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Music: Ombrages by Daniel Colin, Rumba De La lasi by Gili Garabdi, and Indifference by Dan Newton’s Cafe Accordion Orchestra
Lunch was inspired by work with artists Sari Hoke, Adalia Pemberton-Smith, Michaela Neild, and Dominic Giambra during the summer of 2022 and made in collaboration with the cast.
Dancers: Lyla Giallombardo, Mario Liguori, Katy Maddalina, Grace Rezin, Lauren Saab, Audree Woods. Understudy: Jenna Hartke
Aspen is a meditation on the beauty of the body and nature; an embodiment of the strong, yet fragile features of both.
Music: “Golden Times 1” by Ben Lukas Boysen
Dancers: Sidney Bowers, Maya Calvo, Mia Gionis, Alisa Guiffrida, Lyssie Hartzog, Gianna Militello, Kiara Stuart, Kelsey Wegman, Taylor Rose Williamson Brennah Woollis, understudy: Sophia Fino
Lighting Design: Isabella Fortunato
Projection: Jacob Clouse
Video Link: Aspen
Fiefdom explores the great contrast of possibilities and limitations imposed by dancing in a fixed space. A metaphor for the great beauty that can come from deep investigation of our perceived limitations, Fiefdom exploits the fixed space while embracing the limitless potential of dynamic surroundings.
Composer and Musician: John Smigielski
Tranquil Unrest explores the ever shifting uniting and fractious energies of a community.
Music: Points of Infinity by Emma O’Halloran
Length: 13 minutes
Dancers: Allison Bollinger, Shakora Domingo, Heather Dorler, Tori Gorny, Hannah Lucas, Moriah Markowitz, Mandy McLenigan, Victoria Parr, Erica Sedor, Caroline Sheehan, Christina Tribo, Bari Williamson, Courtney Wolff, Katie Youngman, Katie Wackowski, Whitney Zimmerman
Reverie is a visual exploration of the slowly shifting ostinato
Music: Canto Ostinato by Simeon Holt
Length: 8:30
Continuum is a recollection of movement themes from Melanie’s work from 2005 - 2017 and a first time collaboration with Paul Hokanson who has been photographing Melanie’s work since 2011
Music: Marc Mellits/Gravity
Images: Paul Hokanson
Length: 10:35
Couplet embodies parallel lines of poetry exploring intimacy and proximity of connections.
Music: Lullaby and Crossings by Caroline Mallonée
Performers: Melanie Aceto and Phil Wackerfuss
Choreographer: Melanie Aceto in collaboration with Mary Sullivan
Performers: Melanie Aceto and Mary Sullivan
This work explores the constancy of time through rotation. The rise and melt of the two bodies illustrates the advocacy of each body for the other over time.
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
In To Selves is a collaboration between composer Esin Gündüz and choreographer Melanie Aceto in which both women dance and produce sound. Starting from a place of total synchronization, the performers gradually diverge, using music and movement to forge their own separate identities. The piece is intensely corporeal – two bodies moving and resonating in space. This physicality is emphasized by Gündüz’s frequent use of ingressive phonation, or singing while inhaling. Listeners cannot help but embody this gritty, belabored sound, feeling the physical effort of it themselves, and the subsequent relief that comes from breathing normally. The result is a visceral confrontation between anxiety and catharsis, an affect not far removed from Metté’s darker, more disorienting images.
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
Nine female bodies tightly pack themselves into the window display at The Dress Shop at 89 Allen Street. Maneuvering in slow motion, the bodies negotiate each other as they create both the dense space through which to travel and the traveling. Live music by Lawrence Rizzuto and friends accompanies the dancers. In this dance installation piece composed by Melanie Aceto, the audience is invited to come at any time, and stay for as long as they wish.
