Where:
The Dance Complex
536 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02139
Cambridge, MA 02139
Admission:
$20-50
Categories:
Art, Seasonal, Shows, Virtual
Event website:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/taking-the-long-view-in-person-tickets-588528844617
About Taking the Long View:
Both Molissa Fenley and Pat Catterson have had long careers as dancers and dance makers. They both have chosen to live life as artists for the long haul, that is, they have taken the long view. As much as their work is different, they share a belief in the meaningfulness of dancing itself and the power of designed movement to change one’s perceptions. Molissa and Pat share the stage to present an evening of recent work.
Molissa Fenley presents three dances:
Pat Catterson premieres her 116th work:
About Molissa Fenley:
Molissa Fenley was born in Nevada in 1954, grew up in Ibadan and Lagos, Nigeria (1961-71), and returned to the USA to attend Mills College 1971-1975. She moved to New York in 1975 and founded Molissa Fenley and Company in 1977, creating 90 dances for the company since. The Company have performed throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, South America, Europe, Australia, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong. She has received Bessie Awards for Cenotaph (1985) and State of Darkness (1988, 2021). Fellowships include: American Academy in Rome, Asian Cultural Council, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Greenwich Collection Ltd, Guggenheim, National Endowment for the Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts.
About Pat Catterson:
Pat Catterson, whose parents were a ballroom dancing team and her paternal grandfather a tap dancer in Vaudeville, is a NYC and Boston based artist choreographer who has created 115 works. Receiving many accolades including a 2011 Solomon R. Guggenheim Choreography Fellowship, a Fulbright Grant, and multiple individual grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the CAPS Program, the Harkness Foundation, and the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, she had been on the faculties at Sarah Lawrence College, UCLA, the Juilliard School, Marymount Manhattan College, and the Merce Cunningham Studio, as well as a guest artist all over the US and in Europe. Her writing has been published in Ballet Review, JOPERD, Attitude Magazine, Dance Magazine Online, the Getty Iris, and the Dance Research Journal and she recently finished her memoir I Said Yes/ The Autobiography of a Choreographer. She earned her BA in psychology and philosophy from Northwestern University and her MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts from Goddard College. She first performed Yvonne Rainer’s work in 1969 and since 1999 has worked as her dancer, rehearsal assistant, and stager of her works, touring nationally and internationally.