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Watch the video of FlipFest! on CEC ArtsLink's Vimeo account!
WaxFactory with Al Orensanz and Fritzie Brown
Goran Bogdanovski
Lucian Ban and Sam Newsome
Vít Hořejš + Czechoslovak American Theatre
Robert Black and Yoshiko Chuma
Klavdia and German Khatylaev
Viktor Tth
Sonja Perryman and Daniel Alexander Jones
WaxFactory
Sylwia Gorak
Jim Neu & Co.
Ilya Belenkov
Al Orensanz and Fritzie Brown
David Simons and Lisa Karrer
Viktor Tóth and Jeff Zielinski
Maja Mitić and Kathy Randels
John Kelly
WaxFactory with audience
Bonnie Sue Stein and Al Orensanz
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FlipFest! At the Angel Orensanz Foundation 172 Norfolk Street Lower East Side, NYC
FlipFest! was co-produced by CEC ArtsLink and Bonnie Sue Stein/GOH Productions. We thank the following foundation and institutions for their support:
See full press release here. See the order of apperances and description of peformances here. Download the full program (PDF).
Participating Artists:
Tea Alagic (2004 ArtsLink Projects awardee) is a director, writer, and actor. Her recent directing credits include St. Joan by George Bernard Shaw (New York University), Zero Hour by Tea Alagic (Yale University Theater), The Brothers Size by Tarrell Alvin McCraney (The Public Theater, NY, The Studio Theater, Washington D.C, The Abbey Theater, Dublin), Book of Daniel by Daniel Alexander Jones (University of Texas/Austin) and Chiang Kai Chek by Charles Mee (Yale Cabaret). As associate artistic director of the Ensemble Company for the Performing Arts, Alagic directed Woyzeck by George Buchner and Self-Accusation by Peter Handke. She has acted with Theatre du Soleil, Robert Lepage, Richard Foreman and Yoshiko Chuma. Alagic received a BFA in acting from Charles University in Prague, and an MFA in directing from Yale School of Drama, where she received the Julian Milton Kaufman Prize for Best Director. She has received awards from the Cairo International Festival and the Edinburgh International Fringe Fest among others. She is currently working on Zero Hour, commissioned by the Public Theater; its first reading will be at The Abbey Theatre in December 2008.
Pianist, bandleader, composer and arranger Lucian Ban (2004 ArtsLink Projects collaboration with Sam Newsome) is originally from Cluj, Romania. He currently lives in New York City where he is at the forefront of contemporary modern jazz. He performs and tours regularly with his own projects and as a sideman, and was nominated in 2005 and 2006 for the prestigious Hans Koller Best European Jazz Musician Preis in Austria. Ban has written music for theater, film and ballet, including for the New York City Symphony Orchestra. His compositions are frequently performed and recorded, and include a commission for the Machito Orchestra, performed at the 2002 Super Bowl, among others. New York-based projects include original music for Philosopher Fox produced by East River Comedia, nominated for the prestigious IT Award; and music for the Paul Auster play Timbuktu directed by Richard Schechner. www.lucianban.com
Robert Black (1996 ArtsLink Projects awardee and frequent CEC ArtsLink VisArt participant) is equally at home on the double bass in classical, contemporary and experimental musical genres and collaborations. He has an active performing career as a soloist, chamber musician and orchestra player. He has produced over 75 commissioned solo works and his solo tours have taken him throughout the world. He is a founding member of the Bang on a Can All-Stars. Black’s recent collaborators include actor Kathryn Walker, Brazilian artist Ige D'Aquino, choreographers Katie Nollet-Stevinson and Yoshiko Chuma, and the Ciompi and Miami String Quartets. He maintains a full teaching schedule at the Hartt School of the University of Hartford, the Festival Eleazar de Carvalho in Brazil and the Manhattan School of Music Contemporary Music Program. He has recorded for Sony Classical, Point/Polygram, Koch, Mode, O.O. Discs, Cantaloupe and others. A recipient of numerous grants, he received a 1998 Bessie Award for his collaborative work with The School of Hard Knocks in NYC. www.robertblack.org
Goran Bogdanovski (2001 ArtsLink Fellow) has performed with more than 70 choreographers and directors since 1989 in classical ballet, physical theatre, contemporary dance, film and video. Since 2000, when he founded Fičo Balet, he has been developing his own choreography, as well as performing and leading workshops from Moscow to New York. From 2002-2008 he ran Kino Šiška, a rehearsal space for contemporary dance and theater in Ljubljana, and in 2003 he helped to launch Gibanica (Moving Cake), the first biannual Slovene dance festival. He is also a founder of NOMAD Dance Academy, an educational and artistic research project with partners from Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Bulgaria.
