Photo: Courtesy of OhOK
Photo: Courtesy of OhOK

Together, Yet Still Alone

Kristen Shahverdian

I love duets. There is intimacy built into witnessing a relationship. But what if the togetherness never happened?  

OhOK’s Whitney Casal and Britt Davis, along with drummer David Guy, created Do mirrors burn?, a film adaptation of what was originally a live performance at SOUNDANCE Festival Berlin 2020. Guy’s music provides a strong framework for the piece; the dancers ride on the drums’ tempo and volume with torsos shaking, strong limbs reaching, and stillness. I am grateful that the relationship between music and movement is not a mirror image. I see and hear both because of their independence.  

As the initial dancer enters the space and walks in a circle, my eyes take in place. The dancer is in a field; a constant breeze moves the stalks of wheat, and in the distance a building dots the skyline in this black and white film. Each dancer has solo moments, with sinewing spines juxtaposed with strong arms reaching out. A pushup—then the dancer melts into the field and disappears. Their movements do not reveal who they are or why they are here, but the artists state on the website that they wanted physicality to take precedent, and it does.

As the dancers’ arms arc around each other, my eyes adjust so my brain can catch up. What would normally be touch now looks like hands absorbing one another. Their full torsos dissolve together for just a moment, but then they separate again. It could become gimmicky, but it is not. If they are each other’s mirror, I feel the mirror liquify and shapeshift; they become something else because of this new form of contact. The connection lasts for a moment and then the original body reappears, and boundaries return.

In the end, both dancers lean back together, in unison. One rises and while thrusting her arms and hips forward she almost leaves the screen, only to drop down out of view in the stalks of wheat. For a moment we are left with one again—although that was all we ever had.

Do mirrors burn?OhOK Performance Group (Whitney Casal, Britt Davis), 2020 Fringe Festival, Sept.   10—Oct.  4.

Share this article

Kristen Shahverdian

Kristen Shahverdian performed in Philadelphia for over 15 years and created new work under the name Melissa Diane. She is a staff writer and editor with thINKingDANCE.

PARTNER CONTENT

Keep Reading

‘Don’t Stop Me Now’: A Philadelphia Dance Extravaganza

Zoe Farnsworth

A community dance extravaganza full of queerness, flirtiness and wild Queen Interpretations.

A giant discoball hangs at the back of the theater, Philadelphia’s “biggest”. The stage is awash in red with a spotlight at the lip of the stage. The theater is empty; there is a sense of anticipation as the discoball takes over the frame of the photo.
Photo: Paige Phillips

Resistance and Art-Making: ‘Dancing Collective Power’

Zoe Farnsworth

Integrating improvisational dance skills into direct action protest

Three performers stand in a triangle in Studio 34. The camera blurs the background and focuses on their upper torsos and faces. The two dancers in backwear jeans and t-shirts; one laughs and the other holds a serious expression, bracing for impact. Together, they support the front dancer’s hips and shoulders. This third performer looks expectantly forward for the shove of another performer not in the photo.
Photo: Rachel Warriner