-
[Janine Antoni: Collaborating with Stephen
Petronio]
-
[Stephen Petronio Company]
-
[PETRONIO] I worked very hard to develop
-
a very succinct and idiosyncratic
-
and highly-nuanced language--
-
and I'm in my mid-fifties--
-
[Stephen Petronio, Choreographer]
-
and it took a long time to establish that.
-
Now that I have,
-
I'm kind of like, "Now what?"
-
The stereotype of dance is that
-
if we exist in this ethereal plane,
-
our work does disappear as we do it,
-
and that's the best part of it:
-
the moment is precious because it goes away.
-
You just get a glimpse of a movement,
-
and you have to chase it
-
or try to hold it in your memory, but...
-
["Lick and Lather", Janine Antoni]
-
a sculpture, you can look at from all sides
-
for as long as you want
-
to stay in the room with it.
-
So, I got very jealous with that.
-
I'm absolutely obsessed and in love
-
with the visual world.
-
I knew of Janine's work
-
before I knew Janine.
-
I've worked with people like
-
Cindy Sherman
-
and Anish Kapoor--
-
["Loving Care", Janine Antoni]
-
visual artists who I would share the space
with,
-
but they had their territory
-
and I had mine.
-
Well, with Janine I felt that,
-
because she was a performer as well,
-
that she would invade me in a way,
-
and I very much wanted to be invaded.
-
[ANTONI] I was asked by the choreographer,
-
Stephen Petronio,
-
to do the visuals for
-
a piece he was working on called
-
"Like Lazarus Did".
-
He was interested in notions
-
of transcendence and elevation.
-
["Like Lazarus Did", The Joyce Theater, NYC]
-
I spent a lot of time watching him
-
choreograph the piece,
-
and spent time with the dancers.
-
One thing that is very evident in his work
-
is that it has this kind of
-
exuberance and complexity.
-
So when I looked at the work,
-
I said, what I would like to do is
-
to offer him stillness.
-
And rather than make a set for the dance,
-
I would perform as well.
-
For two hours during the performance
-
I lay completely still.
-
[PETRONIO] She was meditating, really,
-
on her body,
-
as the audience was looking
-
at our body.
-
She was absolutely still
-
in a meditation
-
on her form
-
and her own death
-
against the chaotic look of the stage.
-
[ANTONI] Stephen's cousin was having a baby,
-
and she kept sending him sonograms.
-
And he looked at these images
-
and used them as
-
positions to choreograph one of his dancers,
-
Nick Sciscione,
-
for the last dance of
-
"Like Lazarus Did".
-
When he was making that dance,
-
I said, "Stephen, we should do it in honey,"
-
"because honey looks like amniotic fluid."
-
And then, of course,
-
it was impossible to do on a stage.
-
We were very interested in making a video
-
where one could not feel gravity.
-
["Honey Baby"]
-
Having had a child,
-
it's miraculous that a body
-
can grow another body--
-
that one body grows
-
from the nutrients of another body.
-
[PETRONIO] So there is kind of
-
a womb-like viscus body
-
moving through viscus liquid
-
at a very slow
-
and infinitesimal level.
-
Just the smallest movement of the finger--
-
and the spread of the toes
-
and the arch of the head--
-
took me, you know...
-
a place that I would never go on stage.
-
There was a kind of intimacy
-
that I long for on stage,
-
but I couldn't have on stage,
-
so "Honey Baby" led me to that,
-
and the camera led me to that.
-
Janine didn't invite me
-
to make a dance for her sculpture;
-
she invited me to collaborate with her
-
as a visual artist.
-
Janine and I were both
-
pushing Nick around verbally
-
in that process.
-
So she was getting in my face
-
movement-wise,
-
and I was getting in her face
-
sculpture-wise.
-
People find it very hard to understand that
-
we did this together,
-
because they want to think of me
-
as the choreographer
-
and her as the sculptor.
-
But we really tried to erase that line.
-
We continue to try to erase that line,
-
and we're working together on future projects
-
to do that.