{"id":728,"date":"2010-06-14T20:00:25","date_gmt":"2010-06-15T03:00:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp\/2010\/06\/charming_ashton_mind-blowing_e\/"},"modified":"2010-06-14T20:00:25","modified_gmt":"2010-06-15T03:00:25","slug":"charming_ashton_mind-blowing_e","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/2010\/06\/charming_ashton_mind-blowing_e.html","title":{"rendered":"Ashton&#8217;s charming knowingness, Graham&#8217;s unfolding abstraction, John Jasperse&#8217;s wily truthiness, and New York City Ballet&#8217;s mixed bag (UPDATE FRIDAY 6\/25)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Starting backwards, with the Architecture of Dance festival at the New York City Ballet this season, the seven choreographers all had the option to commission a score, as well as a set by no less than famous Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, for their world premieres. With one ballet to go, I&#8217;m beginning to suspect this embarrassment of riches may be more embarrassment than riches&#8211; that there&#8217;s only so much a choreographer can respond to before he loses focus. Is it an accident that the best pieces in the festival have tended to forego commissioned score or Calatrava set, or both? Did Wheeldon, Ratmansky, and McGregor all know better than to overwhelm themselves with so many choice elements that demand a piece of the action? The problem may just be timing: that when you have a commissioned score or new large sculpture to get used to, it never arrives early enough. Anyway, the record so far has been that those who used a commissioned score (Millepied, Barak, and Bigonzetti) made wretched ballets.&nbsp; The Calatrava sets did less harm, though<\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"> not much good either.&nbsp; Maybe <\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Peter Martins, with commissioned Calatrava movable set but extant score, will disprove the rule. His ballet premieres Tuesday.<\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><b>Update: <\/b>Yup, the Martins ballet, <i>Mirage, <\/i>did disprove the rule. Yippee! Martins has turned out so many dutiful, empty ballets that I wasn&#8217;t expecting much. It is lovely to be proven wrong&#8211;to witness a choreographer overtaken by curiosity. <br \/><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Here is the start <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/d6446ad6-7fa2-11df-91b4-00144feabdc0.html\">of my review, <\/a>which came out today (Friday 6\/25) in the Financial Times: <\/p>\n<p><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Until this week, the New York City Ballet&#8217;s Architecture of Dance festival was proving a disappointment, despite the creative expenditure: four commissioned scores for seven new ballets and the world-renowned architect Santiago Calatrava at the ready to design sets.<br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">The Spaniard&#8217;s organic shapes suit the ballet stage, and yet the choreographers either had him painting backdrops &#8211; lovely, sure &#8211; or treated his poetically charged structures as if they were backdrops even when they dominated the space. Meanwhile, the scores seemed to thwart more than inspire.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Peter Martins&#8217; <em>Mirage<\/em> comes as a relief, then, if not a vindication. The dance, the airy set that rises from the ground to hover like a massive bird, Esa-Pekka Salonen&#8217;s restless violin concerto and Marc Happel&#8217;s costumes in muted colours and curving lines cohere into a single sensual, meditative work tinged with melancholy.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"smallMirageMorgRFair.jpg\" src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/smallMirageMorgRFair.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-center\" style=\"margin: 0pt auto 20px; text-align: center; display: block;\" width=\"448\" height=\"313\" \/><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\">Robert Fairchild beside Katherine Morgan in one of several entrancing duets beneath the big wire bird\/divided heart. Fairchild danced with a beautiful gluiness (in duet with Anthony Huxley; <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\">in the coed pas de deux, <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\">the men don&#8217;t move much, mainly providing a core for the women ). Morgan demonstrated the most delectable timing for her swooping legs. Photo by Paul Kolnik for NYCB.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"> <br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">The steps correspond to the set&#8217;s white cords, which twist to converge at its spine. <em>Mirage <\/em>gyres, with moves winding and unwinding from the body&#8217;s and the stage&#8217;s central axis like a string with a weight at its base. Robert Fairchild and Anthony Huxley throw a leg across their torsos that sends them into a long spiral of off-kilter turns. Kathryn Morgan alternates lunges that catapult her forward with ones that throw her back, her leg a pendulum &#8211; slowest at its extreme, swiftest and most powerful as it returns to neutral. When the bird overhead closes its wings to become a heart, Jennie Somogyi makes Jared Angle her compass and the leg scalloping the air its guide.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">The crescendos and decrescendos that weight and momentum dictate combine with&#8230;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">For the rest of the review, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/d6446ad6-7fa2-11df-91b4-00144feabdc0.html\">click here.<\/a> <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">As for earlier, less succesful efforts <strong>(end of update) <\/strong>here is the start of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/60132f72-77ce-11df-82c3-00144feabdc0.html\">my review for the Financial Times of the Bigonzetti premiere: <br \/>\n<\/a><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">This year, the new choreography festival at New York City Ballet mainly involves old hands. Alterballetto&#8217;s Mauro Bigonzetti, for example, is on to his fourth ballet with the company. In an interview printed in the programme, he says he knows the dancers well enough by now to make &#8220;their character and humanity&#8221; his inspiration.