Yoshiko Chuma (ArtsLink Host and 1995, 1998, 2000 and 2008 ArtsLink Projects awardee) is a conceptual artist and choreographer and artistic director of The School of Hard Knocks. She has created more than sixty full-length performance works for theaters and site-specific venues with her company and on commission throughout the world. Chuma first worked in Eastern and Central Europe in 1985, and has led workshops, and initiated residencies and collaborations with artists in the region. Her company has performed throughout the world at sites including the Hong Kong harbor, the Eiffel Tower, Newcastle Swing Bridge, Dublin’s Temple Bar district, Tallinn’s Old Town, The Joyce Theater, Dance Theater Workshop, City Center and the National Theaters of Sarajevo and Macedonia. Chuma has received fellowships and awards from the Guggenheim, the National Endowment for the Arts, New York Foundation for Artists and the Japan Foundation, among others. She is the recipient of a 1984 Bessie Award for choreography, six Bessie Awards to company artists from 1987-1998, and a 2007 Bessie for Sustained Achievement. www.yoshikochuma.org
DJ Joro Boro (Friend of ArtsLink) was born in Bulgaria. In New York City, he was a fixture at Mehanata Bulgarian Bar. His music is best described as Ethnotech or EthnoMesh—a cosmopolitan textured knot-work of dance styles including Gypsy speed brass, Arabic dancehall, Angolan kuduro, Punjabi bhangra, Brazilian favela funk, digital cumbia, merengue de la calle, plus sleazy Balkan incarnations of chalga, turbo folk, and manele. As described by Other Music, it is a music of "movement, progressive voice, and diversity. The fast-forward multifarious collective from the 'Eastern Bloc' and beyond, spearheaded by Joro-Boro and Eugene Hutz of Gogol Bordello, pluralistically exhale out of a trans-cultural osmosis of East meets West, romantically fusing the abundant expressions of a relevant past into a shifting matrix of the now-sound of today's wayward cultural bents. That is, an unorthodox real-deal identity stamp to destroy and forge through all barriers that are political, social, and musical."
Vít Hořejš (1994 ArtsLink Projects awardee) moved to New York from Prague in 1979. He is the Artistic Director of the Czechoslovak-American Marionette Theatre and has written, adapted and directed a dozen plays for the company. The Theatre is dedicated to the preservation and presentation of traditional and not-so-traditional puppetry. The company has played to great acclaim in twenty-seven states in the US and at international festivals in Poland, Turkey, Pakistan, and the Czech Republic. Hořejš himself has published stories and plays and toured extensively in the US, Asia, and Europe.
