Marcel Cole in "Free As A Bird" |
Directed by Alison Plevey for QL2 Dance
QL2 Theatre, Gorman House Arts Centre, 14th and
15th December, 2019.
Reviewed by Bill Stephens
The final presentation on the QL2 Dance 2019 calendar, “On
Course 2019” provides a unique opportunity for students who are currently on full time study
in universities around Australia and New Zealand, to
choreograph, collaborate and perform new short works.
This year participating choreographers came from the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), the Victorian College of the Arts (VCA), the New Zealand School of Dance (NZSD), the Academy of Music and Performing Arts (AMPA) and the Sydney Dance Company Pre-Professional Year (PPY) to work with fellow tertiary students and senior Quantum Leapers to create original works.
This year participating choreographers came from the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA), the Victorian College of the Arts (VCA), the New Zealand School of Dance (NZSD), the Academy of Music and Performing Arts (AMPA) and the Sydney Dance Company Pre-Professional Year (PPY) to work with fellow tertiary students and senior Quantum Leapers to create original works.
Many of the participants had been inspired to pursue further contemporary dance studies as a result of their
involvement with Quantum Leap and its various programs, during their formative years. But for others, it was their first taste of this program, which this year was directed by
Alison Plevey, founder and Artistic Director of Australian Dance Party, who
together with Steve Gow, a member of Australian Dance Party, also provided
professional artistic mentorship for the participants.
The task for the emerging choreographers was to create an original dance work to be performed for three performances before paying audiences. The choreographers were encouraged by their mentors to not concern themselves with creating the “best” work, but to take full advantage of this opportunity to step outside their individual comfort zones, draw on the new skills learnt during their studies so far, but to experiment and take risks. A challenge which the participants embraced with admirable energy and creativity, and also admirably, attention to detail
With only space for six full rehearsals of each work during an intense
two week rehearsal period, with the choreographers responsible for rehearsing
their dancers, organising schedules, sourcing costumes, choosing music and
co-ordinating lighting plots, uneven results may have been expected.
However it says much for the commitment, energy and creativity of the young choreographers and their dancers, as well as their mentors, that the works which resulted provided such a stimulating evening of dance.
However it says much for the commitment, energy and creativity of the young choreographers and their dancers, as well as their mentors, that the works which resulted provided such a stimulating evening of dance.
Each work had its particular interest. Where some
choreographers managed to achieve polished unison work, others impressed with
the clarity of the movement they chose to express their themes.
One such work was a solo work, “Free as a bird”, devised and
danced by Marcel Cole, currently majoring in contemporary dance at NZSD. It commenced excitingly with Cole dancing
an expansive, bravura classical solo from the ballet, “La Bayadere”. A change of lighting suddenly transported the
audience to a dance studio where Cole is discovered at a ballet barre, berating
himself with existential questions as he repeatedly fell to the floor while failing to execute difficult
dance steps. It was an arresting work,
brilliantly performed.
"Eye to Eye" by Caspar IIshner |
Also particularly impressive were the polished performances Caspar IIshner
was able to achieve with his work for eight dancers, entitled “Eye to Eye”. Also studying at NZSD, Ilshner produced a
remarkably cohesive work exploring questions of human communication through confidently arranged unison choreography to a score which he composed himself.
Otto Kosok, now in his second year at NZSD, kept the
audience intrigued with his cleverly devised work, “Pushing Up Daisies”, an ambitious work also for five dancers, inspired by Wolf Eribruch’s “Duck, Death
and the Tulip” in which Caspar IIshner portrayed a mysterious man with a
suitcase, appearing to have power over life or death.
"Pushing Up Daisies" by Otto Kosok |
Having just finished her first year at WAAPA, Ruby Ballantyne, one of several former
QL2 alumni in this year’s program,
drew guffaws from the audience with her delightfully quirky duo, “My Roommate
is a Very Heavy Sleeper”, exploring conscious and subconscious states, which she performed with Maddy Bowman to an
amusing soundscape, which she co-composed
with Lorien Allen.
"Tensegrity" by Karlia Cook |
“Propagating blue Bindweed” a lovely work by Amelia Vanzwol
(VCA) for a quartet of dancers costumed in pristine white boiler-suits; “Just Breath”, sophisticatingly choreographed
by Lara Darling (WAAPA) in
which her four dancers costumed attractively in black, explored energy use; “Tensegrity” for which Karlia
Cook (WAAPA)employed pulsing movements for her five dancers to express ideas of community interaction; and “I was the angel in the poem you wrote” by Mia Tuco, who is majoring in
acting at VCA for which she incorporated shadows and coloured lights and an
interesting choreographic repertoire for
her five dancers to interpret the cyclical nature of life; together with two
interesting short dance films by Gabriel Sinclair and Jason Pearce, both at
VCA, all provided a tantalising glimpse into
directions being explored by young emerging dance makers in their efforts to express often complicated concepts through the language of dance.
Bravo to QL2 Dance
for maintaining this important initiative, now in its thirteenth year.
Photos by Andrew Sirkorski - Art Atelier
This review also appears in Australian Arts Review. www.artsreview.com.au
This review also appears in Australian Arts Review. www.artsreview.com.au