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">So why, in <em>Luce Nascosta <\/em>(&#8220;Hidden Light&#8221;), do they resemble bugs? And the goons in Balanchine&#8217;s <em>Prodigal Son,<\/em> and marionettes &#8211; anything but humans? And why is one dancer indistinguishable from the other?<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\nThe blame rests in part with the gloomy lighting &#8211; a favourite of choreographers from sunny Italy &#8211; and the identical black costumes for the nine women (midriff and ruffled floppy tutu over bare legs) and nine men (karate trousers, with chest bare). But the larger problem is the elaborate lexicon of meaningless quirks the choreographer has devised. It obscures the dancers&#8217; individual gifts.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Hands splay like cut-out stars. Hip-hop gesticulations circle head and shin. Rumps protrude and spines spasm out. Limbs snap straight then retract like those of a cartoon bug on its deathbed. In tangled pas de deux, the woman inserts her legs into the nooks and crannies between her body and his.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"smallLuceReicDanc.jpg\" src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/smallLuceReicDanc.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-center\" style=\"margin: 0pt auto 20px; text-align: center; display: block;\" width=\"448\" height=\"313\" \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\" size=\"4\">Adrian Danchig-Waring and Teresa Reichlin get squiggly and spiky. Photo by Paul Kolnik for the New York City Ballet. <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">The dancers each have their moment in the gloom. And, yes, Maria Kowroski&#8217;s cameos are not identical to Ashley Bouder&#8217;s. Kowroski&#8217;s phrases tend to unfurl in a single long breath; Bouder&#8217;s are staccato. But by the time one dancer has followed another and another and another, the predictability of the ballet&#8217;s structure overwhelms any surprises&#8230;.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\nFor the whole <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/60132f72-77ce-11df-82c3-00144feabdc0.html\">review, click here.<\/a> <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">And here begins <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/0\/d5e1121c-7294-11df-9f82-00144feabdc0.html\">my Financial Times review <\/a>of the more complete and more interesting festival fiasco, <i>Call Me Ben<\/i>: <\/p>\n<p><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\nIt must have seemed nifty to put the wunderkinds together &#8211; choreographer Melissa Barak, 30, whose first piece the New York City Ballet staged when she was 22, and Jay Greenberg, 18, who by the age of 12 had composed five symphonies, the last of which the London Symphony Orchestra performed. But <em>Call Me Ben<\/em>, about 1940s gangster Ben &#8220;Bugsy&#8221; Siegel, is a disaster.<\/p>\n<p><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"BARAKgangstersmall.jpg\" src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/BARAKgangstersmall.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-center\" style=\"margin: 0pt auto 20px; text-align: center; display: block;\" width=\"448\" height=\"256\" \/><font size=\"4\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\" size=\"4\">The gangsters object to Daniel Ulbricht&#8217;s orders. Photo by Paul Kolnik for the New York City Ballet.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\nThe problem begins with the commissioned score. Bouncing fast from Shostakovichian bombast to Prokofiev-style dissonance to generic symphonic syrupiness, the music does not lend itself to anything but listening. But Barak&#8217;s ballets &#8211; among them, three previous works for NYCB, her alma mater &#8211; have adhered to the Balanchine rule of letting the music set the terms. So she meets musical mishmash with her own hodgepodge. The bio-ballet pairs homemade dialogue that erratically advances the plot &#8211; and is delivered woodenly by panting, overmiked dancers &#8211; with intervals of dancing that reveal nothing about the characters.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Barak&#8217;s choice of story demonstrates an excellent instinct for drama&#8230;.. <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\nFor the full takedown, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/0\/d5e1121c-7294-11df-9f82-00144feabdc0.html\">click here.<\/a><br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Meanwhile downtown, the Martha Graham Company wowed me with early work by both Graham and her contemporaries. Imagine abstraction <\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">coming into being <\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">before your eyes.&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">I have to confess, I have been a reluctant joiner to the Graham camp. In the early 2000s, when the company&#8217;s future was in jeopardy, I privately thought, <i>Let it go: it can&#8217;t be saved. <\/i>Imagine a modern dancer version of  <i>Funny Face<\/i>&#8216;s <font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">bohemians and psychoanalysts, and you&#8217;ll have some idea of the grotesquerie that the Graham dances had become. But then former Graham star Janet Eilber took over, and restored the work by scraping off all the later &#8220;touch ups&#8221;: finally I could see what the big deal was. Now she has extended that clarity to Graham&#8217;s 1930s peers.&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">This group of works makes up The Political Dance Project, but it&#8217;s the formal radicalism in the service of these politics that is especially amazing.