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E12 LAND O' LAKES


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Metro D.C. Dance Awards The 10th Anniversary Metro


2.98


D.C. Dance Awards will be hosted for the first time at the Harman Center for the Arts on Oct. 6, the service organization Dance/Met- roDC has announced. Awards will be given to those voted the best dancers, choreog- raphers and designers, as well as to productions appearing throughout the region in the past year. Presenting the awards will be two Washington-area natives: Virginia Johnson, former leading ballerina of Dance Theatre of Harlem and DTH’s artistic direc- tor, and Patrick Corbin, formerly of the Paul Taylor Dance Com- pany. The event will also feature per- formances by the Suzanne Farrell Ballet, dancing George Balan- chine’s “Meditation”; Washington Ballet member Andile Ndlovu; the Indian troupe Kuchipudi Ka- lanidhi; the Next Reflex Dance Collective; Urban Artistry; Thomas Dwyer from Liz Lerman Dance Exchange and George Ma- son University students dancing an excerpt from Mark Morri’s “Grand Duo.” Also performing will be the winners of the “Should I Quit My Day Job? Dance-Off.” These are non-dancers who will compete for a spot on the awards program after raising money for their cho- sen charity. Those attending a pre-performance reception will see the last round of competi- tions judged by a panel including NBC4 meteorologist Chuck Bell. Tickets can be purchased at the


Harman Center box office, www. shakespearetheatre.org or 202- 547-1122. Pre-show reception tickets can be purchased through Dance/MetroDC by calling 202- 778-1190, or e-mail csidwell@dancemetrodc.org more information.


for — Sarah Kaufman


Pola Nirenska Award The 2010 Pola Nirenska Award


for Lifetime Achievement will go to Seda Khoyan Gelenian, a dance advocate and teacher, the Washington Performing Arts So- ciety and the Pola Nirenska Award Committee announced re- cently. The award will be pre- sented Oct. 3 during perform- ances by local dance companies on the Kennedy Center’s Millen- nium Stage. The annual award honors out- standing contributions, artistic


Visit us at cfa.gmu.edu


SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 2010 WASHINGTON ARTS BRIEFS


KUCHIPUDI KALANIDHI


ON THE SLATE: The Kuchipudi Kalanidhi company is scheduled to perform at the 10th Anniversary Metro D.C. Dance Awards.


excellence or devoted service to dance. It was established by Ni- renska’s husband, Jan Karsk, in 1993 in memory of the modern dancer, choreographer and teacher who died in 1992. She was born in 1910 in Warsaw and trained as a dancer in Europe but became established in Washing- ton as a teacher and company di- rector at a time when modern dance was a little-known art form. Gelenian studied with Niren- ska and has taught dance exten- sively throughout the area. She served on several arts panels and was the founder, artistic director and choreographer of the Arme- nian Folk Dance Group of Great- er Washington.


— Sarah Kaufman Venice Biennale


The 115-year-old Venice Bien- nale is pretty much the most im- portant event on the interna- tional art scene. It’s also one of the few events where this coun- try’s culture has something close to official representation, thanks to a grand national pavilion that needs to be filled every two years. Last week, the State Department announced that, when the 54th Biennale launches in June of 2011, the U.S. pavilion will feature an artistic duo known simply as Allora & Calzadilla, the nom d’ar- tiste of Jennifer Allora and Guil- lermo Calzadilla, a couple based in Puerto Rico. Their show will be organized from the Indianapolis Museum of Art, which was cho- sen for the job by a committee named by the National Endow-


ment for the Arts, which helps State run this rare piece of artis- tic diplomacy. Allora & Calzadilla will already be known to some dedicated biennalists. In 2005, they pre- sented one of the festival’s more peculiar pieces: a massive real- istic hippo sculpted entirely of mud, with a live performer sit- ting on its back and blowing a whistle. Hard to say precisely what it meant, but if nothing else its strangeness bodes well for Venice in 2011. For the last three Biennales, our country’s pavilion has been filled by something close to blue- chip art: It has hosted solo shows by Ed Ruscha, Felix Gonzalez- Torres (dead since 1996) and Bruce Nauman. Their solos were very good, but they hardly put this country on the cutting edge. That’s what Allora and Calzadilla should do, with art that’s often political. One excellent piece of theirs is a six-minute video of six tortoises floating on a log. They’re in China’s heavily pollut- ed Pearl River, and the camera follows them as they bob along and take in the passing shoreline with its throngs and factories. You wonder why they don’t re- treat into their shells, given what we’re doing to the nature they re- ly on. No one knows what Allora and Calzadilla will be doing in Venice next spring. They’re making six new works for the show.


— Blake Gopnik


Musical Mondays When the Capitol Hill United


Great Performances at Mason


Keyboard Conversations® with Jeffrey Siegel Three Great“Bs”—Bach,Beethoven,and Barber Sunday, September 19 at 7 p.m. Wonderful works from “Three Great B’s.” $38, $30, $19


ff


Joel Grey Saturday, September 25 at 8 p.m.


“The quintessential song-and-dance man.” (TheWashington Post)


$60, $52, $30 This event is part of the ARTS by George! benefit.


MOMIX Botanica Saturday, October 2 at 8 p.m. Sunday, October 3 at 4 p.m.


An herbal remedy for whatever ails you, Botanica is an event not to be missed! $46, $38, $23


American Festival Pops Orchestra SALUTES! Anthony Maiello, conductor Saturday, October 9 at 8 p.m. Delightful music from Broadway, film, and TV. $46, $38, $23


ff


Virginia Opera Rigoletto Friday, October 15 at 8 p.m. Sunday, October 17 at 2 p.m. Love, betrayal, vengeance, loss …Verdi.


