Long, billowing sheer curtains with concealed entrances surround the stage for Brazilian choreographers Rosane Chamecki and Andrea Lerner's newest piece, Visible Content, coming to MASS MoCA on Saturday, March 29, at 8 p.m.
The stage design is the terrain for the heroine's shadowy inner life as she struggles to confront her demons. As in a dream, reality and the absurd will intertwine, offering a glimpse into the main character's psyche. Dance Magazine calls them "utterly engaging." According to The Village Voice, "the dancers' passions are true; the idea, solid; the performers assured."
Chamecki and Lerner's collaboration began with the common goal to "attain a bold and transparent physicality -- one that could reveal the psychological state of a body." According to the pair, "The ultimate goal became to strip the movement to its essential, to pare down the superfluous, thereby creating a tangible image. The challenge is to codify emotional material into functional physical structures where the body is busy in resolving its tasks. The result is a body urging to articulate, to accomplish and conquer."
Lerner and Chamecki studied dance in their native Brazil for years before they moved to New York City in 1989 to expand their studies. They created ChameckiLerner Dance Company in 1993 when they began earning their first invitations to festivals in Europe and South America. With outstanding reviews from newspapers in Venezuela, Belgium, and The Netherlands, they went on to create their first evening-length piece produced by Dance Theater Workshop in 1994.
In 1995 they created homemade produced by Performance Space 122. Chameckilerner has received grants from the Jerome Foundation, Meet the Composer, New York State Council for the Arts, Seimens, FIESP, and Electrolux, among others. They have performed at Joyce Theater, New York City's Downtown Arts Festival's Main Event, Dance Theater Workshop, Food for Thought, Judson Memorial Church, DanceBlitz, and Jacob's Pillow's Inside Out series. ChameckiLerner received the prestigious award for artistic achievement from The Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts in 1998.
ChameckiLerner:
Visible Content is sponsored by the Porches Inn at MASS MoCA and the New England Foundation for the Arts. Funded in part by the National Dance Project of the New England Foundation for the Arts, with lead funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Additional funding provided by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and Philip Morris Companies Inc.
Chamecki and Lerner will host a morning movement class for children in MASS MoCA's rehearsal studio on Saturday, March 29, at 11:00 A.M. Tickets for the kids event are free with museum admission, but space is limited and reservations are required.
Tickets to ChameckiLerner: Visible Content are $16 adults, $12 students. MASS MoCA members receive a 10% discount. Tickets are available through the MASS MoCA Box Office located on Marshall Street in North Adams from 11 A.M. until 5 P.M. every day but Tuesday. Tickets can also be charged by phone by calling 413.662.2111 during Box Office hours or online at www.massmoca.org at any time of day.
MASS MoCA, the largest center for contemporary visual and performing arts in the United States, is located on Marshall Street in North Adams on a 13-acre campus of renovated 19th-century factory buildings.
MASS MoCA 1040 MASS MoCA Way North Adams, Mass. 01247 413.MOCA.111 www.massmoca.org
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Northern Berkshire United Way: 1970s Has Its Ups and Downs
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
The Northern Berkshire United Way sets its highest goal yet in 1979, and the first time going over $200,000.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Over three decades, the Northern Berkshire United Community Services had raised some $3 million for its affiliated agencies.
That number was announced that the organizations "fifth" annual meeting in 1974, marking the time since Adams had joined, and counting the funds raised by the North Adams Community Chest and the North Adams and Adams United Funds and Northern Berkshire United Fund.
The report that year was dedicated to past 24 volunteer campaign chairs, of whom 17 were still in the area and three — Russell Lanoue, George Higgins and G. Churchill Francis — had since died.
The amount of money raised seemed significant for the time, but the united fund found itself struggling in the early '70s as the economy dipped and its the need for its services grew.
The campaign in 1970 saw an ambitious goal of $184,952 to support 16 agencies, with Northern Berkshire Child Care as the latest addition. The drive kicked off that goal at the Midway with Chair George Bateman, but it reached only 80 percent of its goal by the end.
Batemen said it might not be a financial success but "I believe it was a spiritual success" because of the hard work and enthusiasm of so many drive volunteers.
But President Henry Pierpan said there would be allocation cuts for 1971 despite "a substantial sum" voted from reserve funds.
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