Dancers from QL2 Dance perform "Shared Language" |
Artistic
Director: Ruth Osborne – Assistant to the Artistic Director: Stephen Gow
Lighting
designed by Antony Hately – Stage Managed by Anni Doyle Wawrzynczak
Canberra
Theatre Centre Playhouse, 10th July 2023.
Reviewed by
Bill Stephens.
This evening
of dance by youth dance companies from around the country is the culmination of
a four-day festival, “Meet Up”, a biennial event hosted by QL2 at the Gorman
Arts Centre in Canberra.
This year,
in addition to Canberra’s QL2 Dance, five companies participated representing
four Australian states and territories. The works presented in this showcase
were the results of four days intensive collaboration between young people and
professional dance artists.
Jahna Lugnan and Julia Villaflor perform "Connection". |
The program commenced with a beautifully choreographed contemporary Aboriginal piece entitled “Connection”. No choreographer was attributed so presumably it was the work of the two dancers, Jahna Lugnan and Julia Villaflor, who charmed with the graceful unison movement.
Eight
dancers from the NSW Illawarra Coast Company, Austi Dance and Physical Theatre, wearing loose multi-coloured
costumes, offered a work called “Move Me” choreographed by Timothy Farr in collaboration
with the dancers. Working with a soundtrack on which the dominant sound
suggested zippers, the work combined impressive unison and free-form moves to
suggest constant shifting, packing and unpacking.
Dancers from Stompin performing "Tethered" |
Caitlin
Comerford worked with helium balloons and five dancers from the Launceston
company, Stompin, to create a
light-hearted, free form work entitled “Tethered” which explored how balloons
challenged the way the dancers moved.
Fling Physical Theatre performing "Puffer". |
Gabrielle
Rose made imaginative use of puffer jackets and hoodies to create an energetic
work appropriately entitled “Puffer” for the Bega dance company, Fling Physical Theatre, while QL2 Dance doyen, Ruth Osborne, with the
assistance of Stephen Gow, featured nine of her dancers, resplendent in orange
and grey costumes, to offer a subtle warning against excessive use of mobile
phones with her work, “Shared Language” which incorporated an original
soundtrack composed by Adam Ventoura.
Catapult Dance Choreographic Hub from Newcastle was represented by
seven dancers from its Flipside Project who performed a work choreographed by
Alexandra Ford entitled “Conversations From The Other Day” which utilised Olafur
Arnalds fascinating composition, “Everything Must Change”, to explore
contemporary gender issues.
Dancers from Yellow Wheel performing "The Dancing Fever of 1518" |
The final
work on the program, and certainly a high light of the evening, was performed
by seventeen dancers from Yellow Wheel
in Melbourne, who offered a cleverly constructed abstract work entitled “The
Dancing Fever of 1518”, choreographed by Kyall Shanks with Jacqui Maida, to the
tantalising “NY Lipps Dries Van Notes 2020 Remix” by Soulwax and Nancy Whang.
As
entertaining as it was as a showcase for youth dance, “Gather” also provided an impressive demonstration of the strength
and variety of youth dance practice throughout the country as well as an
engaging reminder of the opportunities it provides for self-expression and creativity
for the young practitioners who embrace it.
Images by Lorna Sim.
This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au