THEATRE
PREVIEW
SUSHI
NEOFEST IX
Published
in KPBS On Air Magazine April 1991
What do
spurting volcanic breasts, slave rape, the
Sushi's founder-director
Lynn Schuette and Managing Director Vicki Wolf have chosen six new works from
the wild outposts of dance and performance art.
This year's
Neofest sounds as provocative as last year's, but less political. And with the exception of one dance group,
all the performers are women from
Schuette is
addicted to change. But, much to her
amazement, she's stayed with Sushi, her innovative
Neofest IX,
says Schuette, "opens and closes with hot dance." The closing act,
Ron Brown's dance company, Evidence, was booked by Schuette sight-unseen. "We always take risks," she
says. "I'm willing to trust my
instincts. That's what Sushi's all
about. Sometimes you have to curate
with a leap of faith."
Schuette's
instincts have brought her national attention in the world of performance
art. She was the first on the West
Coast to support Karen Finley, and she featured Tim Miller and Holly Hughes
early in their careers. When those
three controversial performance artists had their grants revoked from the
National Endowment for the Arts last summer, Schuette immediately called them
up and booked them for return visits to
Said Holly
Hughes during her third visit to Sushi, last December: "Lynn Schuette is my favorite
presenter. She was supporting
multicultural work before it was a buzzword.
Her arts organization is one of the few really class acts."
It isn't easy
to grow as an institution and still stay flexible within an art form that
changes by the minute. But Schuette is
nothing if not receptive and open-minded.
A provocative photograph, excellent
The opening
Neofest dance performance is Donna Uchizono and Company, a group dedicated to
"that point where the awkward becomes elegant." In the West Coast Premiere of "San
Andreas," the faultline is invoked as a metaphor for the risk, fragility
and tension of our lives.
Sandwiched
in-between the dance performances are the West Coast premiere of "Sally's
Rape and "Persimmon Peel," montages of dialogue and scenario
exploring the experiences of African-American women (April 18-20, co-sponsored
by the African American Museum of Fine Arts and the Centro Cultural de la
Raza), and the San Diego premiere of Dancenoise's "Full Moon Show," a
wacky barrage of movement and message, concerning the idiocies of American
culture (April 25-27).
Marty
Pottenger, a construction worker for 17 years, presents "The Construction
Stories," a piece which combines onstage bricklaying with a builder's-eye
view of the beauty and brutality of the physical world (May 9-11).
One festival
event (May 3-4) takes place at Sherwood Auditorium in the San Diego Museum of
Contemporary Art: noted performance
artist Rachel Rosenthal, whose "Pangaean Dreams," one of the
highlights of last October's Los Angeles Festival, uses images of tectonic
plates to make powerful statements about coming apart and getting connected.
Once again, the
backbone of Neofest's $50,000 budget is provided by an NEA Inter-Arts grant ($9000,
up $1500 from last year). The festival
aim is to reach an expanded audience, while exposing San Diegans to "the
range and richness of today's dance and performance art." In the past ten years, says Schuette,
"Artists have moved away from the notion of art for art's sake. They want to communicate with the
audience." It's a lot easier in an
intimate space like Sushi, and with an audience that performance artists consider
to be one of the warmest and most supportive in the country.
“Neofest IX
runs from April 11-May 18. For
information, call 235-8466.”
©1991 Patté
Productions Inc.