June dancewatch: griot, riverdance, obt and a chat with barry johnson about portland’s evolving contemporary scene • oregon artswatch

June dancewatch: griot, riverdance, obt and a chat with barry johnson about portland’s evolving contemporary scene • oregon artswatch

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Two of my favorite people will be sitting down face to face this month over bagels and coffee, no less, at Performance Works NW to talk about Portland’s dance history. As part of _Mycelium


Dreams: the PASTfuture Long-Form Archival Conversation Series_, Portland dance artist Linda K. Johnson continues her work documenting the histories of veteran Portland dancers and


dance-adjacent artists. This month, on June 8, she’ll be in conversation with Barry Johnson, my fearless editor and longtime arts journalist, and the reason I’m writing for Oregon ArtsWatch


today. For the past 14 years, Barry Johnson, an incredibly gifted editor, writer, and storyteller who has been writing about dance and culture for decades, has also been my patient and


generous mentor here at _Oregon ArtsWatch_. We first met in a four-week class he taught on arts journalism at The Attic, A Haven for Writers in Portland. The two-hour Tuesday evening


sessions offered a welcome respite and creative outlet during a time when I was a full-time mother to a four-year-old and managing life at home. Each week, Johnson brought in a different


article to analyze and discuss with our lively class full of enthusiastic art lovers, guiding us through the structure and purpose of arts writing for journalism through colorful


storytelling and joy.  At the end of the workshop, I wrote my first story for him: a review of _Broken Flowers_, a dance work by Portland choreographer Agnieszka Laska that addressed the


horrors of human trafficking. That piece marked the beginning of my writing career with Oregon ArtsWatch, and Johnson has been there ever since, offering feedback, encouragement, and


insight. Our conversations, most of which have taken place in the margins of my Google Docs, have profoundly shaped my approach to writing and deepened my understanding of dance, culture,


and the role of journalism in nurturing the arts community I live in. Last week, we met up to catch up — and for me to interview him ahead of his upcoming conversation with Linda.  What I


didn’t know was that Johnson’s own path into dance writing began with a kind of cosmic alignment of several events that shaped his thinking. In 1978, shortly after moving to Seattle, Johnson


attended Bumbershoot, a major Seattle music and dance festival, and accidentally stumbled upon American dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham’s performance. Sponsor What he saw was


Cunningham’s solo _50 Looks_, which featured Cunningham walking down the diagonals of the stage holding a series of still poses while carrying a chair. Johnson was mesmerized. “And all he’s


doing is walking, and his hips are popping in that kind of Merce way that Merce’s hip kinda pops when he walks. And his head’s high, and he’s holding that chair. And I’m watching him get to


the end, and he starts walking back, and I’m like totally entranced by Merce walking with that chair back and forth; that’s all that’s going on; there’s no music, there’s no nothing. There’s


Merce walking to and fro on the stage with this chair.” “And after it was over, I went, ‘Why the hell was that interesting?’ I had this perplexity about dance as a result; I just couldn’t


figure out why Merce was so cool, why was that so interesting, what was it, was that dancing, I don’t know. “ In 1978, when Johnson was working as the advertising manager at the _Seattle


Sun_ newspaper, a dancer came in to place a classified ad for a class she was planning to teach. She was charismatic, persuasive, and deeply embedded in the city’s modern dance scene. After


Barry helped her craft the ad, she looked at him and said, “You should come take my class.” He did — and spent the next couple of months learning modern dance and stepping into a community


he hadn’t previously known. When the Twyla Tharp Dance Company came to the University of Washington not long after, Johnson knew he was interested in journalism. He volunteered to write a


review of the performance for the _Sun_. Over three days, he immersed himself in the dancers’ world. He watched rehearsals, interviewed company members, and even went out dancing with them


in the evenings. “Sometimes they would have two rehearsals in a day,” he said, “and in between, they would play tennis!” “These people were crazy; they were madly physical,” he recalled.


“They were on a totally different level of physicality. They were pushing right to the limit of the human body’s ability to control itself all the time. They were just, on a centrifuge, like


the stage was a centrifuge, and they were flung to the edges of the stage and then brought back around. My god, it was thrilling … it was really good; I was hooked.” “The night of the


performance comes. They dance, I watch it, I take notes — books full of notes. Then I ask myself, ‘What’s a dance review?'” Sponsor For almost two days, with the help of a friend and


news reporter from the _Sun_, he started working on the story. “I probably wrote 70 versions of the story, back and forth between the two of us. I was writing for him, something he would


understand. And gradually, in the process of those versions, he was teaching me some of the basic structures of a dance review for a newspaper. I was learning how newspaper stories operate.


