Choreographer Emily Johnson brings show to ASU Gammage's Beyond Series
Celebrated director, choreographer, curator Emily Johnson (Native Alaskan Yup'ik) presents "Niicugni" (Listen), a new dance performance housed within a light and sound installation made of hanging fish-skin sculptures. The performance is set for 7 p.m., March 2 at 7 p.m. at ASU Galvin Playhouse. Tickets are $25 and are on sale now.
Niicugni – the word – is a directive to pay attention, to listen. "Niicugni" the dance quietly compels such attentiveness through its layering of multiple dances, live music, stories, and histories. Niicugni asks, can we pay attention to the ways we do and do not listen to our bodies, histories, impulses and environments? Equating the molecules of land with the cells that comprise our bodies, "Niicugni" is also about how land, or place, like our bodies, is a repository of past, present, and future. It holds, at once, myth and truth, magic and evil, hope and death, laughter and monsters, as well as ancestral histories and cultural identities. In the moment of each performance, "Niicugni" wonders if we can recognize the importance of everyone in the room? Can we see ourselves as part of the whole? Can we absorb that everyone we see is here now and will be gone?
Johnson is an artist and writer who makes body based dance/installation/
The creation and presentation of "Niicugni" is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts in cooperation with the New England Foundation for the Arts though the National Dance Project. Major support for NDP is provided by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the Community Connections Fund of the MetLife Foundation with support from the NEA provides funding for choreographers in the early stages of their careers. The Beyond series media partner is 91.5 KJZZ and 89.5 KBAQ. Emily Johnson/Catalyst presented in partnership with the ASU School of Dance at Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts.