Photo © Stephanie Berger, 2012
Photo © Stephanie Berger, 2012
Photo © Stephanie Berger, 2012
Photo © Samantha Siegel
Photo © Samantha Siegel
Photo © Samantha Siegel
Photo © Mark Hanauer
Photo © Mark Hanauer
Photo © Jack Mitchell

REPERTORY/ Astral Converted

Astral Converted (1991), Trisha Brown’s first full evening-length piece, received its world premiere at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., May 14-18, 1991. Commissioned by the National Gallery, the dance was featured in conjunction with the museum’s Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI) exhibition, and concluded the Trisha Brown Company’s 20th anniversary celebrations.

A reworking and lengthening of Astral Convertible (1989)—one of Brown’s earlier collaborations with Rauschenberg—Astral Converted (1991) combines Rauschenberg’s dramatic aluminum towers from the earlier piece with a new score by John Cage. Reconceived for evening-length performances, the choreography combines new and original material, with sections reorganized, and movement rewoven. [1]

As in Astral Convertible (1989) Rauschenberg’s gleaming towers integrate a self-contained system of lighting and sound, using motion sensors to detect the presence of dancers and respond to their movement. Cage’s score, an eight-track recording of live musicians, emanates from tapes lodged within the free-standing mobile towers. [2]

For the premiere performance of Astral Converted (1991), the audience was seated on the National Gallery’s gradually rising steps; the Washington Monument and the U.S. Capitol served as the backdrop, and the evening sky the curtain.

 

 

1. Trisha Brown Company, “Astral Converted (50”), Trisha Brown’s First Full Evening Dance, to Receive World Premiere at the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC,” Press Release (May 13, 1991).

2. Program notes, “Trisha Brown Dance Company.” Performance. London: Saddler’s Wells, May 31, 2005.

 

CHOREOGRAPHY:

Trisha Brown

SOUND:

John Cage, Eight

Visual Design:

Robert Rauschenberg

ORIGINAL CAST:

Liz Carpenter, Lance Gries, Nicole Juralewicz, Kevin Kortan, Gregory Lara, Carolyn Lucas, Diane Madden, Trish Oesterling, Lisa Schmidt, Wil Swanson, David Thomson

NY PREMIERE:

New York City Center, New York, NY, May 6, 1993

US PREMIERE:

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, May 14, 1991

WORLD PREMIERE:

La Ferme du Buisson, Marne-la-Vallée, France, November 24, 1992

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