| Pittsburgh, PA Tuesday April 12, 2005 |
| News Sports Lifestyle Classifieds About Us | |
![]() |
|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() Dance Preview: Warhol show delves into dancer's soul
Saturday, May 18, 2002 By Jane Vranish
"I love to dance," says choreographer Sarah Skaggs, "so I took a step
back and looked at my work over the last 12 years."
What emerged was an autobiography of sorts -- a rare look at the inner
recesses of this New York City choreographer and an intimate portrait to
be presented at The Andy Warhol Museum tonight.
Skaggs is perhaps best known for her "social" dances that begin with
audience participation, then center on her company, only to finish with
the audience clamoring to get back into action.
The idea arose from a sketch by Skaggs.
"I teach the company a solo," she explains. "From there we start to
flesh it out. It's like a playwright writing all the lines, where my five
dancers take different characters."
Her Warhol performance will consist of those solo sketches from the
'90s, when she "put the work inside specific places." But Skaggs began her
career in 1984 with the idea that "certain choreographic passages were
just tangled, unpruned thickets of steps." She explored Eastern European
and Far Eastern folk dances, incorporating elements into her mix.
The result was "Higher Ground," the event that required a willing
audience. Post-concert activities even included a "dance party
free-for-all that integrated dance into the everyday."
Audiences at The Warhol will see a compilation of solos, in which
Skaggs will talk about the context in which the dances were created.
Those in attendance also will get an explanation of "why people dance,"
related to Skaggs' work in Asia and Prague, Czech Republic, where she
studied folk dance. And they'll get to see dance "up close -- the hands,
the shoulders, the back, the inner workings of movement," the
vulnerability of it all.
Skaggs cautions that she doesn't have a "fusion" style. "My movement
leaks out of the body in certain ways," she says. "People could relate
right away to tai chi or simply to the kinetic response."
The choreographer, who lives near Ground Zero, site of the former World
Trade Center, will premiere one work composed after Sept. 11. Skaggs
watched the events unfold from her apartment. "I couldn't move or dance
for a month," she recalls.
"Bow" is the result, a solo that is "a little limp" but honors what
happened.
Jane Vranish is the Post-Gazette dance critic.
| |||||||||||||||||||||||
Back to
top E-mail this story ![]() | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright ©1997-2005 PG Publishing Co., Inc. All Rights Reserved. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||