Flight of Mind: Natural Patterns of Destruction

| | Comments (0)

IMG_0539SerenaDavidsonMonson
photo credit: Serena Davidson

IMG_0562SerenaDavidsonMonson
photo credit: Serena Davidson

IMG_0506SerenaDavidsonMonson
photo credit: Serena Davidson

IMG_0491SerenaDavidsonMonson
photo credit: Serena Davidson

Posted by Scott McEachern

This is a wonderful piece that explores the effects of humans on the natural world. From the moment one sees the stage, an opening surrounded by local plants bucketed in dirt forming an artificial wetland, there is no question about the beauty of the production. The four dancers arrive on stage, one at a time, and dance to minimal music that is designed to be background, to mimic the sounds of nature (and later, the urban environment). The first third of the play is devoted to evoking the patterns of various animals: fish, birds, without the interference with humans. The dancers move in formation, touch each other lovingly, and settle into a rhythm of continuity. It is beautiful and lovely and leaves one aching for a better natural world. Because one knows that the second half of the play is a long meditation upon the destructiveness of humans. There is the interference with natural migratory patterns by the urban environment—the birds are forced to forage for food in the midst of a construction site, their formations are interrupted and often destroyed, they become scavengers and their community breaks down into squabbling and individualism. The dancers masterfully create (or un-create) the environment around them, as they move the natural landscape around them, signaling an interaction with nature that humans have long since given up in favor of an antagonistic relationship with birds, plants, the environment. The production highlights how far humans have gone to wreck havoc on the natural patterns.

IMG_0573SerenaDavidsonMonson
photo credit: Serena Davidson

IMG_0661SerenaDavidsonMonson
photo credit: Serena Davidson

click here for more TBA photos: Serena Davidson Photography

Leave a comment

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by published on September 20, 2006 6:47 AM.

Nature Theater of Oklahoma: Chat and Dance was the previous entry in this blog.

"I Still Ask Because It's Interesting": Deborah Hay Chat is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.