Akram Khan Showing

khan

Spring 2013

About the piece

Carrying forward with the enthusiasm generated by Yale Dance Lab’s 2012 project on the legacy of Merce Cunningham, The Dance Lab’s spring 2013 project shifted our attention to cutting-edge contemporary dance artists working today. The project differed from past years by focusing on two artists, living on separate continents, both under the age of forty-five.

The two artists – Reggie Wilson and Akram Khan – share an interest in fusing contemporary and traditional dance forms, toward renewed cultural and political relevance. Based in Brooklyn, Reggie Wilson and his company Fist and Heel Performance Group synthesize American postmodern choreographic strategies with dances of the African diaspora. British Bangladeshi choreographer Akram Khan thinks cross-culturally, cross-disciplinarily, and transnationally through a movement style that fuses European contemporary dance with the classical Indian dance form khathak. Through their choreography, Khan and Wilson are redefining the meaning of “diaspora” in the 21st century.

The project occurred in two phases. From January through March, the Dance Lab worked with Reggie Wilson and the dancers of Fist and Heel Performance Group on choreographic excerpts from his twenty-year plus career, including material from his newest work, scheduled for a New York premiere in the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Next Wave Festival in 2013. In April, two dancers from the Akram Khan Company — Eulalia Ayguade Farro of Spain and Young Jin Kim of South Korea — visited Yale for a three-week residency, during which they staged excerpts of Khan’s KAASH (2002), BAHOK (2008), and VERTICAL ROAD (2010). Both phases culminated in public lecture demonstrations.

In launching a study of artists working across national and cultural boundaries, Yale Dance Lab supports Yale’s mission to internationalize the university in all realms of campus and educational life.

Sponsored by the Arts Discretionary Fund in Yale College and the Lionel F. Conacher and Joan T. Dea Fund in cooperation with the dance studies curriculum, Theater Studies, and Alliance for Dance at Yale.

Dancers

Caroline Andersson (YC), Amymarie K. Bartholomew (YC ‘13), Nathalie Batraville (Ph.D. 2016), Lauren Dawson (YC), Derek DiMartini (YC ‘13), Lila Ann Dodge (MA ‘14), Hannah Dreitcer (DIV ‘14), Laura Fridman (YC ‘15), Molly Haig (YC ‘14), Indrani Krishnan-Lukomski (YC ‘15), Karlanna Lewis (MBA ‘15), Elena Light (YC ‘13), Clarissa Marzán (YC ‘14), Elizabeth Quander (YC ‘15), Zoe Reich-Aviles (YC ‘15), Aren Vastola (YC ‘14), Cecillia Xie (YC ‘13)

About the Artist

Akram Khan is one of the most acclaimed choreographers of his generation working in Britain today. Born in London into a family of Bangladeshi origin, he began dancing at seven and studied with the renowned kathak dancer and teacher Sri Pratap Pawar. Khan began presenting solo performances of his work in the late 1990s, maintaining his commitment to classical kathak as well as developing modern work. Khan is currently an Associate Artist of MC2: Grenoble and Sadler’s Wells, London in a special international co-operation.

Khan’s notable company works are bahok (2008), originally produced in collaboration with National Ballet of China; Variations (2006), a production with London Sinfonietta in celebration of Steve Reich’s 70th birthday; ma (2004), with text by Hanif Kureishi; Kaash (2002), a collaboration with artist Anish Kapoor and composer Nitin Sawhney. Besides his company work, Khan also created duets: In-I (2008) with Oscar-winning actress Juliette Binoche, Sacred Monsters (2006) with internationally acclaimed dancer Sylvie Guillem, and award-winning zero degrees (2005) with Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui in collaboration with Antony Gormley and Nitin Sawhney. DESH (2011), Khan’s first full-length contemporary solo is a part-autobiographical work which is at once intimate yet epic. Khan’s latest contemporary ensemble work Vertical Road (2010) and recent creation Gnosis (2009), where he combined his classical Indian and contemporary dance roots, received critical acclaim and continue to tour worldwide. He recently choreographed a section of the London 2012 Olympics Opening Ceremony.

Khan has been the recipient of numerous awards throughout his career including the Laurence Olivier Award, the prestigious ISPA (International Society for the Performing Arts) Distinguished Artist Award, South Bank Sky Arts Award, UK Critics’ Circle National Dance Award and The Age Critics’ Award (Australia).

Khan was awarded an MBE for services to dance in 2005. He is also an Honorary Graduate of Roehampton and De Montfort Universities, and an Honorary Fellow of Trinity Laban.


 

Photography: William Sacco