&nbsp;<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Here&#8217;s a chunk of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/7c762a16-74a9-11df-aed7-00144feabdc0.html\">my Financial Times review from a couple of weeks ago: <\/a><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>Janet Eilber, artistic director of the Graham troupe since it returned from the brink a few years ago, is the kind of thoughtful contrarian that the maverick choreographer would have appreciated. According to the dance world&#8217;s conventional wisdom, a historic work can speak so loudly for itself that the present will not drown it out; Eilber, on the contrary, insists on context and curation.<br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">This season&#8217;s Political Dance Project honours Graham&#8217;s belief that &#8220;no artist is ahead of his time, he is his time&#8221;, by setting the works of her early, all-female group beside their contemporaries. The effect is to illuminate the Graham pieces or modern dance between the wars, and the whole modernist project.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Isadora Duncan&#8217;s 1924 solo <em>The Revolutionary <\/em>lends strange forms and new meanings to the iconic fists and lunges of the revolutionary worker. Tadej Brdnik plants his knuckles on the ground as if to drill into the red earth. But then his arms pli\u00e9 and a diamond of negative space appears. Whatever you thought the fists signified is suddenly &#8211; and happily &#8211; confounded.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"tadejrevolutionarysmall.jpg\" src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/tadejrevolutionarysmall.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-center\" style=\"margin: 0pt auto 20px; text-align: center; display: block;\" width=\"448\" height=\"298\" \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<div style=\"text-align: center;\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\">Brdnik the revolutionary. Photo by Kerville Cosmos Jack.<br \/>\n<\/font><br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>In 1938 and a mesmerising Carrie Ellmore-Tallitsch performed on Wednesday, also converts archetypal forms into poetic abstractions. The concave chest, scuffling walk and furtive gaze of the down and out become a bright mechanical bird.<br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">This alchemising process seems to be a defining element of early modern dance. A gesture acquires sculptural heft and escapes the commonplace.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">In Graham&#8217;s 1936 <em>Chronicle, <\/em>this occurs via hands and arms that&#8230; <\/p>\n<p><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">For the whole review, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/7c762a16-74a9-11df-aed7-00144feabdc0.html\">click here<\/a>. <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>American Ballet Theatre is stitching up the hole that the Joffrey Ballet&#8217;s move to Chicago fifteen years ago caused in New York&#8217;s Ashton rep&#8211;and it&#8217;s a wonderful thing. This year ABT added <i>Birthday Offering <\/i>and the <i>Thais <\/i>pas de deux to <i>Sylvia <\/i>and <i>The Dream<\/i>. Next up <i>Monotones<\/i>?<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">You still have a couple more chances to catch the Ashton program the last week in June. Here&#8217;s<a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/87058d12-73de-11df-87f5-00144feabdc0.html\"> the start of my Ashton review for the Financial Times:<\/a><\/p>\n<p><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Frederick Ashton&#8217;s particular genius is not easily assimilated into New York&#8217;s ballet scene. New Yorkers expect race horses &#8211; limbs splayed, space devoured. Ashton offers show horses, the dancers moving up and down, all head and jittery feet. His heart is too warm to make ours ache the way Balanchine can. And though Ashton seems no more European than Jerome Robbins &#8211; no angst themes or chiaroscuro lighting &#8211; he doesn&#8217;t compensate for his lack of suavity with streetwise cool: the ballets do not point outward to the world but inward to ballet and its pagan-pastoral past. Even Ashton&#8217;s fondness for imperial Russian style, with which we are also in love, does him no favours. In his hands, it becomes neither imperial nor Russian but a gently parodic version of ballet itself.<br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Nevertheless, and happily, American Ballet Theatre has expanded its Ashton offerings beyond <em>Sylvia <\/em>and <em>The Dream, <\/em>in which the glorious storytelling and brilliant characterisations mitigate the foreignness of the style.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">The 1956 <em>Birthday Offering <\/em>distils <em>The Sleeping Beauty <\/em>down to its fairy variations. Isabella Boylston, for example, is the Carmen fairy &#8211; her legs stabbing the ground and slicing through the air. Stella Abrera moves with the Lilac Fairy&#8217;s pillowy softness, swinging a leg as if chiming a bell. All seven ballerinas halo their heads in their arms with such a sweetly self-conscious air that they momentarily turn into ballerina dolls.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">For the 1971 <em>Tha\u00efs <\/em>pas de deux, Ashton kaleidoscopes the various incarnations of <em>La Bayad\u00e8re<\/em>&#8216;s Nikiya &#8211; from full-blooded temple dancer to vengeful ghost. Even after removing her veil, Diana Vishneva averts her gaze as if she were lost from this world. But her exposed neck suggests that the other world is her willing body.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<div style=\"text-align: center;\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"thaisvishnevamatthewssmall.jpg\" src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/thaisvishnevamatthewssmall.