'What's the point?' Oona Doherty's resonant ambivalence
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, December 26, 2024


'What's the point?' Oona Doherty's resonant ambivalence
Dancers perform Oona Doherty’s “Navy Blue” at the Joyce Theater in New York on June 4, 2024. The choreographer’s “Navy Blue” is the rare work to express the emotions of life in pandemic lockdown. (Rachel Papo/The New York Times)

by Brian Seibert



NEW YORK, NY.- Despite the enormous impact that the pandemic had on dance, few works have emerged that capture the experience. Plenty of pieces have been shaped by isolation and social-distancing rules, but not many have made something of the emotions of lockdown. Oona Doherty’s “Navy Blue,” from 2022, is one, and the feelings it effectively expresses are those of the lucky: dread, helplessness, guilt.

At the start of “Navy Blue,” which had its New York premiere at the Joyce Theater on Tuesday, a dozen dancers are lined up, dressed in mandarin-collared workers’ suits, their heads shaking so fast that their faces blur. Mostly they move in loose unison: sinking, crouching, clumping; stumbling, circling, fleeing with nowhere to go.

Although the music is Rachmaninoff, big and romantic, the dancers shrink from large gestures, wary-eyed. When they raise a fist in the air, it looks less like the defiant punch of striking workers or a Black Power salute than like the stance of a straphanger, pendant and insecure. They approximate ethereal ballet steps and point at the stars, but all the reaching quickly retracts or deflates, as if in embarrassment.

There’s a cracking sound like a gunshot, and a dancer falls. Then another and another. It doesn’t matter whether the performers try to be moving targets, hoping someone else will be chosen, or offer themselves as sacrifices. The slaughter is random (except that it isn’t — the choreographer is the invisible killer). Before long, everyone joins together in a new unison: the stillness of death. Video projections (by Nadir Bouassria) outline each body in bloodlike pools of blue.

Eventually, the dancers rise and take on yet another kind of unison, all mouthing a single disembodied voice: Doherty’s. Her speech (written with Bush Moukarzel) floats a premise of futurity and cosmic distance — she thanks the audience for traveling 4.5 billion years to see a show; Jamie xx’s score supplies electronic anomie — yet it is clearly a lockdown rant.

Doherty wallows in human insignificance (each of us is “a pale blue dot on a pale blue dot”). She lists historical villains and violent events as if doomscrolling. She indicts herself, itemizing the costs of the production. “What’s the point?” she asks.

This rant, with its questions about the meaning of art and the meaning of life, is somewhat adolescent in tone. That impression is heightened by the movement that accompanies it: purposely messier, driven more by feeling than form. Some dancers are able to focus this better than others.

Yet “Navy Blue” remains compelling. While it lacks Doherty’s physical presence, her unguarded charisma and authenticity come through in her voice in an unstable mix of ambition and humility. After her 2015 breakout solo, “Hope Hunt and the Ascension Into Lazarus,” her career rocketed at a speed that must have felt vertiginous and doubt inducing. She’s expressed as much in interviews. Her ambivalence about her career comes through, sublimated and not, in her art. “What’s the point?” is her continual question, and it finds resonant form in “Navy Blue.”

“Look again,” Doherty keeps saying in her rant, as much to herself as to the audience. She’s looking for a way out. She arrives, with a rueful laugh, at gratitude for “the importance of being unimportant” and the admonition that “we must love one another and die.” Onstage, a cathartically flailing solo, like the Chosen One’s dance of death in “The Rite of Spring,” is followed by a group hug.

The hope that gesture is trying to convey isn’t all that convincing. She’s still hunting for hope, and that makes her an artist to watch.



Oona Doherty: Through Sunday at the Joyce Theater, Manhattan; joyce.org.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

June 11, 2024

Boca Raton Museum Presents Photography from the Doug McCraw Collection

Turner Prize nominee Delaine Le Bas opens major show at Tramway

Gagosian presents wall works by Donald Judd in Basel

JR opens his fourth exhibition at Perrotin Paris

The Portland Art Museum presents 'Monet to Matisse: French Moderns'

Thames & Hudson to release 'The Avant-Gardists: Artists in Revolt in the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union 1917-1935'

Christie's announces London Summer Season sales

University Archives announces highlights included in online-only auction, June 26th

James Cohan now represents Kennedy Yanko

MOA reopens to the public following successful completion of seismic upgrades of iconic Great Hall

Casey Kaplan now representing Sydney Cain

Lost Edward Bawden comes to light after 80 years

Dynamic group exhibition examines an often overlooked artistic language

Building upgrades for Brett Whiteley Studio as exhibition tour starts in July

Swann to offer illustration art featuring highlights from the Collection of Jules Feiffer

Jean-Philippe Allard, jazz producer and musicians' advocate, dies at 67

Jorge Pardo sculpture installation opens at Landcraft Gardens

Cynthia Hawkins's first solo exhibition at kaufmann repetto opens in Milan

Daylight to publish 'The Many Pleasures: Found Art in New York City' by Barton Lewis

In 'Clipped,' Cleopatra Coleman spreads her wings

'What's the point?' Oona Doherty's resonant ambivalence

Photo London announces a new Director for the Tenth edition of the Fair

The Frye Art Museum opens a major survey of photographs, video, and large-scale installations by Stephanie Syjuco

Obama marks milestone in construction of presidential center

Redefining Kitchen Experiences: Y2 Integrated Cooker's Design Revolution and Its Visionary Creators

Digital Marketing Trends in 2024

How Self Storage in Dartmouth Supports the Tiny Living Movement




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful