#Dance dude gay pride nyc series#
This month Vangeline Theater/New York Butoh Institute collaborates with Howl Arts to present a multi-national video series of hourlong programs in which artists show their work and discuss the intersection of Butoh and queerness. On the first of three Tuesdays, Singapore’s XUE offered Flowers. Queer Butoh 2021, June 22 | The 20th century Japanese form known as Butoh has always manifested aspects of homoeroticism. XUE (aka Sher Chew), in a performance of “Flowers.” | Photo by Richie Duque At the Guggenheim Museum (1071 Fifth Ave.
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The development of this Works & Process commission will be continued in a bubble residency at Bethany Arts Community.
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This is a collaboration with filmmaker Christopher Ash, designer Rebecca Kanach, and a duo of musicians, as well as various queer composers including Pax Ressler, Emily Bate, and Daniel De Jesus. Jarboe uses the story of Rose and the metaphor of cannibalism to explore gender queerness, nature and nurture, and queer ancestry. Rose: You Are Who You Eat by John Jarboe of The Bearded Ladies Cabaret, June 20 | Based on a true story, Rose is a series of performance pieces (songs, videos, and poems) dedicated to Bearded Ladies Cabaret founder John Jarboe’s twin, Rose, whom Jarboe “absorbed” or “consumed” in the womb. Wombhog John Jarboe digs deep, in “Rose: You Are Who You Eat.” | Photo by John Christopher Ash, make-up and costume design by Rebecca Kanach For more information about the event and its limited audience capacity, click here. This event is part of the River to River Festival. Fri., June 25–Sun., June 27 at 1pm & 4:30pm at The Arts Center at Governors Island, Studio A3, 110 Andes Road, Governors Island. An incredibly smart, subtle performance artist, Valencia moves and speaks as if engaging her closest friends. Mariana Valencia: Futurity, June 25-27 | Valencia’s new work repurposes older pieces dealing with site to tell “queerstories” that converge in New York City and beyond.
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#Dance dude gay pride nyc registration#
Free with advance registration at (donations accepted). This program features an hour of new films, with special guests nightly, followed by a discussion and dance party with the artists. All is shaped inherently by a lived queerness.” Gwirtzman, a master teacher from Washington Heights currently on the faculty at Ithaca College, has spent the pandemic era making films of himself and his company. The metaphors of resilience, pride, strength, and community are central to my art-making. Daniel Gwirtzman Dance Company, Dance With Us, June 25-27 | “I don’t make Gay Art.