And so that’s how I started. I got positive feedback on the article; you need that.” “What really drew me in,” Johnson added, “was modern dance. That earthier, grand union kind of dance. The


kind that asked: What is dance? Who gets to do it? Why do we have these structures? Why does every dancer have to be small and skinny?” He was interested in the freedom of the form and the


way it challenged convention. It all tied back, he said, to that moment watching Merce. “When I see a dancer perform, I love it when it feels like they’re making it up right now — even


though I know they’re not, unless it’s improv,” he said. “It gives this sense that we’re exploring bodies, minds, and emotions together.” For him, watching dance is both a physical and


emotional mirror. “Ultimately, it translates to: I should be exploring my own life in the way she’s exploring movement.” Laughing, he says, “We’re always trying to fix ourselves.” When I


asked him why he started writing about dance, Johnson offered this: “When I read the dance writing in Seattle at the time, I found it unreadable. The critics had this pontificating attitude,


like they were guarding some standard and put on Earth to grade dancers. I don’t like that kind of writing. As a reader, I want more than a writer’s judgment, I want to see their receipts.


Show me where the dance is coming from, what it felt like to sit there, how the audience reacted.” “I never got that kind of bodily experience when I was reading their stuff. It seemed


remote. I wanted a hotter, closer experience. I think a piece should be like a movie. Sometimes I have a close-up, sometimes I’m at midrange, sometimes I’m across the street or at 10,000


feet, even, surveying. The best stories, I think, take you and give you different kinds of perspectives on the subject. So I wanted to do that.” Johnson moved to Portland in the early 1980s


and worked as an editor and writer for _Willamette Week_. In 1983 he joined _The Oregonian_ as editor of the arts section. He left _The Oregonian_ in 2009, amid the collapse of print


journalism, and soon after founded the digital-only Oregon ArtsWatch to help revitalize arts writing and thinking in the city. Sponsor He’s been observing Portland’s dance scene since the


1970s, watching artists’ careers unfold, intertwine, and evolve. He’s seen them collaborate, perform in each other’s work, and then strike out on their own. If you love _Between Two


Ferns_–style banter, PBS-style deep dives, and hearing artists talk candidly about their lives, work, and the culture that shapes them, this one’s for you. Come for the bagels and coffee;


stay for the stories. You can learn more about Barry Johnson and Portland’s dance scene over the last 50 years at Linda K. Johnson’s upcoming interview with him, part of the _Mycelium


Dreams_ series at Performance Works NW. Don’t miss it. PERFORMANCES THIS MONTH! Griot (Work-in-Progress Showing) Rejoice! Diaspora Dance Theater 5 p.m. June 1 Reed College, Reed College


Performing Arts Building, 3203 S.E. Woodstock Blvd., Portland A Griot is the memory keeper of a community. A hereditary position passed down through generations in traditional West African


communities, the Griot’s job it is to preserve the community’s history and culture through singing, music, and dance. Join Rejoice! Diaspora Dance Theater as they trace the Griots from


Senegal to Brazil and the American South and the impacts they have had on communities, lineage, and culture.  Oluyinka Akinjiola and Michael Galen’s choreography features music developed and


performed with Tama master and Griot Massamba Diop. The performance also includes an immersive score by Galen, which incorporates field recordings from Brazil and Senegal. Riverdance 30:


The New Generation Presented by Hult Center for the Performing Arts June 3-5 Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Silva Concert Hall, One Eugene Center, Eugene This theatrical production


showcases traditional Irish music and dance, and is known for its electrifying footwork, elaborate costumes, and live music, featuring a score composed by Bill Whelan. It debuted as an


interval act during the Eurovision Song Contest in 1994 and has since revolutionized Irish dance by bringing it to the global stage.  Sponsor The OBT Collection Presented by Oregon Ballet


Theatre June 5-8 Newmark Theatre, 1111 S.W. Broadway, Portland Oregon Ballet Theatre presents a capsule collection of four one-act ballets. _For Pixie_ is a haunting pas de deux set to Nina


Simone’s _Wild is the Wind_, inspired by OBT artistic director Dani Rowe’s grandparents’ fierce and unconventional love story. _Quartet for Five_, choreographed by Bobbi Jene Smith and Or


Schraiber, is an intensely physical contemporary dance accompanied by Philip Glass’s music, performed live by members of the OBT Orchestra. A world premiere from Nicolas Blanc promises to


thrill with a fresh contemporary edge, hailed as “the next big find” by _Classical Voice SF_. The collection closes with _Of Three_, Lauren Flower’s delicate and intimate work for three


dancers that lingers long after the final notes of Chopin’s romantic score. Riverdance 30 – The New Generation Presented by Portland’5 June 6-8 Keller Auditorium, 222 S.W. Clay Street,


Portland This theatrical production. moving north to Portland after its run in Eugene, showcases traditional Irish music and dance. After debuting as an interval act during the Eurovision


