New York City Ballet (David H. Koch Theater) 21 April 2020 - 21st century choreographers I | GoComGo.com

21st century choreographers I

New York City Ballet (David H. Koch Theater), New York, USA
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7:30 PM
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Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: New York, USA
Starts at: 19:30
Duration:

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Overview

Three dances from contemporary choreographers illustrate the Company’s continually renewed repertory of original works. The third ballet from Lauren Lovette returns for the spring, joined by Justin Peck’s Year of the Rabbit, an exuberant breakthrough work inspired by the Sufjan Stevens score, and Christopher Wheeldon’s Estancia, depicting a romance on the Argentine Pampas and featuring a set designed by the Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava.

Set to an orchestration of Sufjan Stevens’ 2001 electronica album Enjoy Your Rabbit, Justin Peck’s acclaimed Year of the Rabbit presents an ever-changing kaleidoscope of visually arresting shapes, weaving six featured dances into the corps de ballet.

NYCB Resident Choreographer and Artistic Advisor Justin Peck’s second work for New York City Ballet, Year of the Rabbit, is a collaboration with American singer-songwriter Sufjan Stevens. The ballet is set to Stevens’ Enjoy Your Rabbit, an electronica album and song cycle based on the Chinese zodiac, and the orchestration of the score by Michael Atkinson was created specifically for the ballet. Year of the Rabbit is an elaboration of Peck’s Tales of a Chinese Zodiac, which was created in 2010 for the New York Choreographic Institute.

Exploring themes of isolation, identity, and self-discovery, Lauren Lovette’s The Shaded Line is an atmospheric journey across five movements, featuring a layered score from Tan Dun and Zac Posen’s elegantly radical take on traditional ballet costuming.

Featuring sumptuous painted landscapes by Santiago Calatrava, Estancia tells the story of a city boy who learns to wrangle horses, and ultimately the heart of a country girl, on the Argentine pampas.

Created for NYCB in 2010, Christopher Wheeldon’s Estancia is set to music by Alberto Ginastera. The music was originally commissioned by Lincoln Kirstein in 1941 after he saw Ginastera’s ballet Panambí while in Buenos Aires with his American Ballet Caravan. But the company disbanded that year, before Kirstein was able to have George Balanchine choreograph the ballet. After almost 70 years, Estancia came to NYCB, choreographed by Wheeldon and with set designs by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava; costumes by Honduran-born, New York-based fashion designer Carlos Campos; and lighting by Mark Stanley.

Venue Info

New York City Ballet (David H. Koch Theater) - New York
Location   20 Lincoln Center Plaza

The David H. Koch Theater is the major theater for ballet, modern, and other forms of dance, part of the Lincoln Center, at the intersection of Columbus Avenue and 63rd Street in the Lincoln Square neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. Originally named the New York State Theater, the venue has been home to the New York City Ballet since its opening in 1964, the secondary venue for the American Ballet Theatre in the fall, and served as home to the New York City Opera from 1964 to 2011.

The New York State Theater was built with funds from the State of New York as part of New York State's cultural participation in the 1964–1965 World's Fair. The theater was designed by architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee, and opened on April 23, 1964. After the Fair, the State transferred ownership of the theater to the City of New York.

Along with the opera and ballet companies, another early tenant of the theater was the now defunct Music Theater of Lincoln Center whose president was composer Richard Rodgers. In the mid-1960s, the company produced fully staged revivals of classic Broadway musicals. These included The King and I; Carousel (with original star, John Raitt); Annie Get Your Gun (revised in 1966 by Irving Berlin for its original star, Ethel Merman); Show Boat; and South Pacific.

The theater seats 2,586 and features broad seating on the orchestra level, four main “Rings” (balconies), and a small Fifth Ring, faced with jewel-like lights and a large spherical chandelier in the center of the gold latticed ceiling.

The lobby areas of the theater feature many works of modern art, including pieces by Jasper Johns, Lee Bontecou, and Reuben Nakian.

Important Info
Type: Modern Ballet
City: New York, USA
Starts at: 19:30
Duration:
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