$86, $72, $44 – Friday $98, $80, $48 – Sunday


Brooklyn Rider Saturday, October 16 at 8 p.m.


“Few young artists are so versatile.” (New Yorker) $40, $32, $20


Buika Saturday, October 30 at 8 p.m.


“Luminous…magnificent…superb!” (The New York Times) $42, $34, $21


Lar Lubovitch Dance Company Friday, November 5 at 8 p.m.


“Freshness, buoyancy, and sheer dancerly joy.” (Seattle Times) $44, $36, $22


BBC Concert Orchestra Keith Lockhart, principal conductor Ilya Yakushev, piano Saturday, November 6 at 8 p.m. One of the world’s most respected orchestras. $60, $52, $30


Keyboard Conversations® with Jeffrey Siegel Robert Schumann: Fantasies – Forbidden and Fulfilled Sunday, November 7 at 7 p.m.


Some of the most romantic music ever composed. $38, $30, $19


ff


Dailey &Vincent Friday, November 12 at 8 p.m.


“The most celebrated new bluegrass act of the last few years.” (The New York Times) $44, $36, $22


ff


The Merchants of Bollywood Friday, October 22 at 8 p.m. “…a huge blast of fun.” (The [London] Times) $48, $40, $24


ff


Bayanihan Philippine National Dance Company Saturday, November 13 at 8 p.m. Sunday, November 14 at 4 p.m.


A magical experience for the whole family to share and enjoy! $46, $38, $23


ff


Aquila Theatre A Midsummer Night’s Dream Friday, November 19 at 8 p.m.


“Timely and pleasing… this ‘Dream’ soothes the eye and tickles the funny bone.” (The New York Times)


$34, $26, $17


New Orleans Nights with Allen Toussaint, Nicholas Payton, and the Joe Krown Trio Sunday, November 21 at 7 p.m.


Be sure to catch this incredible evening of rich swingin’ music in tribute to the grand epicenter of jazz.


$44, $36, $22 ff


Chanticleer A Chanticleer Christmas Saturday, November 27 at 8 p.m.


“No one does a better choral Christmas than the virtuoso male voices of Chanticleer.” (New Yorker)


$48, $40, $24


Virginia Opera Così fan tutte Friday, December 3 at 8 p.m. Sunday, December 5 at 2 p.m.


Mozart’s deliciously wry tale takes an ironic look at the foibles of love.


$86, $72, $44 – Friday $98, $80, $48 – Sunday


ff


= FAMILY FRIENDLY: Youth through grade 12 half price!


On the Fairfax campus, six miles west of Beltway exit 54 at the intersection of Braddock Road and Rt. 123. Center for theArts 888-945-2468 or cfa.gmu.edu


TheWaverly Consort The Christmas Story Friday, December 10 at 8 p.m.


“One of the joys of the season.” (Chicago Tribune) $42, $34, $21


ff


Synergy Brass Quintet Christmas in Brass Saturday, December 11 at 8 p.m.


“Unadulterated exuberance and a rock star approach [to] performing.” (U.S.1) $44, $36, $22


ff


Leahy Leahy Family Christmas Friday, December 17 at 8 p.m.


“Leahy makes Christmas a true family affair!” (Calgary Herald) $48, $40, $24


ff


Vienna Boys Choir Christmas in Vienna Saturday, December 18 at 8 p.m. Sunday, December 19 at 4 p.m.


“Theirs are the voices of Christmas, as pure as angels, as clear as the winter light.” (Charles Passy, Ovation) ff


$48, $40, $24 FALL 2010


Turtle Island Quartet With Cyrus Chestnut and Mike Marshall Saturday, December 4 at 8 p.m.


A remarkable evening of classic jazz, Americana, and holiday favorites. $44, $36, $22


Methodist Church finished reno- vating its Moeller organ in 2009, 70 years after the instrument was built, it decided to launch a free concert series to show it off. On Monday the Musical Mondays concert series starts its second season with a performance by Chelsea Chen, a 26-year-old or- ganist-composer trained at Juilli- ard and Yale who last year won the Lili Boulanger Award as an exceptionally promising young musician. Chen’s own works in- clude arrangements of Chinese folk tunes and a piece called “Su- per Mario Fantasy.” The series continues on Feb. 28 with the Washington Trombone Ensem- ble, and concludes on April 18 with a performance by the ac- claimed organist Timothy Olsen. Monday at 8 p.m., Capitol Hill


United Methodist Church, 421 Seward Square SE (Fifth Street near Pennsylvania Ave), 202-546- 1000,


Admission is free.


www.chumc.net. — Anne Midgette


What’s out there The Cultural Landscape Foun-


dation is offering free guided tours of 25 of Washington’s public spaces and gardens during “What’s Out There Weekend” Sept. 25-26. The weekend is a way for those who are both unfamil- iar and curious to see the outdoor “cultural landscapes” designed by prominent architects, past and present, from the FDR Me- morial to the final resting place of Washington notables, Congres- sional Cemetery, and Tudor Place, the home owned by de- scendants of Martha Washing- ton. The foundation also has a


“What’s Out There” database, the first of its kind, which holds list- ings that span more than two centuries of designed landscapes across the country.


Schedules of tours can be found at


wot-weekend-DC. Young Artists Workshop


The Brentwood Arts Exchange in Brentwood will host two free events aimed at children and teens in September and October: The Young Artists Workshop from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Satur- day, Sept. 25, will focus 6-to-12- year-olds on drawing, painting, art history and crafts. Registra- tion is required, through Prince George’s County recreation facil- ities or at pgparks.com. Collaborative Mural Painting


with artist Alonzo Davis will be held 7-10 p.m. Friday, Oct. 8. Art- ists age 10-18 are invited. — Erin Williams


tclf.org/landscapes/ — Erin Williams


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