entwined relationships of presence and absence, legendary Belgian filmmaker Chantal Akerman's latest installation features video shot at her residences in different countries. During the exhibition's opening day, Akerman will be recorded in The Kitchen's second-floor space reading from her story My Mother Laughs. This video will join the others, introducing a kind of psycho- geography for domestic settings at once near and far.

MUSIC

Sonia Wieder-Atherton's Odyssey for Cello and Imaginary Choir Co-presented with the French Institute Alliance Française Thursday - Saturday, April 18-20, 8:00 P.M.
Tickets: $15

In conjunction with Chantal Akerman's Maniac Shadows, cellist Sonia Wieder-Atherton presents the U.S. premiere of the final piece in a triptych that began with Jewish Songs and Songs from the East, which accompanied Akerman's eponymous 1993 film. Inspired by music from countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea, Wieder-Atherton offers a moving dreamscape constructed from sounds that transcends cultures and genres.

MUSIC

Marina Rosenfeld's P.A./HARD LOVE, Featuring Warrior Queen
Friday and Saturday, April 26 and 27, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $15

Marina Rosenfeld's P.A./HARD LOVE is the latest iteration of the artist's eponymous sound system, a rough assemblage of tricked-out horns, subwoofers and loudspeakers. Previously staged as P.A. in monumental settings like Liverpool's Renshaw Hall car park and the Park Avenue Armory, P.A./HARD LOVE features the collaboration of legendary dancehall emcee Warrior Queen and cellist Okkyung Lee. The work's diffuse aesthetics - an architectural mash-up of live sound and synthetic site recording - questions the conciliatory fantasies of public-ness and identity as conditions of broadcast sound. Instead, P.A./HARD LOVE plumbs the complex, mutually distorting relationship of space, voice and amplification. The evening also celebrates the album release of the project on electronic label Room40.

MUSIC

Tristan Perich's Noise Patterns
Thursday and Friday, May 16 and 17, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $15

Expanding on Tristan Perich's previous tonal works for electronic circuits and acoustic instruments, Noise Patterns is a composition for sequenced 1-bit patterns of white noise, programmed for and performed by microchip. The music is an investigation into the foundational limits of computation, which surface in the seemingly simple world of randomness.

THEATER/PERFORMANCE

William Leavitt's Habitat,
Friday and Saturday, May 24 and 25, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $15

Habitat takes place between two groups of neighbors in the adjoining backyards of a small mid- western town. While these people sometimes speak of what divides them, the real tragedy here arises in the ordinary business of life that distracts them from any possible concordance. As always, Leavitt registers the psychological impact of things that happen beyond one's power of control.

EXHIBITION

Maintenance Required

Curated by Nina Horisaki-Christens, Andrea Neustein, Victoria Rogers and Jason Waite Helena Rubinstein Curatorial Fellows of the Whitney Museum of American Art, Independent Study Program

May 30 - June 22, 2013
Opening Reception: Thursday, May 30, 5:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M.
Exhibition Hours: Tuesday - Friday, 12:00 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.; Saturday 11:00 A.M. - 6:00 P.M. FREE

"After the revolution, who's going to pick up the garbage on Monday morning?" Maintenance is the ever-present activity that upholds our infrastructure, our society and our lives. Yet it remains largely unseen and undervalued. Bringing these operations into view exposes the social and economic forces at work as well as the constant struggle against entropy and decay that underlies our daily existence. Taking as its point of departure Mierle Laderman Ukeles' Maintenance Art Manifesto (1971), the exhibition features a broad range of artistic practices that engage and contend with large-scale systems of maintenance. In addressing the uneasy balance between dependency and control implicit within these structures, the exhibition questions what needs to be maintained, how systems are continually renewed, who determines what will be cared for, and under what conditions these critical cycles are kept in motion.

MUSIC
Either/Or's Spring Festival

Thursday and Friday, May 30 and 31, 8:00 P.M. Tickets: $15

The acclaimed experimental music ensemble Either/Or presents its 8th annual Spring Festival of contemporary chamber music at The Kitchen. The programming ranges from "post-rock reverie" to Western swing and draws upon E/O's unique instrumentation including cimbalom, komungo, and cracked analog organs. The 2013 Festival maps a broad cross-section of the ensemble's aesthetic interests - exploring the intersection of American experimentalism and the European avant-garde.

For the Festival, E/O will bring its unique focus to world premiere works from New York composers Richard Carrick, Anthony Coleman, Yotam Haber, Jin Hi Kim, Miya Masaoka and John Zorn. In addition, recent projects from Erik Griswold, Thomas Meadowcroft, Ian Power, François Rose and Anna Thorvaldsdottir will be presented.

DANCE

Dance and Process: Kira Alker, Anna Azrieli, Yve Laris Cohen, Moriah Evans Friday and Saturday, June 7 and 8, 8:00 P.M.
Curated by Sarah Michelson
Tickets: $15

The culmination of an extended group process of sharing work and receiving structured feedback, this evening features new works by Kira Alker, Anna Azrieli, Yve Laris Cohen and Moriah Evans.

The Kitchen is one of New York City's most forward-looking nonprofit spaces, showing innovative work by emerging and established artists across disciplines. Our programs range from dance, music, performance, and theater to video, film, and art, in addition to literary events, artists' talks, and lecture series. Since its inception in 1971, The Kitchen has been a powerful force in shaping the cultural landscape of this country, and has helped launch the careers of many artists who have gone on to worldwide prominence.

Box Office Information: 212.255.5793 x11, open Tuesdays - Saturdays, 2:00 - 6:00 P.M. The Kitchen is located at 512 West 19th Street New York, NY.

Facebook: facebook.com/TheKitchenNYC
Twitter: twitter.com/TheKitchen_NYC



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