Audio By Carbonatix
For the fourth year in a row, Miami-based Dance Now! returns to the Bass Museum of Art (2100 Collins Ave., Miami Beach). This time, the troupe will interact with a current exhibit through a site-specific dance called “The Ekphrasis Project.” And this year’s inspirational artwork is one of the series’ most evocative. New York video artist Eve Sussman has installed her feature-length film The Rape of the Sabine Women, which unspools over five screens on the second floor of the museum. It’s a reinterpretation of the Roman myth about the founding of the empire, in this case with the characters and settings from the 1960s — think Mad Men suits and midcentury architecture and design. It would be hard to find a better artwork than this for Hannah Baumgarten and Diego Salterini — the founders and choreographers of Dance Now! — to dance around.
The troupe’s dancers will weave their way around the screens in movements and actions that add physical depth to the already-heady story line (according to the ancient tale, the all-male founders of Rome needed some female companionship, so they stole young women from the neighboring Sabines, with tragic consequences).
Sun., June 2, 1:30 & 3:30 p.m., 2013
We’re thankful for you. Are you thankful for us?
We feel thankful for our staff and for the privilege of fulfilling our mission to be an unparalleled source of information and insight in Miami. We’re aiming to raise $30,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to this community.
Help us continue giving back to Miami.