Will Rawls

Last updated
Will Rawls
NationalityAmerican
Awards
  • 2015 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award
  • 2014 Process Space Residency, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council
  • 2013 MacDowell Colony Fellowship
  • 2012 Harlem Stage Fund for New Work
  • 2010 2011 Mount Tremper Arts Residency and Performance
  • 2009 2010 Studio Series Residency, Dance Theater Workshop
  • 2008 New York Times, Best Performers of the Year
  • 2008 danceWEB Europe Scholarship to ImPulsTanz Festival
  • 2000 Class Speaker Elect at Williams College Commencement Exercises
  • 2000 Dewey Prize for Public Speaking at Commencement Exercises
  • 2000 Williams College Hubbard Hutchinson Fellowship in the Arts

Will Rawls is an American contemporary choreographer, performance artist, curator and writer based in New York City and with continuing projects in Europe. He has choreographed solo works and group works as well as danced professionally with established dance companies. He is also one half of the performance art collaborative, Dance Gang, with Kennis Hawkins. [1]

Contents

In 2017, Rawls collaborated with poet and writer Claudia Rankine on What Remains. Rawls and Rankine began to generate What Remains together after being recommended as collaborators by a mutual friend. Rawls entered the studio with two of Rankine's works – 2004's Don't Let Me Be Lonely and 2014's Citizen. The work included four performers: Tara Aisha Willis, Jessica Pretty, Leslie Cuyjet, and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste. Toussaint-Baptiste was also sound designer for What Remains. In the program for the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) in Chicago, Tara Aisha Willis (performer and Associate Curator of Performance for the MCA) described the work as asking: "In making What Remains, we are trying to imagine the state of being both living and already slated for death as a habitable place, a vast void or tundra where we use our voices and bodies to call ourselves into existence. It may be the 'already-dead' space, but it is ours, or at least a space where we are already accustomed to its particular discomforts. [2] " What Remains premiered at Bard College, and has been performed at national venues, including Danspace in New York, the Walker Art Center, Yale Repertory Theatre, and, in December, 2018, Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art Warehouse Space.

Selected Shows

Writings

Will Rawls is currently the co-editor with Abigail Levine at Critical Correspondence, a web publication of the Center for Movement Research. [13]

Performed with

Curatorial

Collaboration

Dance Gang is an American performance art duo made up of Will Rawls and Kennis Hawkins started in 2006 in New York City.

The two, both over six feet tall, met in 2004 as fellow dancers in Shen Wei Dance Arts and then started their own project. Dance Gang began with playful dance interventions in public spaces and then continued into short and full-length site-specific choreographed works. [25] They performed an hour-long site-specific work, "Dog Free" in the River to River Festival in 2009,[ citation needed ] shorter works with Neal Medlyn, [26] a performance to Beyoncé's 'All the Single Ladies' at Joe's Pub, [27] and to Kanye West's "Bad News" track from 808 and Heartbreaks, [28] a work at the Ise Cultural Foundation as part of "In Pursuit: Art on Dating," [29] and others.

In 2018 and 2019, Rawls collaborated with choreographer Andros Zins-Browne on two performances. The first was The Tony Cokes Remixes for the 10th Berlin Biennial. [30] The following year the two collaborated on making a new version of Simone Forti's 1960 performance See-Saw, commissioned by the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and performed by the two as well as performer Martita Abril. [31]

Triple Canopy's presentation of Will Rawls' work with scholar and Performa associate curator Adrienne Edwards to discuss relationships between objects, animal figures, and blackness in performance. [32]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joan Jonas</span> American visual artist (born 1936)

Joan Jonas is an American visual artist and a pioneer of video and performance art, "a central figure in the performance art movement of the late 1960s". Jonas' projects and experiments were influential in the creation of video performance art as a medium. Her influences also extended to conceptual art, theatre, performance art and other visual media. She lives and works in New York and Nova Scotia, Canada.

Scott Benzel is an American visual artist, musician, performance artist, and composer. Benzel is a member of the faculty of the School of Art at California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claudia Rankine</span> American poet, essayist, and playwright (born 1963)

Claudia Rankine is an American poet, essayist, playwright and the editor of several anthologies. She is the author of five volumes of poetry, two plays and various essays.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eiko & Koma</span>

Eiko Otake and Takashi Koma Otake, generally known as Eiko & Koma, are a Japanese performance duo. Since 1972, Eiko & Koma have worked as co-artistic directors, choreographers, and performers, creating a unique theater of movement out of stillness, shape, light, sound, and time. For most of their multi-disciplinary works, Eiko & Koma also create their own sets and costumes, and they are usually the sole performers in their work. Neither of them studied traditional Japanese dance or theater forms and prefer to choreograph and perform only their own works. They do not bill their work as Butoh though Eiko & Koma cite Kazuo Ohno as their main inspiration.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tino Sehgal</span> German/Indian artist (b.1976)

Tino Sehgal is an artist of German and Indian descent, based in Berlin, who describes his work as "constructed situations". He is also thought of as a choreographer who makes dance for the museum setting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Asia Art Archive</span> Non-profit art organisation in Hong Kong

Asia Art Archive (AAA) is a nonprofit organisation based in Hong Kong that documents the recent history of contemporary art in Asia within an international context. AAA incorporates material that members of local art communities find relevant to the field, and provides educational and public programming. AAA is one of the most comprehensive publicly accessible collections of research materials in the field. In activating its collections, AAA initiates public, educational, and residency programmes. AAA also offers research grants and publishes art and cultural criticism on its online platform 'Like a Fever'.

