âCatapultâ showcases student dance talent at CU
Dance pieces tackling both timeless and timely themes will be on display in "Catapult," aÌęÌęchoreographed by graduating ÂÌñ»»ÆȚ students. The show runs Feb. 10-12 in CUâsÌę.
In âCatapult,â four burgeoning artists set to earn BFA degrees this spring will use inventive choreography to examine everything from anxiety in modern times to the negative impact of processed food to the male gaze in Renaissance art.
âI definitely think our times, politically, are getting very messy and very interesting,â says Heather Woolley, one of the showâs choreographers. âUsing dance as a way to research contemporary issues is important to the arts and what they stand for.â
In Woolleyâs piece, dancers are dressed as animals who have adapted to 21st-century American life in different ways. A garden slug has coated itself in processed food to ward off predators, but itâs taken a toll on her survival. Three hens have begun to resist a roosterâs patriarchal egg-laying mandates, but they canât bear to break from some of their domestic routines.Ìę
Woolley says she wanted to use animals instead of people in order to âconfront some of the tricky conversations we donât like to haveâ in a more accessible way.
Ellen Reynerson, too, is interested in contemporary issuesânamely the toll anxiety takes on many of us. Half of the dancers in her piece are regular people, while the other half are dressed in dark, sleek clothing to represent the black cloud of anxiety hanging over us.
âThe piece is about how anxiety can manipulate you and blur your perception of whatâs real and what isnât,â Reynerson, a Boulder native, says. âWhatâs interesting about anxiety is, it exists to keep you safe, and itâs not always a bad thing to have. It has good intentions, but sometimes itâs overpowering and can hold you back.â
Reynerson says she hopes audiences come away thinking about their anxiety âlike a personal relationship. If you can choose to say ânoâ or acknowledge that itâs there, you can begin to work through things and prevent it from manipulating you.â
Emma Scholz, another BFA student, also hopes her piece inspires audiences to use more personal agencyâspecifically when theyâre taking in a piece of art.
âI want them to read the little descriptions of the paintings they see in museumsâto be curious about the things around them rather than just being passive observers,â she says. âThat way, they learn about it and can question it for themselves.â
The dance and art history double major has always been interested in the intersections between history and movement. In her piece, dancers pose as the subjects of classic Titian paintings and slowly discover they can move around freely, first moving their fingers and then their whole bodies.
âWhen a body is in motion, it no longer belongs to one person, such as the person painting it,â she says. âThereâs a new level of agency, because theyâre not just placed in a certain position. They have this capacity to break away from the expectations put upon them.â
Scholz says sheâs grateful for ÂÌñ»»ÆȚâs unique dance department, where faculty emphasize the importance of inquisitiveness and originality.
âIâve found that a lot of my professors are intent on creating good humans,â she says. âTheyâre not interested in winning trophies. Theyâre interested in creating the humans who are going to make the biggest change.â
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Performances
Friday, Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 12, 2 p.m.
All events take place in the Charlotte York Irey Theatre.Ìę
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Tickets for Catapult start at $16.ÌęTo purchase tickets, visit the CU Presents box office in person (972 Broadway), call 303-492-8008 during business hours orÌęanytime. Note: All online and phone orders are subject to a service fee. To schedule interviews or for other media information, contact Jill Kimball atÌęjill.kimball@colorado.edu.
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