login    password    artist  buyer  gallery  
Not a member? Register
absolutearts.com logo HOME REGISTER BUY ART SEARCH ART TRENDS COLLECT ART ART NEWS
 
 
Art News:

Pilobolus Dance Theatre / February 26 CONTACT: Brad White
Marketing and Publicity Manager
Center for the Arts, Pepperdine University
24255 Pacific Coast Hwy, Malibu, CA 90263
(310) 506-4055
brad.white@pepperdine.edu
BOX OFFICE: (310) 506-4522
http://arts.pepperdine.edu/

Photos available upon request



PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY
CENTER FOR THE ARTS

presents

Pilobolus Dance Theatre

Tuesday, February 26, 2013, 8 p.m.
Smothers Theatre, Pepperdine University
24255 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu, CA

Pilobolus Dance Theatre, which has earned worldwide acclaim with its compelling mix of humor and invention, returns to Pepperdine University's Smothers Theatre at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, February 26.

Tickets, priced at $50, $40, and $30 for the public and $10 for full-time Pepperdine students, are available now by calling (310) 506-4522. Tickets are also available through Ticketmaster at (800) 982-2787. More information: http://arts.pepperdine.edu/ or http://www.pilobolus.com/

The company's seven dancers will perform Azimuth, The Transformation, Symbiosis, All Is Not Lost, and Automaton.

Azimuth (2012) is Pilobolus' collaboration with the MacArthur "Genius" Award-winning master juggler Michael Moschen that turns the act of juggling on its side. Through Pilobolus' defiance of gravity and Moschen's investigation of the geometries of the universe and humans' place within them, balls float and roll as if in an inter-species harmony between dancers and the celestial machine.

The Transformation (2009) is a shadow piece in which a young woman is transformed. It was created in collaboration with Steven Banks, the lead writer for the animated series SpongeBob SquarePants.

Symbiosis (2001) is a male-female duet that traces the birth of a relationship between two creatures sinuously and sensuously intertwined. At once a Darwinian investigation and a love story, Symbiosis never ceases to surprise with its majesty and emotional depth.

All Is Not Lost (2011) is the live companion to Pilobolus' video collaboration with the Grammy-winning band OK Go. Playing with multiple perspectives, gravity, and dimensionality, the piece changes the way we look at dance through a kaleidoscopic view of human connection.

Automaton (2012) is a new collaboration with the internationally renowned choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui. The result is a cyborg of a dance that questions the difference between human and machine. Somewhere between Tron and Blade Runner, Automaton takes place in a mirrored world that allows us to view multiple angles at the same time. Deep emotions punctuate the intoxicating rhythms of the machine as we experience a journey through a time that seems yet to come.

ABOUT PILOBOLUS

Founded in 1971 and based in Washington Depot, Connecticut, Pilobolus is a modern performance company that to this day wears its revolutionary stripes on its sleeves. In keeping with its fundamentally collective creative process, Pilobolus Dance Theatre now curates and convenes groups of diverse artists to make inventive, athletic, witty, and collaborative performance works on stage and screen using the human body as a medium for expression.

Pilobolus makes art to build community. It teaches its group-based creative process to performers and non-dancers alike through popular, unique educational projects and programs. This collection of activities is called the Pilobolus Institute. Pilobolus also applies its method of creative invention to a wide range of movement services for film, advertising, publishing, commercial clients, and corporate events. This division is called Pilobolus Creative Services.

Pilobolus Dance Theatre performs for stage, television, and online audiences all over the world. The company has appeared late at night on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, early in the morning on Sesame Street, and in primetime as a feature on CBS' 60 Minutes.

Pilobolus has performed live shows in 64 countries and received a number of prestigious honors, including the Berlin Critics Prize, the Scotsman Award, the Brandeis Award, a Primetime Emmy Award for outstanding achievement in cultural programming, the Samuel H. Scripps American Dance Festival Award for lifetime achievement in choreography, and a TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) Fellowship for performing a TED Talk in 2005.

In 2010 Pilobolus was honored as the first collective to receive the Dance Magazine Award, which recognizes artists who have made lasting contributions to the field. Pilobolus works also appear in the repertories of major American and European dance companies.

In 2005 Pilobolus transferred its archive to Dartmouth College, where the company originated. Since then the college has been growing the "living archive" with a series of new-work commissions.

The 2012-2013 season marks Pilobolus' 41st year. In keeping with the energy and spirit of its biological namesake--a phototropic fungus that thrives in farmyards--the company has continued to grow toward the light, expanding and refining its unique methods of collective creative production to assemble a repertoire of over 100 choreographic works. While it has become a stable and influential force in the world of dance, Pilobolus remains as protean as ever, looking forward to the next 40 years of collaborating on the future.

###





#

YOUR FIRST STOP FOR ART ONLINE!
HELP MEDIA KIT SERVICES CONTACT


Discover over 150,000 works of contemporary art. Search by medium, subject matter, price and theme... research over 200,000 works by over 22,000 masters in the indepth art history section. Browse through new Art Blogs. Use our advanced artwork search interface.

Call for Artists, Premiere Portfolio sign-up for your Free Portfolio or create an Artist Portfolio today and sell your art at the marketplace for contemporary Art! Start a Gallery Site to exclusively showcase your gallery. Keep track of contemporary art with your free MYabsolutearts account.

 


Copyright 1995-2013. World Wide Arts Resources Corporation. All rights reserved