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http://www.citypaper.net/blogs/clog/2009/06/05/dance-driven-eun-jung-choi-gonzalez/

Friday, June 5th, 2009 at 1:15 pm
posted by carolyn huckabay
categories Arts, ArtsFlash

Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez (right, with Guillermo Ortega Tanus) in BluePrint
Next up in our “four dancers, four questions” series is Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez, whose BluePrint debuted Wednesday during opening night of the 2009 nEW Festival (which we’ve written about here, here and here).

Lucky for you, she and her Da-Da-Dance Project will perform tonight, as well. BluePrint, we’re told, “unveils our necessity for the isolation and distance we involuntarily construct in our daily lives.” Heavy. But, according to Choi-Gonzalez, the work is an organic process. “I was fascinated by body gestures that spoke even more strongly when our verbal language (human coding system) was removed from a conversation,” she says. “After playing with all these elements, the work created its own life, appending its own significance and meanings.”

For a sneak peek, watch the video below. And after the jump, read our Q&A with Choi-Gonzalez. We have a feeling we’ll be seeing a lot more of this choreographer — she tells us her company’s relocating to Philly in the fall to embark upon a three-year fellowship with Temple’s Dance MFA program.

BluePrint, Fri., June 5, 9 p.m., $15, UArts Dance Theater at the Drake, 1512 Spruce St., 215-359-7775, newfestival.net.

City Paper: Tell us about your nEW Festival premiere. What drives the work, and what should the audience expect?
Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez: I will be presenting a work, BluePrint, which was started out in the summer of 2007, with initial concepts of “deconstruction” and “physically intended bodily language” without imposing performer’s emotional responses to the movement. Also, I was fascinated by body gestures that spoke even strongly when our verbal language (human coding system) was removed from a conversation. After playing with all these elements, the work created its own life, appending its own significance and meanings. The theme of the final production of BluePrint subsequently unveiled our necessity for “isolation” and “distance” we involuntarily construct in our daily lives. The work will be danced to Alban Bailly’s fabulous original music score.
I don’t know if I would like to define what the audience would expect to see, rather I suggest that they witness and find their own magic if they feel related or/and connected. Come not prepared!

CP: Who’s your idol, and why? (It doesn’t have to be a dancer.)
EJCG: There are many artists that I greatly admire and respect. They have their own unique voices and artistic visions. People who inspire me the most are those who think outside the box and push even further beyond the limits of our rules and standarized ideas. I don’t know if I would call them my idols. The concept of “idol” seems a little too Hollywood man-made object for me.
Amongst many contemporary artists, I am fond of Ann Hamilton’s heartfelt installations. I am fascinated by James Turrell’s spiritual and mysterious light sculpture and installations, which give weight to the air and color it in the most profound way, shifting the definition of a physical threshold. I think it is incredibly innovative and beautiful concept. And he accomplished it! I like the way Christo and Jeanne-Claude think [about] our environments and nature as their canvas. I particularly love magical video installations of Pipilotti Rist, Tony Oursler, and Bill Viola. They bring another dimension and depth to their creations. I am certain that there are so many more inspiring artists who I missed out on, and I would come across in the future.
If I really have to use the word, “idol,” I would give that prize to my mother who devoted her life, creating something so magnificent with her patience, perseverance and much passion. This year, she turns 66 and she just started taking dance classes and plays a drum set in a church band, while working full-time, running a business and living as a single lady. I think that’s INSPIRING!

CP: If you couldn’t dance, what would you do instead?
EJCG: It is a funny question, because I already wear so many hats while I am dancing professionally (or not?). So it doens’t seem so significant to think what I would do if I couldn’t dance. I guess I am not at the stage of dancing full-time or dedicating myself solely on choreographing or running a company. It is not something that I would not like to do, but as an independent artist, I had to teach myself to survive, utilizing my skills in different areas, which after all influences my practice of art making. Currently I do work as a graphic/web designer. I also worked as an interaction designer, creating concept design for public installations. Sometime I become a stage manager or a videographer. Other times, I work as a Korean/English interpreter. Then this year, I got involved in several Audio Description projects. I work as a personal trainer. I have taught theater, musical theater, dance classes to kids, students, adult and senior citizens. In the end, I would like be a production or project manager. I feel like I have helpful knowledge in many areas, AND I like to organize, I like to coordinate, I like to create, I like to work with artists, I like challenges that are forth coming, I like to solve problems, and I like to help myself as well as others….

CP: What’s on the horizon?
EJCG: There are several exciting events coming up. Soon after nEW Festival, I will be teaching at the Governor’s School of North Carolina. Then, Da·Da·Dance Project (a duet repertory dance company, founded by Guillermo Ortega Tanus and myself) will have its debut season in New York City from July 30th through August 1st at Joyce SoHo, New York. In August, the company will have Stephanie Nugent, a guest artists from California, come to set a new duet work, “Meniscus,” as well as Rodger Belman restaging a short duet.
Da·Da·Dance Project will be relocating to Philadelphia in September 2009. I was awarded a three-year fellowship from Temple University Dance MFA program. So I hope that our work will be seen more in the Philadelphia area in upcoming years.

http://www.philly.com/inquirer/weekend/20090605_2_nEW_Festival_dance_programs_witty__stunning.html

Posted on Fri, Jun. 5, 2009

2 nEW Festival dance programs witty, stunning
By Merilyn Jackson

For The Inquirer
The nEW Festival’s public stage performances launched Wednesday night at the Drake Theater with two programs, displays of brilliant dancing and a strong array of interpretations of a single work.