Dancenoise is an American performance art duo created by Anne Iobst and Lucy Sexton. Dancenoise entered the New York and Washington, D.C., art and club scene in 1983, performing at venues such as WOW Café, the Pyramid, 8BC, Performance Space 122, Franklin Furnace, The Kitchen, La Mama, Danspace Project, and King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut. Their work has also been presented around Europe as well as at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. Dancenoise has also collaborated with other artists including Charles Atlas, Mike Taylor, Ishmael Houston-Jones, and Yvonne Meier. In addition to their work under the title Dancenoise, Iobst and Sexton, along with Jo Andres and Mimi Goese, were frequent collaborators with Tom Murrin, an East Village performance artist known for his monthly celebrations in honor of the full moon. Dancenoise is a recipient of National Endowment of the Arts Choreographic Fellowships and a Bessie Award for New York Dance and Theatre.

Movement Research is a non-profit organization that offers dance classes, workshops, residencies and performance opportunities for artists in New York City. Its focus is on improvisation, post-modern dance, and experimentation. It was founded in 1978 under the name “The School for Movement Research & Construction” and incorporated in 1980 after its first public performance in 1979. Movement Research organizes performances at the Judson Memorial Church among other locations around New York City. It has a long tie with Judson Church and Judson Dance Theater which shares some of the same base of artists. In Spring 2018, Movement Research announced they will be occupying 3 spaces in the newly renovated 122 Community Center, making 122CC Movement Research's first permanent home in their 40 year history.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ishmael Houston-Jones</span> American choreographer (born 1951)

Ishmael Houston-Jones is a choreographer, author, performer, teacher, curator, and arts advocate known for his improvisational dance and language work. His work has been performed in New York City, across the United States, in Europe, Canada, Australia and Latin America. Houston-Jones and Fred Holland shared a 1984 New York Dance and Performance Bessie Award for their work Cowboys, Dreams and Ladders performed at The Kitchen and he shared another Bessie Award in 2011 with writer Dennis Cooper and composer Chris Cochrane for the 2010 revival of their 1985 collaboration, THEM. THEM was performed at Performance Space 122, the American Realness Festival, Springdance in Utrecht, Tanz im August in Berlin, REDCAT in Los Angeles, Centre Pompidou in Paris, and at TAP, Theatre and Auditorium of Poitiers, France. The 1985 premier performance of THEM at PS122 was part of New York's first AIDS benefit.

Dance Gang is an American performance art duo made up of Will Rawls and Kennis Hawkins started in 2006 in New York City.

BodyCartography Project is a dance performance duo composed of Olive Bieringa and Otto Ramstad. Their work is influenced by their studies at the Body-Mind Center, where dance is taught based on a somatic movement approach. The pair have created over 150 dance works, including site-specific creations, stage productions, film, and installations. BodyCartography Project makes dances that engage with the vital materiality of the body, embodiment, and interaction of body and space.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">DonChristian</span> American rapper

DonChristian Jones, also known as DonChristian, is a New York-based is a multi-media, artist, musician, and director. His work spans musical and visual performances, installations, and community murals, blending both genres of painting and hip-hop and referencing classical and contemporary styles. Jones is a founding member and creative director of Public Assistants, a design and production lab focused on mutual aid, programming, and worldbuilding nestled in between Bed-Stuy and Bushwick, Brooklyn.

Taisha Paggett is a Los Angeles–based choreographer and artist. paggett is a faculty member at University of California, Riverside in the Department of Dance. She has experience working both onstage and in gallery settings. paggett was included in the 2014 Whitney Biennial and Made in LA, the Hammer Museums biennial in 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jennifer Monson</span> American dancer and choreographer

Jennifer Monson is an American dancer and choreographer. She has been actively creating dance work since the 1980s. She works with dance improvisation and creates choreography that is at times improvised or devised through scores, as well as collaborating with other dancers, visual artists, architects and scientists. Monson grew up in southern California and, at one point, wanted to be a park ranger. She was awarded the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists award (1998) and in 2000, Monson received the Creative Capital Performing Arts Award. She now resides in Illinois as a professor at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, after living in Williamsburg in Brooklyn from 1991–2002. At one point, she was also involved with the University of Vermont, where she was a professor at large from 2010–2016 with the dance, environmental studies, and library faculty.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Overlie</span> American choreographer (1946–2020)

Mary Overlie was an American choreographer, dancer, theater artist, professor, author, and the originator of the Six Viewpoints technique for theater and dance. The Six Viewpoints technique is both a philosophical articulation of postmodern performance and a teaching system addressing directing, choreographing, dancing, acting, improvisation, and performance analysis. The Six Viewpoints has been taught in the core curriculum of the Experimental Theater Wing within Tisch School of the Arts at New York University since its inception (1978).

