
"Dance Reflections by Van Cleef & Arpels will kick off its seventh edition, the second to take place in New York City. From February 19 through March 21, over 20 invigorating performances will light up the stages at New York City Center, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Perelman Performing Arts Center, Guggenheim New York, New York Live Arts, and more."
"Dance brings all the artistic disciplines together: it can incorporate music, the plastic arts, costuming, lighting, set design, graphic design, and even jewelry," says Serge Laurent, Van Cleef & Arpels's Director of Dance and Culture Programs. "It is a fascinating art form and an incredible field of expression. That is why it can appeal to such a wide audience. I'd like to encourage spectators to admire the works freely, with no preconceptions."
"are a performance of Merce Cunningham's Biped (1999) by The Lyon Opera Ballet, Mycelium (2023) from choreographer Christos Papadopoulos, Age of Content (2023) by (LA)HORDE-Ballet national de Marseille, an L.A. Dance Project performance of Reflections: a triptych, which stems from a 2012 dialogue between Van Cleef & Arpels and Benjamin Millepied, and Lucinda Childs's Early Works series, which will be staged in the rotunda of the Guggenheim New York."
Dance Reflections runs from February 19 through March 21 across multiple New York venues, featuring over twenty performances and workshops. Programming includes Merce Cunningham's Biped performed by The Lyon Opera Ballet, Christos Papadopoulos's Mycelium (2023), (LA)HORDE-Ballet national de Marseille's Age of Content (2023), L.A. Dance Project's Reflections: a triptych, and Lucinda Childs's Early Works staged in the Guggenheim rotunda. The multi-week program includes workshops at the New York Center for Creativity & Dance. Dance Reflections launched in 2020 to support artists, preserve choreographic heritage, promote dance education and transmission, and nurture contemporary creation. Van Cleef & Arpels has engaged with dance since the 1920s and collaborated with George Balanchine in the 1950s and 1960s.
Read at Galerie Magazine
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