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Performing arts take centre stage

Concordia hosts Canada’s first Encuentro, welcoming more than 700 artists, scholars and activists from the Americas
April 22, 2014
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By Julie Gedeon


Everybody loves a parade. The word itself conjures images of celebration, marching, having fun. But can a parade be a catalyst for political change?

That is among the many questions that will be explored when Concordia hosts Canada’s first Encuentro, an encounter/meeting of more than 700 artists, schol­ars and activists from the Americas.

The bi-annual Encuentro, held in conjunc­tion with the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics, is designed to foster experimentation, dialogue and collaboration. The 2014 event is called Manifest! Choreographing Social Movements in the Americas and will be held from June 21 to 28.

And what better way to study a pa­rade than to have one? That’s among the performance activities for faculty and students from Concordia’s depart­ments of Contemporary Dance, Music and Theatre involved with the gathering.

“The Encuentro is very much about how we embody and perform knowledge, and one of the best ways to share what we do is to actually do it,” says Mark Sussman, associate dean of Academic and Student Affairs in the Faculty of Fine Arts, and convenor of the Encuentro.

2BOYS.TV
2BOYS.TV, seen here in a 2010 Encuentro performance, features visiting theatre artist Stephen Lawson. | Photo courtesy of Marlène Ramîrez-Cancio

Sussman, who also teaches in the Department of Theatre, is also one of the artistic co-directors of Great Small Works, a New York City-based per­formance company that will invite Encuentro participants to conceptualize, design and stage a parade in downtown Montreal. “It’ll take place as part of the Urban Intervention Day, when we leave the university to participate in events in public spaces within the downtown area,” Sussman says. 

Image courtesy of Great Small Works Associate Professor Mark Sussman’s company, Great Small Works, will perform at the Encuentro. | Image courtesy of Great Small Works

Great Small Works will share its expertise in making flags, banners, puppets and masks.

“The company is devoted to the idea that these kinds of visual theatrical elements can quickly be constructed in large numbers to create a dramatic effect, and it wants to share its techniques with others,” Sussman says. 

The Encuentro is an occasion for Concordia to draw upon various ar­tistic partnerships.

Up to 18 theatre students have been invited to take part in a one-week residency at the Bread and Puppet Theater in Glover, Vt., to develop a show for presentation at the Encuentro. 

“The students will be totally immersed in both political theatre and a farm life that includes daily chores,” says Ursula Neuerburg-Denzer, an assistant professor in the Department of Theatre. “It will definitely be a brand-new experience for a number of urban students and likely sensitize all of them to issues about farming and food production.”

All of the performances staged at the Encuentro will be examined in terms of the relationship between art and activ­ism. “As a community of performance studies scholars, we look what it is about the aesthetics or techniques of a per­formance that sparks political action,” Sussman explains. “We purposely chose the word choreographing in our theme because it applies to the notion that social movements don’t just happen, but are choreographed in ways that focus on a political goal.”

An ideal host

Stephen Lawson, a Department of Theatre artist in residence, volunteered as a lead organizer because he wanted to share the unique characteristics of his native city with peers from the Americas, while at the same time give Concordia students and faculty the opportunity to experience an Encuentro.

“I know how effective the Encuentro is as a format for gathering incredible thinkers and doers,” says Lawson, who’s been to all the Encuentros (held once every two years) since 2007. “Concordia is an ideal host because the university is a leader in bridging the arts and academia,” he says. “The Faculty of Fine Arts — with its emphasis on multidisciplinary studies — is definitely at the forefront of art programs, and being able to present some of what we’re doing to an international forum is wonderful.”

The Encuentro’s theme particularly resonates with Ricardo Dal Farra, an as­sociate professor in the Department of Music. “I was born in a Latin American country where demonstrations are a daily activity to fight for your rights, for your survival — where the beating of pots and pans in the streets began as a form of protest — and where being in­volved in politics can result in people’s disappearance — 30,000 of them during the ’70s and ’80s,” he says. 

As an electroacoustic music composer and media artist, Dal Farra says, “I want to participate in the Encuentro to em­phasize the power of music to spread ideas, raise awareness and prompt reflection for social improvement.”

Florence Figols, BFA (cont. dance) 85, a part-time faculty member in the Department of Contemporary Dance, will participate in a workgroup focused on documenting events that are espe­cially challenging.

“There’s always a score for music and a script for theatre, but video recordings access only the in­terpretation of dance — not the actual choreography,” she explains.

“What in­terests me is how the essence of dance as an aesthetic of disappearance can offer new creative possibilities.”

Bread and Puppet Theater Bread and Puppet Theater, along with theatre students, will participate in the Encuentro’s Urban Intervention. | Photo by Mark Dannenhauer

She will share her initial research into how various forms of documentation can alter sensory perceptions. Figols’s work has involved the cataloguing of video­tapes of Argentinians whose relatives disappeared. She will embody their gestures to create a kinesic document and inform her writing for the proj­ect. “I want to explore how the body can re-enact past events for current meaning, and examine what’s lost or gained through each transformation,” she explains.

Lawson reminisces how his participa­tion in past Encuentro gatherings has affected his role as both a global citizen and performer. “My work has assumed greater social aspects as I’ve become more interested in how a work of art can from its very inception engage a community rather than being presented to the com­munity only after it’s done,” he says.
 

The Encuentro will take place at Concordia from June 21 to 28 and includes public performances and exhibitions

 



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