ART
SPACE
GRANTS
DATES
US

 

ART > CURRENT PROJECTS > SITELINES

When is the New York Stock Exchange a stage? When is the oldest church courtyard in the US an intimate playhouse? When is an entire acre in the middle of downtown a multi-media venue? Only during the Council’s annual Sitelines series. From June 1 to September 14, consider all of Downtown the best seat in the house.

Admission to all events is FREE.
Produced in association with The River to River Festival

CURRENT


talkback banner


SITELINES TALKBACK
A panel discussion on creating site-specific public art

Click for more details

Thursday, September 27 | 7pm
Lower Manhattan Cultural Council office
125 Maiden Lane, 2 fl [map]
RSVP required

Straight from the choreographers of Sitelines '07,
moderated by Sitelines curator and producer, Nolini Barretto.
Refreshments will be served.

PAST

Martha GrahamMARTHA GRAHAM DANCE COMPANY
Steps In the Street and Prelude To Action (from Chronicle, 1936)

Friday-Sunday, June 1-3
12:30PM
Intersection of Wall and Broad Streets

Martha Graham Dance Company will launch this year’s series with Steps In the Streets and Prelude to Action from the 1936 piece Chronicle, a work created by Martha Graham in response to the menace of fascism in Europe. These two excerpts evoke the devastation that war leaves in its wake but also induces a rallying call to action that suggests a powerful answer.  The work is one of the very few dances Graham made which express explicitly political ideas.  An all-female cast performs the stark, geometric choreography — percussive, angular, and always visceral — in which the powerful tension of Graham’s early movement is still present today.  

Photo by Michael Gandy
Thanks to the New York Stock Exchange

PRESS
Crain's New York, May 28, 2007
NY 1 News, June 1, 2007
The New York Times, June 5, 2007

 

rising phoenixRISING PHOENIX REPERTORY
Fall Forward

June 18, 19, 21, 22, 25, 26, 28, 29 at 12PM
June 20, 23, 27, 30, 2007 at 6PM
John Street United Methodist Church and its adjacent open-air courtyards at 44 John Street (btw. Nassau & Dutch St)

Fall Forward is a new play written by Daniel Reitz and directed by Daniel Talbott. Its three intimate vignettes deal with the sudden cataclysm that life holds in store for us. Featuring a sexually ambiguous, BlackBerry-obsessed young broker, a grief-stricken woman debating the point of her continued existence, and a reunited couple who reminisce about their past.

Thanks to John Street United Methodist Church.

PRESS
NYTheatre.com, June 18, 2007

 

trystTRYST and SYSTEM OF UNITS
Security Zone

Tue-Sun, July 10-15,
Noon–6pm, ongoing
Old Slip (btw. Water & Front St.), adjacent to the Police Museum

Opening a new Sitelines effort toward cross-continental collaboration, System of Units, a performance troupe from Siberia, pairs with the New York interventionist performance group TRYST in Security Zone. The two groups first met in Novosibirsk, Siberia, where they performed a site-specific piece last summer. Supported by CEC Artslink, their collaboration melds the playful spontaneous interactivity of TRYST (Paul Benney, Clarinda Mac Low and Alejandra Martorell) with the intensity and rigorous designs of System of Units (Ilya Belenkov and Katerina Basalaeva). The teams join up during a weeklong on-site development process (which is open to the public), followed by a week of full-day performances where the two groups will play off each other and tap into the physical environment, downtown passersby, and the collaborators’ backgrounds for inspiration. Sly alterations of everyday life, outlandish costumes, and surprises will abound.

Co-sponsored by CEC ArtsLink

PRESS
NYTheatre.com

whose broad stripesLAWRENCE GOLDHUBER/
BIGMANARTS
Whose Broads Stripes

Wed-Fri, July 18-20, 25-27
Two performances daily:
Noon & 12:30pm
Federal Hall National Memorial Steps, 26 Wall St.
(btw. Broad & William St.)

Dancer and choreographer Lawrence Goldhuber arrives at Federal Hall with a briefcase and cash in hand. Flanked and tantalized by showgirls dressed in slinky red-and-white gowns and tormented by the searing guitar of Geoff Gersh screaming out Jimi Hendrix’s version of “The Star Spangled Banner,” Goldhuber’s new choreography transports a little Las Vegas to Wall Street in this glam-o-rama.

PRESS
Time Out

Photo by James Schriebl Photography

trystREGGIE WILSON and ANDREYA OUAMBA
Accounting for Customs

Wed-Sat, August 22-25
Two performances daily:
12:30pm & 1:30pm
U.S. Custom House steps, 1 Bowling Green (at Broadway)

A new work created by collaborators Andreya Ouamba, of Senegal, and Brooklyn-based Reggie Wilson and his Fist and Heel Performance Group wrestles with questions of memory and loss. How do people innovate within and against traditions? For displaced and exiled communities, the questions of preservation, continuity, memory and loss have a particularly poignant urgency. In the African diaspora, remembered and stolen pasts and troubled and hopeful presents are mediated by invention, as explored by Ouamba and Wilson and danced by Fist and Heel. Accounting for Customs is part of the Centennial Celebration of the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House.

The New York Times, August 22, 2007  
Time Out NY, August 15, 2007

customs house logo

dean mossDEAN MOSS and RYUTARO MISHIMA
States & Resemblance

Mon-Tue, August 27-28; &
Tue, September 4, 7:00pm
Wed, August 29; &
Wed-Thu, September 5-6, 12:30pm
Elevated Acre, 55 Water St. (at Old Slip) map

Incorporating shadow-play, text, and dance, and set in a field of dots, “States & Resemblance” is a collaboration between Japanese photographer and video artist Ryutaro Mishima, Indonesian dance and mask artist Restu Imansari Kusumaningrum, and choreographer and New York video artist Dean Moss. A meditation on the pain, beauty, and inevitability of how things, people, and experience pass away, the piece explores how this changing and passing is the most binding aspect of our existence.

The New York Times, August 30, 2007

Time Out NY, August 22, 2007

photo by Ryutaro Mishima

 

bill shannonBILLSHANNON
w/ DJ Excess, The Step Fienz, VJSelf Control, and Special Guests
Window

Mon–Fri, September 17 –21,
noon
140 Broadway/Brown Brothers Harriman Building; entrance on Cedar Street map
RSVP Now Closed

Watching from behind a window overlooking the site, viewers observe Bill Shannon and crew engage with the public space and pedestrian traffic in their freestyle performance that taps into the hip-hop/skateboard tradition of street improvisation. The distance between audience and performers is mitigated by holographic screens and live audio and video mixing by special guests. The multimedia performance features live audio mixing and sampling by DJ Excess.

More Info

brookfield properties
Brookfield Properties has generously donated the use of Zuccotti Park, located between Broadway and Church Street, for this performance.

 

Sitelines is made possible with lead support from Altria Group, Inc. and the New York Mercantile Exchange. Additional support provided by New York State Council on the Arts, Morgan Stanley, and Harkness Foundation for Dance.