3. Mar
Review: “What Is Beauty?”
“With its decidedly non-narrative engagement with its theme and high degree of experimentalist abstraction, Beauty will most directly appeal to aficionados of avant-garde dance or movement theater.“ – Leah Richards & John Ziegler, Culture Catch (2017) for Frantic Beauty
3. Mar
Review: “The Primordial Becoming of Ximena Garnica and Shige Moriya’s Frantic Beauty
“Frantic Beauty is both alarming and compelling in the performers’ ability to bring opposing energies seamlessly together into one performance— they propel themselves in a continuous state of manic, almost violent energy, and then suddenly slow to a calm and pensive state. In one section, the dancers are crouched...Continued
3. Mar
Review: “Exquisite Growth in ‘Frantic Beauty'”
“It leaves the audience questioning their place in the world, and the landscape they should inhabit.“ – Marcina Zaccaria, The Theatre Times (2017) for Frantic Beauty
3. Mar
Review: “Frantic Beauty – BAM Fisher, New York”
“Frantic Beauty is a thoughtful piece of dance, but without Ximena Garnica and Shige Moriya’s careful visual design, it would be incomplete. The lighting is such a vital part of the work that it feels like a sixth dancer.“ – Carrie Lee O’Dell, The Reviews Hub (2017), for Frantic...Continued
3. Mar
Interview: “Dance that Searches for Beauty and Fights For It”
“One could describe this incomparable event as an exploration of dance; however, the 75-minute performance engages the viewer in unique ways, activating all the visual, aural, olfactory, and touch sensibilities.“ – Jane Chin Davidson, HYPERALLERGIC (2019), for Frantic Beauty
3. Mar
Review: “IMPRESSIONS: LEIMAY’s ‘Frantic Beauty’ at Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Fisher”
“LEIMAY’s Frantic Beauty, which received its premiere at Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Fisher, exposes the cathartic and ethereal possibilities of the grotesque.“ – Erin Bomboy, Dance Enthusiast (2017) for Frantic Beauty
3. Mar
Interview: “Bodies on the Edge: Ximena Garnica and Shige Moriya’s ‘Becoming’ Pentalogy”
“Together they have been developing LUDUS, an ongoing practice that combines the ensemble’s physical conditioning, visual art craft, aesthetics, and philosophies while providing another point of access to their creations and process.” – Ivan Talijancic, Howlround (2017) Interview for Frantic Beauty
3. Mar
