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A new festival addresses dire conditions for dance

Union PDX - Festival:19 is a new dance festival, started by Samuel Hobbs, that attempts to address some of the problems in the city's dance community.

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“As Portland (dance) artists, we aren’t provided the opportunities that we really need,” Portland choreographer Samuel Hobbs says. “ We are all scrambling for the same scraps…we need visibility and accessibility.”

Hobbs was explaining both the dire condition of local dance artists and the reason he created Union PDX – Festival:19, a brand new contemporary dance festival. Union PDX debuts September 26-29 at the 180-seat Hampton Opera Center on the river in Southeast Portland, close to MAX, with ample free parking also available.

The festival, curated and directed by Hobbs, will feature world premieres by Portland choreographers Amy Leona Havin—artistic director of The Holding Project, choreographer Carlyn Hudson, and Hobbs, who also directs his own company, push/FOLD Contemporary Dance Company

“Doing your own show is great, but maybe there’s a way that we can come together and lift each other up,” Hudson said when I met up with her, Hobbs, and Havin to hear about the festival and their work. 

Artistic director of push/FOLD dance company, Samuel Hobbs, rehearsing his new work, Ash, to be debuted at his new festival, Union PDX – Festival:19, from September 26-29 at the Hampton Opera Center. Pictured left to right are Holly Shaw, Briley Jozwiak, Ashley Morton, Samuel Hobbs, and Liane Burns.
Photo by Jingzi Photography.

Hobbs has commissioned both Havin and Hudson to create new work for the festival on his company’s four dancers—Holly Shaw, Briley Jozwiak, Liane Burns, and Ashley Morton. ”Right now, funding is huge! Funding and platform. To be commissioned by established institutions and to receive funding are the two biggest things that would absolutely change the game for me at this point,” Havin said.

In addition to the live performances, the festival will feature the first-ever Portland Dance Community Awards. They will be awarded in the Visibility and Advocacy, Opportunity, and Platform categories and will recognize individuals who have positively impacted the Portland dance community through their service work.

“It’s a thank you,” Hudson said, “We recognize what you’re doing for the community, and we appreciate it. We just want to put you up on a pedestal for a moment and make you feel good and let you know that you’re not just throwing all of your energy into a void.” The Portland Dance Community Awardees will be announced at the post-show Union Soireé on September 29.

Sponsor

Portland Opera Puccini in Concert Keller Auditorium Portland Oregon

Before starting his own dance company, push/FOLD, in 2015, Hobbs, who grew up in and around Portland, performed with Rainbow Dance Theatre, Minh Tran and Company, and BodyVox. Since 2014 he has choreographed eight substantial works, including one evening-length production. His work has been shown at Pacific Dance Makers, (A)merging, Conduit’s Dance+ Festival, and Ten Tiny Dances, to name just a few. 

Hobbs’ eclectic background in dance, partnering, martial arts, athletics, and Visceral Movement Theory,™ a somatic theory rooted in the anatomy and kinesiology of the organs, informs his work. In addition to being a choreographer, Hobbs is also a licensed manual therapist and a software developer.

Amy Leona Havin, the Portland-based, Israeli-born choreographer, filmmaker, and artistic director of The Holding Project, creating her new work milk on the dancers of push/FOLD. Pictured left to right are Amy Leona Havin, Liane Burns, Holly Shaw, Ashley Morton, and Briley Jozwiak.
Photo by Jingzi Photography.

Havin is a Portland-based, Israeli-born choreographer, filmmaker, and artistic director of The Holding Project. Her choreography is influenced by her dance training with Ohad Naharin and Batsheva Dance Company’s Gaga Movement Language. She has also trained under other well-known Israeli choreographers: L-E-V’s Sharon Eyal, Ate9’s Danielle Agami, Sidra Bell Dance, Yasmeen Godder, and Shahar Binyamini.

Her works, which include five full-length dance productions and eight dance films, reflect her internal struggle dealing with her duel cultural identity of being both an Israeli and an American, speak to what it means to be Jewish and what it’s like to process generational trauma as the descendent of holocaust survivors. 

Her work has been presented at Disjecta Contemporary Art Center, Shaking The Tree Theatre, Performance Works Northwest, Portland Dance Film Festival, and Archipelago Gallery and has received several awards. 