Share, a witty dance-theater piece loosely based on the notions of truth and falsity by Philadelphia’s Gabrielle Revlock, led off the first program, accompanied by a Jon Barrios electronic soundscape that included a sly weather reading somewhere between Gregorian chant and barbershop quartet. Bonnie Friel and Gregory Holt made up a trio with Revlock, using theatrical tricks like lip-synching to expose false impressions, though Revlock’s title didn’t synch with the dance.

Second were Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez and her partner, Guillermo Ortega Tanus, in Blue Print. They danced in plastic raincoats, stripped them off, then re-dressed from the pile of stuff that tumbled from the fly. Tanus, a terrific dancer (as were all the evening’s performers), seemed to be wrestling with his superego and losing.

In the second program…. (Click on the link above to read more!)

Video: Ploy

Ploy (2009)
Choreography: Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez in collaboration with Guillermo Ortega Tanus
Music: Andrew Drury
Performance: Guillermo Ortega Tanus and Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez
@ First Floor Theater, La MaMa Moves! Dance Festival (May 16, 2008)

Recently Da·Da·Dance Project was recommended by Patricia Aulestia (President of the Mexican Dance Federation) to be participate in a festival in Korea (my greatest effort to be respectful by not mentioning the name of the festival).  The festival was looking to invite a couple of foreign companies to come perform a 15 min. piece at their gala in October 2009.  Our communication was all smooth in the beginning even if the organizer insisted on communicating in Spanish and only with Guillermo, entirely ignoring the female director of the company who obviously speaks his native language.  We know how this thing works…. We know that many festival organizers like to bring foreign companies in order to to encourage international exchanges and multiculturalism.  All for a good cause.

At first, the contact person was asking us about Mexican duet to be presented at the Gala, which at first we didn’t understand the term “Mexican Duet”.  We asked him if he meant “a work” by a Mexican choreographer.  He denied he used this term while it clearly was written in his email.  Then in his next correspondence,  he said since I presented my work in Korean back in 2003, he wouldn’t be able to consider us for this venue, unless Guillermo finds another person (no Korean) to travel with and perform at the event.  We had to explain the concept of our company.  The company is a duet repertory company run by two co-directors, so there are other choreographers’ works, but no other dancer.  However, we wrote him that we would be presenting a work by Guillermo in this occasion.  Finally he wrote back to us, saying because I, Eun Jung, is a native of Korea, regardless it is a work of Guillermo or of mine, I cannot be invited to perform.   Also he was inventing that I was born in Daegu, Korea, where I presented my work in 2003 and because I was born there, it is not even a question that I could come present at their festival.

Today we disregarded the invitation.  It was an humiliation and insult to a certain degree.  We are not products that can be replaced by another race or gender.  We work together for artistic reasons, not for selling our brand image in a market place.  Rather, shouldn’t they be proud that a Korean artist is working in the field, getting recommended by a foreign organizer, collaborating with a foreign artist and working actively in a foreign land?

I feel very discriminated and betrayed by my own race.  I have lived, studied, worked, created work here in the states since 1991.  I did my best to advance with my career, my artistry, and my own personal life.  I have received enormous support from generous, kind people around me both in the United States and Mexico.   I am becoming a US citizen this month.  I have been proud of my own ethnic background and always have worked and presented myself as Korean artist.  At the same time I recognize that I am not perfect, nor better than others.

All artists need to be valued equally for their artistic endeavor and effort regardless their popularity, preferences, race and gender.  However, I am having a difficulty getting over this bitter taste in my mouth and feeling extremely offended by this incident.

Any comment?  Isn’t this considered to be “racial discrimination”?  This is the second time that I was recommended for something and got turned down because I was a native of Korea.  Isn’t there something wrong about this?  Does this happen in other parts of the world?

- This post was written by Eun Jung

Da·Da·Dance Project will present “Mar Y Pos A: Intento Caminar” on May 1-2 at Teatro Mérida.

5PM at Teatro Mérida
La calle 57 de Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico

avantgarde1

Stay tunned!  Our performance will be on Oaxaca Television Channel 9.

Serie de Televisión transmitida por Canal 9, Oaxaca tv
y a través de www.cortv.com.mx

Tiny Voices (2009)
Choreography: Helena Franzén
Music: Jukka Rintamäki
Performance: Guillermo Ortega Tanus and Eun Jung Choi-Gonzalez
@ Little Theater, LaGuardia Performing Arts Center (Dec. 22, 2008)

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