Okwui Okpokwasili is a Nigerian-American artist, performer, choreographer, and writer. Her multidisciplinary performances draw upon her training in theatre, and she describes her work as at "the intersection of theatre, dance, and the installation." Several of her works relate to historical events in Nigeria. She is especially interested in cultural and historical memory and how the Western imagination perceives African bodies.

Lindsay Benedict is an artist living in New York City who works in Super 8 and 16mm film, performance, sound, text and painting. Her works explore cultural boundaries through intimate relationships. She is also an adjunct professor in the Fine Arts department at Parsons, The New School in New York City.

Ryan Ponder McNamara is an American artist known for fusing dance, theater, and history into situation-specific, collaborative performances. McNamara has held performances and exhibitions at Art Basel, The High Line, Dallas Symphony Orchestra, The Whitney Museum, MoMA P.S.1, and The Kitchen amongst other places.

Ashley Hunt is an American artist, activist, writer and educator, primarily known for his photographic and video works on the American prison system, mass incarceration and the prison abolition movement. He is currently a faculty member of the School of Art at the California Institute of the Arts.

Jerron Herman is an American choreographer, dancer, performance artist, writer and a teacher for the Dream Project at National Dance Institute for children with disabilities. He grew up in California as part of a religious and art loving family. He has the movement disorder Cerebral palsy, the symptoms of which he has absorbed into his dance movements.

References

  1. New York Live Arts Organization bio
  2. Willis, Tara Aisha. Program Notes for What Remains by Claudia Rankine and Will Rawls. Museum of Contemporary Art Warehouse Space, Chicago, IL, 9 December 2018.
  3. "Will Rawls Performs the Planet Eaters at Chocolate Factory." November 14, 2013.
  4. ""Will Rawls, The Planet Eaters."". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  5. Text from the exhibition "of words and other gestures" Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine curated by Chiara Vecchiarelli
  6. Description of "Folk You! Folk Me Too!" from Tanzquartier's website
  7. Review of Will Rawls' work in The Huffington Post
  8. PDF of "Leap of Fake" by Will Rawls in 'SCORES N°4: on addressing' pp 40-47
  9. "Dispatch from Documenta (13): Will Rawls in Conversation with Thomas J. Lax" Archived 2016-07-29 at the Wayback Machine from The Studio Museum of Harlem
  10. "Lindsay Benedict in conversation with Will Rawls" in Critical Correspondence
  11. "Megan Byrne, Michael Mahalchick, Will Rawls, and Regina Rocke in conversation with Levi Gonzalez" in Critical Correspondence
  12. "Milka Djordjevich, Nohemà Montzerrat Contreras, Sarah Beth Percival, Will Rawls, and Otto Ramstad in conversation with Alejandra Martorell" in Critical Correspondence
  13. ""Critical Correspondence." in Movement Research". Archived from the original on 2014-04-24. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  14. "BRIC Arts Media bio". Archived from the original on 2014-04-13. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  15. ""Nicholas Leichter Dance kills it at the Joyce." review in Off Off Off dance". Archived from the original on 2019-10-03. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  16. List of dancers for "This Variation" Archived 2014-04-13 at the Wayback Machine at documenta (13)
  17. "Some at MoMA Show Forget 'Look but Don't Touch'" an article in the New York Times
  18. "The Show Must Go On at MoMa" from Agence Pistache blog
  19. "FrenchCulture.org announcement of Alain Buffard's "Baron Samedi"". Archived from the original on 2016-03-15. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  20. "Will Rawls contribution to Agora". Archived from the original on 2023-05-30. Retrieved 2014-04-09.
  21. Sens Production list of artists
  22. Davide Balula's website
  23. "MR Festival 2009: Role Call: Hostess, Prophet" article by Clare Byrne
  24. "The Protagonists: Documents of Dance and Debate" at Danspace Project
  25. "I am Legend" article in the New York Times
  26. Review of 'Dog Breaks: Part Two of Dog Trilogy' Archived 2014-04-09 at the Wayback Machine at Dance Theatre Workshop
  27. Video of Dance Gang's 'Single Ladies' performance
  28. "Kanye West Watches While Naked Woman, Performance Artists Pay Tribute To 808s & Heartbreak" from MTV news
  29. Information about the exhibition "In Pursuit: Art on Dating" at the Ise Cultural Foundation.
  30. "*The Tony Cokes Remixes* No. 1". 17 June 2018.
  31. "Simone Forti's Dance Constructions | MoMA".
  32. Triple Canopy website