Hudson, originally from Nyack, New York, is a twin and the daughter of two restaurateurs. Her work slips effortlessly between contemporary dance, ballet, and vaudeville and weaves humor, heartache, and beauty together, reflecting an array of contrasting ideas. Hudson performed with Connecticut Ballet and co-founded SubRosa Dance Collective in 2011 with Cerrin Lathrop, Jessica Evans, Kailee McMurran, Lena Traenkenschuh, Tia Palomino, and Zahra Banzi. She has choreographed many works for SubRosa Dance Collective and has produced two full-length evenings of her own work. 

Portland choreographer Carlyn Hudson setting her new work, A Predisposition, for the upcoming Union PDX – Festival:19, which runs September 26-29 at the Hampton Opera Center. Pictured left to right are Holly Shaw, Liane Burns, Carlyn Hudson, and Briley Jozwiak,
Photo by Jingzi Photography.

Havin, Hudson, and Hobbs make distinctly different dances. Each one has a different relationship with movement, the process of choreographing, and the music. Hobbs, for example, composes his own music electronically as a way to avoid the cost of royalties. Havin spends endless hours searching through free online music databases to piece together her compositions, and Hudson chooses an existing piece of music that evokes an emotional response and choreographs to it closely. 

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Portland Playhouse Passing Strange Portland Oregon

“A lot of how I create work is through a meditative process,” Hobbs said. “I don’t really know what it is until it puts itself together,” Havin says her work is created through her dancers using improvisational methods based on gaga (an improvisation method developed by Ohad Naharin). Hudson creates the movement on herself before she even meets with the dancers in the studio.

Hobbs’ new work Ash, is based on a poem he wrote about a person facing an existential crisis. For the musical score, he translated the poem into his own made-up language, recorded it, and added recordings of himself singing along with other electronic sounds he created using a rolling seaboard—a musical instrument that bridges the gap between acoustic and digital music by putting the control of pitch, volume and timbre at the artist’s fingertips.

Havin will present milk, a Middle Eastern-influenced work that pulls from her multi-cultural background and uses an eclectic mix of traditional Hebrew prayers and songs together with electronic beats, strings, and ambient sounds, as its score. 

Hudson’s work, which she will be performing in, is called A predisposition and reflects on human behavior and the passing of time. 

This is an important moment for these three choreographers. All three have been rigorously choreographing for years and want very much to take their work to the next level. But funding is minimal for choreographers here, and opportunities to have work produced are few. Hobbs has created a festival and awards show to address the problems in the city’s DIY spirit. Hobbs is passionate about turning Portland into a national hub for dance and bringing the work of Portland choreographers to the world stage. All he needs now… is an audience.

The festival, which includes master classes, student showings, performances, and talk-backs, runs September 26-29 at The Hampton Opera Center at 211 SE Caruthers St. For more information on classes and ticket sales, visit www.unionpdx.org.

Sponsor

Portland Center Stage at the Armory Coriolanus Portland Oregon

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Photo Joe Cantrell

Jamuna Chiarini is a dance artist, producer, curator, and writer, who produces DanceWatch Weekly for Oregon ArtsWatch. Originally from Berkeley, Calif., she studied dance at The School of The Hartford Ballet and Florida State University. She has also trained in Bharatanatyam and is currently studying Odissi. She has performed professionally throughout the United States as a dancer, singer, and actor for dance companies, operas, and in musical theatre productions. Choreography credits include ballets for operas and Kalamandir Dance Company. She received a Regional Arts & Culture Council project grant to create a 30-minute trio called “The Kitchen Sink,” which was performed in November 2017, and was invited to be part of Shawl-Anderson’s Dance Up Close/East Bay in Berkeley, Calif. Jamuna was a scholarship recipient to the Urban Bush Women’s Summer Leadership Institute, “Undoing Racism,” and was a two-year member of CORPUS, a mentoring program directed by Linda K. Johnson. As a producer, she is the co-founder of Co/Mission in Portland, Ore., with Suzanne Chi, a performance project that shifts the paradigm of who initiates the creation process of new choreography by bringing the artistic vision into the hands of the dance performer. She is also the founder of The Outlet Dance Project in Hamilton, N.J.

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One Response

  1. We are so appreciative that Push/FOLD reached out to include an educational opportunity for young dancers. Thank you!
    Vancouver School of Arts and Academics

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