Moving Toward Meaning
By Whitney Weinstein
Upon entering the theater the show seemed to have already begun. The audience watched in silence as the flexible dancers twisted through their warm-up routines, moving like rare creatures through seemingly unreal manipulations.
Azimuth, choreographed only last year, used metal arcs that, when held on each end by a dancer’s outstretched arms, created a curve barely above his or her head. The silver prop contrasted with and paralleled the bending spines of dancers who spiraled the arcs around their bodies. Twirling in and out of unison, the company bobbed the arcs up and down through the space, gently shifting angles to form moment after moment of remarkable visual images.
For the remainder of the evening, videos alternated with live dance, all continuing to challenge physical boundaries and relationships. Many of the short films revealed parallels between technology and nature. In one film cells divided and reproduced, creating a sense of traffic on the screen; the next image showed traffic at a busy city intersection. The patterns were similar, organic. Discovering those similarities introduced unity between two perspectives so drastically different. The concluding dance, Automaton, explored technology’s impact on an individual’s humanity, emphasizing an overarching theme of connection.
Pilobolus continues to push physical limitations and explore their capabilities in group work. The company astonished spectators with the intensity and emotion of the performance, as well as with the dancers’ acrobatic feats: the audience’s initial silence erupted into exclamations of awe preceding the standing ovation that greeted the dancers’ bows. After 42 years, Pilobolus continues to astound with sublime visuals and highly emotional themes.
Pilobolus Dance Theater, Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts, Zellerbach Theater, January 17-20, 2012, http://danceaffiliates.org/dance-celebration.php#page-top.
By Whitney Weinstein
February 5, 2013