Tabs

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

ONE NIGHT ONLY at the Segerstrom in Costa Mesa @ 7:30pm on Wednesday October 26, 2022 :   

13 Tongues by Cloud Gate Dance Theater Company


It is rare to be able to experience a dance performance where you can preview how the choreographer and dancers create their magic on stage.


If you are familiar with the dance-works of the UK-based Akram Khan Company, where the classical Indian roots merge with contemporary and classical ballet dance training to produce universally relevant and spiritually deep expressions for the human body and emotions, then experiencing the 13 Tongues performance by the Taiwan-based Cloud Gate Dance Theater Company will be a comparable cultural treat.

Since I appreciate Qi Gong for both health and as a spiritual practice, I can imagine how these dancers could certainly harness and express qi in their movements. I share here the 37-minute video from their first participation in the World Ballet Day livestream in 2021 because it demonstrates the series of qi-gong incorporated dance movement exercises. You can see how the dancers harness the qi throughout the body from rooting to the earth through the spine to shooting energy through your fingers and feet. It also shares their rehearsal for 13 Tongues and you can see significant portions of the 13 Tongues stage performance - much longer segments than any YouTube preview segments.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kdZQUShSJOE&t=2241s

This World Ballet Day video from Cloud Gate Dance Theatre starts with qigong
exercises to energize the body by rooting to the earth qi while being relaxed, It also incorporates martial arts routine to harness the dancers' energy and strengthen balance training for the dancers. It ends with the rehearsal process of 13 Tongues in 2021.


I would also like to share a second video focusing on the choreographer's creative process and the genesis of this dance. It starts with how the name of 13 Tongues was derived from his mother's memory of a gifted story teller who brought many characters alive with his many voices in a specific district of Taipei. This video also discusses how the colors of the costumes and the visual technology is incorporated into the choreography. I am very impressed by the respect and cultural sensitivity the choreographer demonstrated in his process of dance creation. Even within his own Chinese Taiwanese culture, the appropriation of spiritual utterances and religious motives was done with prior permission from the temple. It is indeed rare to be able to see this aspect of the choreographer's creative journey and to see how the dance is grounded in Chinese cultural experience but yet speaks to the common human experiences as projected in dance movements that can be universally accessed by the audience.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5pfgGziofE

With these two videos, we can more fully appreciate and enjoy this one-night only performance of 13 Tongues by the Cloud Gate Dance Theater company. I hope you can join our group purchase of tickets for this one-night performance that is too good to miss even on a Wednesday night.

Details below:

I am organizing the purchase of group-priced discounted tickets for an astoundingly good ONE_NIGHT ONLY performance titled 13 Tongues by Cloud Gate Dance Theater Company from Taiwan.
If you have dancers in your family or a budding choreographer, or if you just enjoy dance, this evening will be impactful.
Dance Performance: 13 Tongues by Cloud Gate Dance Theatre Company
Date: Wednesday evening, October 26, 2022
Time: 7:30pm (Meet around 6:45-7:15pm for ticket distribution)
Venue: Segerstrom Center for Performing Arts in Costa Mesa
Price per seat: $26 at Orchestra Terrace (all fees and etc included)
Deadline for best seats: Noon on October 1, 2022
Contact for venmo payment details: reallykf@gmail.com


Overview from the Segerstrom's website:
"“Astoundingly good! A sensationally big, indulgent and visually arresting expression of cultural memory.” - The Times
“When you're talking about Cloud Gate, magic is not too strong a word.” - Time
One of Asia’s foremost contemporary dance companies, Cloud Gate was founded in 1973 by choreographer Lin Hwai-min. The company, named after the oldest known dance in China, combines martial arts, Qi Gong, modern dance, and classical ballet. In 2020, Chen Tsung-lung succeeded Lin as the company’s Artistic Director, bringing together his creative works with traditional roots and excitingly innovative perspectives from the digital and globalized world.
In 13 Tongues, Cheng Tsung-lung transforms his childhood memories of the streets of Bangka into a fantastical, dreamlike world, fusing ancient superstitions, religious rites, and modern Taipei culture. Beginning and ending with the sound of a single handbell, the music accompanying 13 Tongues ranges from Taiwanese folk songs to Taoist chants to electronica. On a stage awash with projections of colors, shapes, and images, dancers gather, interact, separate, and then come together again in a vibrant representation of the clamor of street life.
13 Tongues features all the magic, beauty and astonishing ensemble dancing that hypnotized audiences when Cloud Gate made their Center debut in 2018."
Since I appreciate Qi Gong for health and as a spiritual practice, I can imagine how these dancers could certainly harness and express qi in their movements. I share here the 37-minute video from their first participation in the World Ballet Day livestream in 2021 because it shares a series of qi-gong incorporated dance movement exercises where one energizes qi through the body from rooting to the earth through the spine to shooting energy through your fingers and feet. It also shares their rehearsal for and you can see portions of the 13 Tongues performance - longer than any YouTube preview segments.

