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Since my last post I’ve made headway on a couple of fronts. I am thrilled to share that I will be the Studio Artist-in-Residence at 1450 Ocean through the City of Santa Monica Cultural Affairs Division. From July 13-August 31, I will have free access to a studio to further incubate this project. The studio has gorgeous views of the Pacific Ocean and is blocks from my home! I can’t wait! At the end of the residency we will offer an informal showing of the work to the public.

Find the complete progression of the work linked below.

Ruth 1:16-17

Artist in Residence 2015: Christine Suarez Part 2

By 

Christine Suarez

Credits: 

Curated by: 

Spark & Echo Arts, Artist in Residence 2015

2015

Dance

Image by Giorgio Trovato

Primary Scripture

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June 22, 2015












Since my last post I’ve made headway on a couple of fronts. I am thrilled to share that I will be the Studio Artist-in-Residence at 1450 Ocean through the City of Santa Monica Cultural Affairs Division. From July 13-August 31, I will have free access to a studio to further incubate this project. The studio has gorgeous views of the Pacific Ocean and is blocks from my home! I can’t wait! At the end of the residency we will offer an informal showing of the work to the public.


I have also begun rehearsals with my two collaborators: dance artists, Carol McDowell and Rebeca Hernandez. We started with reading and discussing the Book of Ruth together. We have been uncovering a lot of scholarship around the Book of Ruth. Here is an excerpt from some of research that we find particularly fascinating:



“In scene one (1:1–22) Ruth emerges in tension with her culture. She marries outside her own people, disavows the solidarity of her family, abandons her national identity, and renounces her religious affiliation. In the entire biblical epic of Israel, only Abraham approaches this radicalness, but then he had a call from God (Gen, 12:1–3) and also a wife. Ruth stands alone, without support human or divine. Moreover, she reverses sexual allegiance. A young woman commits herself to an old woman in a world where life depends upon men.”

By Phyllis Trible (http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/ruth-bible)



We are also finding much inspiration from paintings of this story. This video is a sketch of material that we’ve created using about a dozen paintings of Naomi and Ruth. We are discovering this entry point to be rich. It is becoming clear that this project is about relationships: Ruth and Naomi’s relationship, their relationship with God, and their relationships to their nation, culture and religion.


More soon! And please if you have any thoughts or responses, I welcome them! Email me at info@suarezdance.org.





Spark Notes

The Artist's Reflection

Christine Suarez is a Los Angeles-based choreographer, performer and educator. Born in Caracas, Venezuela and raised in Baton Rouge Louisiana, Christine made her first works of choreography to the Grease soundtrack. Since then she has created eleven evening-length dance-theater works, numerous site-specific and community events and close to a dozen dances for the theater and film, along with teaching, creating and performing at school sites all over the U.S. While living in New York City from 1994-2006, her work was presented at various venues including Danspace Project, P.S. 122, HERE, Joyce SoHo and Dixon Place. In 1998 she founded SuarezDanceTheater, a not-for-profit, ensemble of dancers, actors and musicians. SuarezDanceTheater examines the unexpected – creating dance-theater in unexpected places with unexpected people about unexpected subjects. Christine and company were Artists in Residence at Tribeca Performing Arts Center from 2003-2006. Her work has toured nationally and internationally to over 20 cities. Her work happens in theaters, houses, parks, Churches, galleries, sidewalks and beaches. She collaborates with multi-generational performers along with parents, children, veterans, high school students and teen mothers.


Since relocating to Los Angeles, she has been invigorated by making dances in unexpected places. Wet Spots (2008) was a site-specific performance about female orgasm that she created in collaboration with a multi-generational cast of women. The Los Angeles Times called it “ingeniously crafted…poignant…hilarious.” She has organized community dance participatory performances in parks, beaches and classrooms in partnership with city governments, community based organizations and schools. She has also been touring Wet Spots: Solo to Tallinn, Estonia, Movement Research at Judson Church (New York City), The Garage (San Francisco), Emory University (Atlanta, GA), The A.W.A.R.D. Show! (REDCAT). Most recently she premiered her new evening length work MOTHER. at the Motion Pacific at the Santa Cruz Fringe Festival and Highways Performance Space in Santa Monica, CA.


As an educator, Christine has worked at public schools all over the New York City and Los Angeles area. She has been a guest teacher/choreographer at California State University San Marcos, California State University Los Angeles, Emory University, Indiana University, Southeastern University of Louisiana and Louisiana State University. She holds an MFA in choreography from UCLA’s World Arts and Cultures Department and a BA in Theater and English Literature from Emory University. She is a government contractor co-creating a dance program for Veterans at The School for Better Living, a psycho-social research initiative a the West Los Angeles VA Hospital. She also works as a teaching artist with the HeArt Project. She has been awarded grants from the Center for Cultural Innovation, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Puffin Foundation, Meet the Composer, the Association for Hispanic Arts, JP Morgan Chase Regrant, the Field and the 92nd Street Y Harkness Dance Center. She is honored to be a Hispanic Scholarship Fund/Cheech Marin Endowed Scholarship Scholar and recipient of the Hispanic Scholarship Fund McNamara Family Creative Arts Projects Grant.

(Photo by CedarBough Saeji) www.suarezdance.org



Christine Suarez

About the Artist

Artist in Residence 2015: Christine Suarez Part 3

Artist in Residence 2015: Christine Suarez Part 1

The joy of our heart has ceased; Our dance has turned into mourning.

Artist in Residence 2015: Christine Suarez

Christine Suarez

Other Works By 

Follow the developmental journey of Christine's project by reading her first, third and final post written over the course of the year.

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