Brockus’ SHIFT/west residency- Helps Women Choreographers Bloom after Pandemic

Rourou Ye in “Daydreaming” – Screenshot by LADC

Rourou Ye in “Daydreaming” – Screenshot by LADC

On June 4th Deborah Brockus and SHIFT/west residency – Women Choreographers launched their online showcase running from June 4 through June 10th on Vimeo.  Twelve works were produced and mentored by Brockus with funding support from a grant by the California Arts Council empowering L.A.’s female choreographers at various stages of their creative journey by supporting their voices and vision.  It is a wonderful evening of fun, artistry and creative invention. Tickets are $15 per household, HERE.

The first piece, a product of the Brockus SHIFT/west residency for Women Choreographers began with a unique filmic morsel by Rourou Ye, called “Daydreaming.” At first the incongruous perspective of legs dangling from the ceiling of a cream colored room, with the character struggling, perhaps hanging, perhaps crawling down the wall to a door that seemed to be the only way out.  Even though there appeared to be a way to the outside world, the traps were many, with a ghostly alter ego challenging our main character both daring and chiding her and sometimes soothing the trapped disoriented Ye. Eventually, both Ego and Alter Ego, in a fascinating duet, opens the door and leads to steps to nowhere.  The ticking of a clock and almost nursery rhyme music by the talented, Sophia Shen, is playful and childlike.  It delights us with its dreamscape of light and tones.   Ye’s “Daydreaming” creates a series of surreal moments, and an imaginative rendering of what appears to be the deadly fires of 2020.  Then it ends with curious roguery by making a pithy point to end of the piece.  The filmmaking and movement is a fascinating and fun work which reflects the metaphor of the curious and unnerving months of the last year.  A remarkable and interesting work… more

Molding Sounds into Music: Southeast of Rain’s 42 Days

Southeast of Rain, a duo comprised of pipa player Sophia Shen and vocalist Lemon Guo, are composer-performers, sound artists, and longtime collaborators with an enthusiastically experiential and interdisciplinary approach to their art. They created their debut album, 42 Days, from a fruitful residency at the Headlands Center for the Arts in Marin, California in the fall of 2019. Resolving to compose a new work each day of their residency, Shen and Guo collected field recordings during “soundwalks” in their local environment and documented their various improvisatory sessions. 42 Days features eight of their compositions, accompanied by descriptions from the composers that read more as introspective journal entries than as formal program notes. These reminiscences are fascinating, unvarnished insights into the unique genesis of each work.