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-none\" style=\"\" width=\"268\" height=\"336\" \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/div>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><small><\/small><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<div style=\"text-align: center;\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><small>Diana Vishneva and Jared Matthews in Ashton&#8217;s meditation on Massenet&#8217;s <em>Thais.<\/em><br \/>\n<\/small><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/div>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><br \/><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">On Tuesday the audience responded tepidly to these plotless works. They might have been more enthusiastic if &#8230;.<br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">For the whole review, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/87058d12-73de-11df-87f5-00144feabdc0.html\">click here<\/a>.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><input id=\"gwProxy\" type=\"hidden\" \/><!--Session data--><input onclick=\"jsCall();\" id=\"jsProxy\" type=\"hidden\" \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<div id=\"refHTML\"><\/div>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">And now for something completely different, which I couldn&#8217;t do justice to in my tiny review: John Jasperse&#8217;s <i>Truth, Revised Histories, Wishful Thinking and Flat Out Lies<\/i>, at the Joyce through Saturday (June 19). If the magical work is all about piecing things together&#8211;wildly disparate things, such as striptease and cartoon gangsters and dandy summers in Tom Wolfe white with string quartets, and floridity and glamour and wallpaper&#8211;how is it that the dance ends up such a whole, one that implausibly is the culmination of its manifold moods? <i>Truth <\/i>concludes with quiet and melancholy and, dare I say, what feels like truth, after all the trapdoors and hapless tricks.&nbsp; <\/p>\n<p>Here&#8217;s the first bit of <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/f731bc90-7a60-11df-9cd7-00144feabdc0.html\">my Financial Times review today<\/a>: <\/p>\n<p><\/font><\/font><br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<blockquote><p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">John Jasperse is a wily artist. He dubs his latest work <i>Truth, Revised Histories, Wishful Thinking, and Flat Out Lies <\/i>in a nod to the flood of book-length expos\u00e9s with run-on, tell-all titles. And yet this two-act absurdist tragicomedy makes such a glorious muddle of its own investigation that you almost forget there is one until the end, when a clue appears like a reticent guest.<br \/>\n<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" alt=\"TRUTHarrowjjecsmall.jpg\" src=\"http:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/TRUTHarrowjjecsmall.jpg\" class=\"mt-image-none\" style=\"\" width=\"448\" height=\"298\" \/><\/p>\n<p><font style=\"font-size: 0.8em;\">John Jasperse points the finger&#8211;or arrow, as it happens; Erin Cornell tries to slither out of the way. Photo by Sylvio Dittrich.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/>\n<font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Jasperse, 46, is one of the few American post-Boomer experimental choreographers to achieve some renown. He tours not only in western Europe but also in the US, and not only to the coasts but also in between. As much an auteur as Pina Bausch, he is less inclined to knit the elements of theatre into a ritualistic whole than to dismantle them so as to link the workings of theatre to those of the world: the &#8220;War on Terror&#8221;, the stultifying effects of the family, and now truthiness &#8211; as the political satirist Stephen Colbert would say. Jasperse&#8217;s riskiest and freest work to date, <i>Truth <\/i>etc amounts to a deranged pastiche of borrowed movement &#8211; the choreographic equivalent of cheating, if not lying.<\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">Captivating Erin Cornell gives a drunken turn to Twyla Tharp&#8217;s ragdoll style. Cornell and Jasperse, the show&#8217;s drifting MC, stage a slow-mo kung-fu tussle that ends in a real slap. Eleanor Hullihan and Cornell perform a topless number that combines the affectlessness and self-stroking of the professional stripper with the affectless and planar geometries of postmodern dance. Meanwhile&#8230;. <\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\">For the whole review, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.ft.com\/cms\/s\/2\/f731bc90-7a60-11df-9cd7-00144feabdc0.html\">click here<\/a>. <\/font><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><br \/><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><font face=\"Palatino Linotype\"><font size=\"4\"><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/font><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Starting backwards, with the Architecture of Dance festival at the New York City Ballet this season, the seven choreographers all had the option to commission a score, as well as a set by no less than famous Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, for their world premieres. With one ballet to go, I&#8217;m beginning to suspect this [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_genesis_hide_title":false,"_genesis_hide_breadcrumbs":false,"_genesis_hide_singular_image":false,"_genesis_hide_footer_widgets":false,"_genesis_custom_body_class":"","_genesis_custom_post_class":"","_genesis_layout":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-728","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","6":"category-main","7":"entry"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/728","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=728"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/728\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=728"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=728"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.artsjournal.com\/foot\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=728"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}