John Kelly (1995 ArtsLink Projects awardee) is a performance and visual artist. His original performances have been presented by The Kitchen, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, the Warhol Museum, the Whitney Biennial, PS 122, BAM Next Wave Festival, and the Tate Modern. In 1998 he directed (and sang a leading role in) Ime Na Koncu Jezika (The Name On The Tip Of The Tongue), a chamber opera by Mitja Vhrovnik Smerkar for the Glej Theatre of Ljubljana, Slovenia. He has collaborated with David Del Tredici, Laurie Anderson, and The Jazz Passengers; commissioned scores by Richard Einhorn and Richard Peaslee; and performed with Natalie Merchant and Antony and The Johnsons. Kelly is currently writing songs for his recording, The Escape Artist. His acting credits include James Joyce’s The Dead, John Cage’s An Alphabet, Christopher Marlowe’s Dido, Queen of Carthage, and Rinde Eckert’s Orpheus X. He has received numerous awards and fellowships including two Bessie Awards, two Obie Awards, an American Choreographer Award, the 2001 CalArts/ Alpert Award and the 2006-2007 Rome Prize in Visual Art at The American Academy in Rome. JOHN KELLY, an autobiography was published by the 2wice Arts Foundation. www.johnkellyperformance.org
(1995 ArtsLink Fellow) has been a company actress with the Lithuanian National Drama Theatre, formerly the Lithuanian State Academic Theatre, since 1992. She is also an award-winning ballroom dancer. Michelevičiūtė has appeared in numerous roles in theater and film, and has toured worldwide. She received great acclaim for roles under directors Eimuntas Nekrošius, Oskaras Koršunovas and others, and for a cameo appearance in Yoshiko Chuma’s Three Stories and a solo performance of an excerpt from Three Sisters at Dixon Place in New York during her ArtsLink residency. Major theatre roles includeRomulus the Great (1991), Marquise de Sad (1992), Eliazaveta Bam (1992), Rain Seller (1993), Persona (1994), The Stranger (1995), Public (1997), Time and Room (1997), Three Sisters (1996); LIFE, Women's Songs (1998), Roberto Zucco (1998), Carmen (1998), Richard III (1999), Station in N City (2000), Dances of Lugnazade Feast (2001), Testament of Barbora Radvilaite (2002). She has acted in the films Don't Know Who I Am, Fish Day, Awakening, Thrush - Green Bird, Moon's Lithuania, and New Adventures of Robin Hood.
Sam Newsome (2004 ArtsLink Projects awardee) has been active in the New York jazz scene since the 1990s as a member of the Terence Blanchard Quintet, which has toured worldwide and released several CDs for Columbia/Sony, including the critically-acclaimed Malcolm X Jazz Suite. He plays both tenor and soprano saxophones, and has incorporated various types of non-Western scales into his palette. His group Global Unity released two CDs, Sam Newsome & Global Unity (Columbia/Sony) and Global Unity (Palmetto). He later explored solo saxophone works by Steve Lacy, Evan Parker, Sonny Rollins, and Anthony Braxton, culminating in the 2007 release of a solo saxophone CD, Monk Abstractions. Currently, Newsome teaches jazz studies at Long Island University’s Brooklyn Campus, tours with Lucian Ban, among others, and is at work on his second solo saxophone CD, Blue Soliloquy.
Al Orensanz (Friend of ArtsLink) is a poet, historian, philosopher, and scholar of Social Upheaval Studies with a PhD in Sociology from New York University. Al can currently be found in various capacities as the public face of the Angel Orensanz Foundation.
Kathy Randels (1998 ArtsLink Projects awardee) is the founding artistic director of New Orleans’ ArtSpot Productions. She has written, performed in and directed numerous original solo and group works in Louisiana and beyond. She received a 2008 V-Day Leadership Award, as well as a 2003 Obie Award and a 2007-2009 NEA/TCG Career Development Program for Directors grant. Her recent collaborations include Flight, Lakeviews, and Alternate Roots’ UPROOTED: The Katrina Project. She also collaborated on three Dah Theatre performances from 1997 to 2003. In 1996, Randels founded the Drama Club at the Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women and has worked with the Students at the Center Program in New Orleans Public Schools since 1998. www.artspotproductions.org
David Simons (1995 and 1997 ArtsLink Projects awardee) is a composer and performer specializing in percussion, theremin, electronics, and world music. Recordings of his works include the CDs Prismatic Hearing (Tzadik), Kebyar Leyak, Cool it Wayang, and Naked We Stand for Gamelan Son of Lion, and on albums by God is My Co-Pilot, Stockhausen, Shelley Hirsch, Music For Homemade Instruments, and many others. Simons’ music for theater and dance has brought him to Zagreb and Tallinn, Seoul and Yogyakarta, Munich and Berlin, Guantanamo, Honolulu, and Bali. He has received a Rockefeller Bellagio residency, NYFA fellowships, and commissions from the American Composers Forum, Mary Flagler Cary Trust and Meet the Composer. His composition Odentity for the Newband’s Harry Partch instruments premiered in 2007. A graduate of California Institute of the Arts, he has published writings on music and sound in Radiotexte(Semiotexte#16), EAR magazine, and Soundings. http://www.simonskarrer.com
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