Paul Chan
Installation view, Danspace Project, New York, 2016
courtesy of Greene Naftali
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Paul Chan
Installation view, Danspace Project, New York, 2016
courtesy of Greene Naftali

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Congratulations, Gillian Walsh!
Congratulations also to choreographer Gillian Walsh who has been nominated for a prestigious Bessie Award in “Outstanding Production” this year for “Moon Fate Sin” co-presented with @danspaceproject ! Read the New York Times feature here.
Paul Chan
Installation view, Danspace Project, New York, 2016
courtesy of Green Naftali, New York
John Bernd inspired a series exploring the impact of the AIDS epidemic on dance.
A Platform 2016: Lost and Found evening includes naked dancers, banners with urgent political messages and “how to survive a plague.”

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“Danspace Project’s Lost & Found Platform continues! Through our partnership with SFMOMA’s Open Space (organized by Claudia La Rocco), San Francisco’s CounterPulse will host a West Coast discussion and screening event on Saturday, February 4th from 2-6pm. “We are thrilled about our first-ever collaboration between Open Space/SFMOMA, CounterPulse, and Danspace Project,” says Danspace Executive Director & Chief Curator Judy Hussie-Taylor. “It has been an aspiration of mine to be able to extend the conversations initiated by Danspace’s Platforms to like-minded communities across the country. We couldn’t be more honored to connect with two great organizations and artists in the SF Bay Area.” La Rocco writes:
“New York is one epicenter of HIV/AIDS in America. The other is San Francisco. As a bicoastal collaboration with Danspace Project, whose Platform series Lost and Found: Dance, New York, HIV/AIDS, Then and Now ran October 13th through November 19th, and in partnership with CounterPulse, SFMOMA’s Open Space gathers an intergenerational group of artists to explore various themes, questions, histories, and lineages as they relate, directly and obliquely, to the impact HIV/AIDS continues to have on dance and performance in the Bay Area and beyond. The afternoon event, which features Annie Danger, Xandra Ibarra, Monique Jenkinson, Rhodessa Jones, Keith Hennessy, Brontez Purnell, Helen Shumaker, and Amara Tabor-Smith, will include discussion, screenings and performative moments. Audience members are free to come and go as they please, and are also encouraged to visit the Lost and Found series on Open Space for related content.”
“What web of connections do generations of artists trace? Who are their influences? Since 2012 we have explored artistic constellations and lineages by asking each artist to share a significant artistic influence. Douglas Dunn writes in response to our prompt,”
My most significant artistic influence(s) is/are…Because…:
Credo: Choreography by Matthew Neenan for Ballet X
https://poddedeux.files.wordpress.com/2016/09/reidredux.mp3
We brought costume designer Reid Bartelme back to the studio, nearly a year after our first interview with him, to delve further into his design process and his vast knowledge of the dance landscape at large. In the meantime to our 2015 interview, the New York Times published an article about Reid highlighting his ability to bring together often-disparate factions of the dance world. We addressed the themes of that article, including the best strategies for learning and educating across worlds, the stigmas that sometimes get attached to one dance world by another, and how the terms “downtown” and “uptown” come into play. (Check out Danspace Project!) As usual, Reid was a lively conversationalist and a complete pleasure to engage. Here are few photos of costumes by Reid & Harriet that came up in the course of conversation, including the notorious “S&M bunny” ears for Trey McIntyre’s Ballet X.
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Reid Bartelme is a freelance fashion and costume designer who lives and works in New York. Prior to designing he spent many years dancing for companies throughout North America, including Pacific Northwest Ballet, BalletMet Columbus, Alberta Ballet, Shen Wei and Lar Lubovitch. He has designed costumes for many dance luminaries including Pam Tanowitz, Michelle Boule, Trey McIntyre, Kyle Abraham and Christopher Wheeldon, Matthew Neenan. Reid Bartelme and Harriet Jung founded Reid & harriet Design in the Fall of 2011. They were classmates in the fashion design program at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Collaboratively, they have designed costumes for Justin Peck, Marcelo Gomes, Andrea Miller, Emery Lecrone, Kyle Abraham, Mauro Bigonzetti, and Doug Varone. They have costumed productions at American Ballet Theater, New York City Ballet and Ballet Next and have produced clothes for commissioned works at Fall for Dance, the Youth America Grand Prix, and Dancers Responding to Aids. Along with Justin Peck, they are featured in the documentary Ballet 422 which premiered at the 2014 TriBeCa Film Festival.
GO SEE DANCE[!]: Reid Bartelme, Reprised We brought costume designer Reid Bartelme back to the studio, nearly a year after our first interview with him…