Cloud Gate 2 (雲門2) has been very busy in recent weeks, getting ready for its four-city Spring Riot tour, which begins April 21 at Taipei’s Novel Hall.
The 11-year old troupe has been staging a Spring Riot almost as long as it has existed. The series, now in its 10th year, has been a showcase for emerging choreographers such as Bulareyaung Pagarlava (布拉瑞揚), Wu Kuo-chu (伍國柱), Cheng Tsung-lung (鄭宗龍), Huang Yi (黃翊) and Hong Kong’s Yuri Ng (伍宇烈), as well as more established ones such as Cloud Gate Dance Theatre founder Lin Hwai-min (林懷民), Lo Man-fei (羅曼菲) and
Ku Ming-shen (古名伸).
For the first time in several years, there will not be a piece by either Lin or Lo on the program, leaving the focus on the troupe’s resident guest choreographers Cheng and Huang. The older generation will be represented by Ku, a professor at National Taipei University of the Arts (國立臺北藝術大學) and founder of Ku & Dancers (古名伸舞團). All three had works in last year’s program, but this edition’s creations promise to be very different.
The 34-year-old Cheng is now in his fourth year with Cloud Gate 2. His new 30-minute performance is entitled Crack (裂), not after the drug but after the lines that split a sidewalk, fracture a relationship, change a life.
In the program notes, Cheng quotes a line from Leonard Cohen’s Anthem: “There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in.” He says the
nine-dancer piece is “a little strange.”
“I want to use all different styles, take all different styles and try to say something about my whole life,” he said in a telephone interview last month, adding that the score by Pan Rong-sheng (潘榮昇) encompasses Chinese opera, classical, rock and electronica music.
“When you look back at your life you try to look into the situations that made a ‘crack,’ for example my mother and father fighting when I was a child — that was a crack — when someone leaves my life, that moment is a crack,” Cheng said. “In doing this piece, I looked back but it also helped me look forward.”
All that introspection, combined with the usual mental anguish that Cheng goes through when he creates, led him to take up running.
“I’m running every day, between 3km and 4km. You have got to challenge yourself and then you believe you can do it. Every day I try to run a little more,” he said, although he admitted with a laugh that he would have to run a lot more before he would stop smoking.
Dancer-choreographer Huang, 26, is moving so fast that everyone else has to run to catch up with him. The Cloud Gate 2 show comes on the heels of two successes: His Spin 2010 show at the Experimental Theater in February was a sellout and critical success, and his 2007 pas de deux Whisper (低語) won him second place at the third Cross Connection Ballet International Choreography Competition in Copenhagen, Denmark, on April 2. Given his schedule, the only way
to catch up with Huang was with an e-mail interview.
Floating Domain (浮動的房間), set to Johann Sebastian Bach’s Concerto in D Minor arranged for piano, is an intensely personal piece, one inspired by Huang’s use of books, the Internet and his imagination to escape his family’s cramped home when he was growing up by creating a “floating room” in his mind.
“I want to share some stories of my life experience with the audience, especially when people feel alone,” he wrote. “We are living in our imaginations ... but we are all alone.”
The emotions of the characters are echoed in the mood — and colors — of the room, a room that can shift in size and space, just as the characters shift from human into a dog, table, chair or wall. The lead dancer falls into a wall made up of other dancers and “the wall catches her softly, like family, like a mother’s arms,” Huang wrote. “That’s what I think about ‘home,’ especially when you feel tired.”
While Cheng and Huang’s works explore interior landscapes, Ku’s 20-minute Endless Shore (碎浪海岸) was inspired by the coastline between Hualien and Taitung.
The interaction of the water and the shore and the ebb and flow of the waves appear a perfect fit for Ku’s choreography because she is the prime exponent in this country of what is known as Contact Improvisation. Ku’s piece builds layer upon layer, as the dancers crisscross the stage, running, jumping, chasing, touching or just standing still as others move around them.
They come together only to separate.
Cloud Gate 2’s six performances at Novel Hall will be followed by stops
in Hsinchu, Kaohsiung and Chiayi
next month.
In late October of 1873 the government of Japan decided against sending a military expedition to Korea to force that nation to open trade relations. Across the government supporters of the expedition resigned immediately. The spectacle of revolt by disaffected samurai began to loom over Japanese politics. In January of 1874 disaffected samurai attacked a senior minister in Tokyo. A month later, a group of pro-Korea expedition and anti-foreign elements from Saga prefecture in Kyushu revolted, driven in part by high food prices stemming from poor harvests. Their leader, according to Edward Drea’s classic Japan’s Imperial Army, was a samurai
The following three paragraphs are just some of what the local Chinese-language press is reporting on breathlessly and following every twist and turn with the eagerness of a soap opera fan. For many English-language readers, it probably comes across as incomprehensibly opaque, so bear with me briefly dear reader: To the surprise of many, former pop singer and Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) ex-lawmaker Yu Tien (余天) of the Taiwan Normal Country Promotion Association (TNCPA) at the last minute dropped out of the running for committee chair of the DPP’s New Taipei City chapter, paving the way for DPP legislator Su
It’s hard to know where to begin with Mark Tovell’s Taiwan: Roads Above the Clouds. Having published a travelogue myself, as well as having contributed to several guidebooks, at first glance Tovell’s book appears to inhabit a middle ground — the kind of hard-to-sell nowheresville publishers detest. Leaf through the pages and you’ll find them suffuse with the purple prose best associated with travel literature: “When the sun is low on a warm, clear morning, and with the heat already rising, we stand at the riverside bike path leading south from Sanxia’s old cobble streets.” Hardly the stuff of your
Located down a sideroad in old Wanhua District (萬華區), Waley Art (水谷藝術) has an established reputation for curating some of the more provocative indie art exhibitions in Taipei. And this month is no exception. Beyond the innocuous facade of a shophouse, the full three stories of the gallery space (including the basement) have been taken over by photographs, installation videos and abstract images courtesy of two creatives who hail from the opposite ends of the earth, Taiwan’s Hsu Yi-ting (許懿婷) and Germany’s Benjamin Janzen. “In 2019, I had an art residency in Europe,” Hsu says. “I met Benjamin in the lobby