Song Contest in 1994, it’s gone on to huge popularity, revolutionizing Irish dance by bringing it to the global stage.  Shine the Light Presented by The Reser 11 a.m. June 7 The Patricia


Reser Center for the Arts, 12625 S.W. Crescent St., Beaverton FREE Join The Reser for a free community open house and celebration. A family-oriented day filled with art appreciation,


interactive activities, and performances by many local groups and artists, it includes PHAME Academy, Rainier Breakers, Abby GoLucky, the Korean Music Institute of Oregon, Mini Shama Ogle


& Troupe, Sultanov Ballet Academy, Congruency Dance Collective, Nartana School of Kuchipudi Dance, Pride of Portland Chorus, New Wave Opera, Sarada Kala Nilayam, The Historical Conjurer,


The Honeybees, and more. Alongside the onstage performances, The Art Gallery at The Reser will host hands-on activity stations for all ages. This event is free and open to everyone. Sponsor


PASTfuture Long Form Archival Conversation Linda K. Johnson with Barry Johnson 11 a.m. June 8 Performance Works NW, 4625 SE 67th Ave, Portland Bagels+coffee+snacks+kind people FREE |


Donations gratefully accepted The PASTfuture Long-Form Archival Conversation Series is part of _Mycelium Dreams_, an ongoing dance cartography and interview project begun in 2022 by Portland


dance and interdisciplinary artist Linda K. Johnson. This archival project invites dance artists to reflect on their artistic journeys and create hand-drawn maps inspired by the


connectivity, reciprocity, and relational quality of mycelium networks. Continuing the theme of interconnectivity, the interview component, _PASTfuture_, aims to create an inclusive oral


record of the stories of dancers in the Portland community. This month, the series features a conversation with Barry Johnson, longtime Portland arts writer, editor, dance lover, and founder


of Oregon ArtsWatch. Student Artist Showcase NW Dance Project 4 p.m. June 8 Portland State University, Lincoln Performance Hall, 1620 S.W. Park Ave. This annual event showcases the talents


of students from NW Dance Project’s Youth Dance Program, featuring performances in ballet, contemporary, jazz, and more. It’s a celebration of the dedication and creativity of young dancers,


providing them with a platform to showcase their talents. Sleeping Beauty and Reawakened Dreams Oregon International Ballet Academy, Choreography and production by Ye Li and  Xuan Cheng


June 14-15 The Patricia Reser Center for the Arts, 2625 S.W. Crescent St., Beaverton Marking its 10th anniversary, Oregon International Ballet Academy (OIBA) presents a landmark performance


at The Patricia Reser Center for the Arts. The celebratory program features a reimagined _Sleeping Beauty_ and the world premiere of _Reawakened Dreams_, a contemporary ballet by acclaimed


choreographer and OIBA Co-Director Ye Li, a tribute to a decade of artistic excellence, bold innovation, and community impact. Co-directed by Xuan Cheng, artistic director of OIBA and ballet


mistress of Hong Kong Ballet, and Ye Li, the program brings together current students, alums, and guest artists — including James Johnson of Oregon Ballet Theatre’s Second Company. It also


features newly worked material from Li’s signature, international prize-winning piece, _The Waiting Room_, woven into the finale.  Sponsor Alembic Artists in Performance  Presented by


Performance Works NW/Linda Austin Dance June 26-29 Performance Works NW, 4625 S.E. 67th Ave., Portland Thursday is a ticketed dress rehearsal and preview, offering a cheaper ticket option.


Unveiling the 11th cohort of Alembic Artists, Performance Works NW/Linda Austin Dance presents three new artists who have been working in the studio over the past year. Sophia Tweed Ahmad,


Kye Grant, and Kai Hynes each brings deeply personal, boundary-blurring practices to performance. In _Inseparables_, Sophia Tweed Ahmad and Ashi Dancler offer a duet rooted in identity,


ancestry, and sound-based ritual, expanding on a solo that premiered in Spain. Kye Grant shares genre-fluid, participatory work shaped by voice, dance, and public space: Projects such as


_Club Alive_ and _Planet Lloyd_ reflect their playful, place-based approach to connection. Kai Hynes presents _Wormgrunt_, a darkly poetic solo that merges butoh and experimental theater,


where sound and sensation evoke the strange stirrings of an unseen world. El Fuego Nuevo: Deseos del Corazon Presented by Ballet Folklorico Academia Gabriela  Noon June 29 The Patricia Reser


Center for the Arts, 2625 S.W. Crescent St., Beaverton Ballet Folklorico Las Rosas de Oregon debuts as a professional company with a vibrant celebration of Mexico’s cultural heritage.


Featuring dancers of all ages from Ballet Folklorico Academia Gabriela, the show journeys from the pre-Hispanic era to the rhythms of Baja California, Sinaloa, and Veracruz, with traditional


dances, colorful costumes, and live music.