Choreographer: Melanie in collaboration with the dancers
Music: Lawrence Rizzuto and Kevin Corbett
Dancers: Lori Brett, Alexia Buono, Allyson Buttram, Laura Jean Castelluzzo, Megan Rutkowski, Holli Simme, Greta Sowyrda, Amy Taravella, Farrah Thompson
Choreographer: Melanie Aceto
Artistic Directors: Melanie Aceto and Michael Rogers
Conceived and created in collaboration with architect/designer Michael J. Rogers, Cloud utilizes over 3,000 square feet of plastic to explore dynamic form, surface environment and the perception of the human form. Choreographed by Melanie Aceto, both the movement material and the arrangement of movement structures utilize the extreme volume of plastic material to create grandeur in space, time and form. The negotiation of the material by the six dancers allows them to move on top of, underneath and with the various sizes of plastic in order to repurpose the material as set, prop, costume and barrier. Non-narrative in structure, the arrangement and transformation of events in Cloud generate images that lead the viewer through a visceral journey.
Trio for the Common Man is a four-section work commissioned by the Society for New Music set to an original score by Mark Olivieri.
photo: Paul Hokanson
Choreographer: Melanie Aceto
Composer: Mark Olivieri
Dancers: Melanie Aceto, Alaina Olivieri and Heather Roffe
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
photo: Paul Hokanson
Portage (2010)
Choreographer: Melanie Aceto
Composer: Marc Mellits, Red
Portage is a four-movement work danced to a score for two marimbas by composer Marc Mellits. Made in consultation with the composer, each section of Portage explores the musical landscape. The opening section of round and punctuated marimba introduces the dancers through lofty, woven jogs and establishes solo and duet spinning.
Section II illustrates the repetitious shifting of the melody up and down the scale by incrementally shifting bodies down the diagonal. Each person is moved segment by segment just as the marimba is punctuated note by note.
Section III embodies the resonance, the prolongation of sound, through continual and softly decorated spinning. The calming sight and sound provide contrast to the fourth section’s drive.
The fourth and final section is continual motion in solo, duet and whole group form. It explores the use of both line and circularity and uses the music as inspiration for its dynamic structure.
Choreographer: Melanie Aceto
Composer: Marc Mellits (Red)
Full Length Video
photo: Renee Conners
photo: Renee Conners
photo: Renee Conners
photo: Renee Conners
Swarm…Churn is danced to “Tight Sweater”, a six-movement work by composer Marc Mellits.
A stimulating study of movement complexity and rhythmic interplay, Swarm…Churn weaves nine bodies in motion through the musical terrain. Choreographed in consultation with the composer, each movement is a strong and direct response to the music. The choreography complements, highlights and expands upon both the detail and of the sensation of the musical composition. Swarm explores backwards locomotion and unison punctuation against group scatter. Reminiscent of drum corps, Reel is a constantly changing whirl of small and large group circles. Drift, the most emotionally human of all of the movements, presents a tender intimacy of one against the group. Bloom is thicker in texture, but light and playful in mood. Pushing the limits of the viewer’s ability to withstand lack of unison, Churn, the final movement, is an exploration of continuous motion.
The use of the music for this piece was made possible by the Center for the Moving Image in the department of Media Study at the University at Buffalo with the generous support of the Liberace Foundation and The Robert and Carol Morris Performing Arts Fellowship. Choreographer Melanie Aceto was selected to participate in this film/dance project in collaboration with filmmaker Yuichiro Yamada who made a documentary of the making of this piece.
Choreographer: Melanie Aceto
Composer: Marc Mellits (Tight Sweater)
Choreography: Melanie Aceto
Composer: Ping Jin
Dancers: Melanie Aceto and Jenna Delmonte
Knit explores the interlacing of two bodies; the physical and emotional connections of being in very close proximity. Each section embraces the melodies and themes in Ping Jin’s compositions that are based on traditional Chinese folk songs.
Section one is a Chinese lullaby indicative of a moving willow tree; the bodies seamlessly interlace like the branches of the willow tree. Section two is based on a Tibetan folk song with solid tone color; the dancers take on a more combative and grounded mood and movement vocabulary. The Rising Half Moon, section three, depicts the Chinese relationship to the moon, always as a reflection on the river; the two bodies are reflected in one other. Tibetan Dance, section four, the two bodies dance playfully and energetically.
photo: Bill Hebert
photo: Bill Hebert
photo: Bill Hebert
photo: Bill Hebert
photo: Bill Hebert