How to get to Segerstrom Center for the Performing Arts:
https://www.scfta.org/Plan-Your-Visit/Directions-Parking.aspx

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Seven reasons not to miss Angkor Wat - California Science Center’s world premiere 3D imax and exhibit



                                           2005 Sunrise at Angkor Wat (credit to blogger)

Just in case anyone is wondering whether or not to see California Science Center’s Angkor Wat IMAX /special exhibit closing on Monday, Sept 5, here are seven good reasons:
1. Even if you have visited the real place in Cambodia (and I have), the 3D IMAX documentary shows what you cannot see on the ground! It will give you a better sense of its size and grandeur in the 9th to 15th centuries compared to the few other civilizations in the same time period!
2. The IMAX shows how the new scientific technology reveals that Angkor Wat was much bigger than earlier known … as big as present day Los Angeles!!
3. Find out how specially trained rats helped with the speed at which archeological work can proceed.
4. I did not know the cause of the downfall of Angkor Wat specifically when I visited the Angkor Wat complex in 2004, but the IMAX documentary will demonstrate which technologies confirmed that it was extreme climate change that made productive agriculture unable to sustain Angkor Wat.
Any essay about consequences of climate change can certainly use the data from this imax/exhibit.
5. The exhibit itself has 120 physical artifacts of which half is brought out of Cambodia for the first time … and two aspects of the exhibit impressed me: (1) the videos incorporated the voices of local experts as well as French and other experts, and (2), it addresses the precolonial looting as well as illicit post colonial trade In antiquities and asks for help to return Cambodian antiquities to Cambodia!
6. Most importantly, Angkor Wat is one of the ancient seven wonders and an UNESCO heritage site … if you can travel to Cambodia one day, it is definitely a bucket list destination .. and while in SE Asia, go see another Buddhist UNESCO site at Borobudur in Indonesia too. Both Hinduism and two types of Buddhism (Theravada and Mahayana) are covered in this exhibit.
7. Most critically, the study of Southeast Asian history and civilizations are not often covered in the US history curriculum, and you will have learned more about Angkor Wat than the normally-trained history teachers in middle or high school (unless they studied SEAsian history) after a couple of hours in the imax/exhibit. I am encouraging teachers to see this exhibit and wished more students could have seen both the IMAX and exhibit. There are hands-on sections too that you can touch!

This is a real gem of an exhibit and IMAX premiering in Los Angeles and not to be missed if you have any iota of curiosity about the world in times past and places a few continents away! No less impressive than Machu Picchu:) 

For information on how to see this Angkor Wat exhibit before it closes on Sept 5, 2022, after the Labor Day weekend, please see:  https://californiasciencecenter.org/exhibits/angkor-the-lost-empire-of-cambodia

For details on visiting CSC, please see:  https://californiasciencecenter.org/visitolute last hour to confirm with payment to join our group will be Saturday noon on Sept 3, 2022.

Should you miss this special exhibit, here are resources to learn more about Angkor Wat.

Angkor Wat: The Lost City of the God Kings


National Geographic Angkor Wat Access Heritage 360


The Khmer kingdom - Fall of the God Kings (Fall of Civilizations series)

Pol Pot and the killing fields
(Reference to the genocide in Cambodia is in one panel of the exhibit.

    The relief art on the sides of the temple is exquisite.