Degenerate Art Ensemble

Degenerate Art Ensemble
Origin Seattle, Wa USA
Founding 1999 (17 years ago)
Genre Performance and Visual Arts
Website http://degenerateartensemble.com

Degenerate Art Ensemble (often abbreviated DAE) is a Seattle-based multi-art performance company whose work is inspired by punk, comics, cinema, nightmares and fairy tales driven by live music and visceral movement theater and dance.[1] The group was founded and is co-directed by dancer/performer/director Haruko Nishimura and composer/conductor/performer Joshua Kohl. Degenerate Art Ensemble is both a multi-discipline performance company and a band, having performed major dance and live music works, orchestral concerts, rock shows and site-specific street spectacles.

"We aim to achieve the intensity of a sacrificial rite to tear away the waking world revealing alternate realities filled with characters that are transformers expressing unimaginable possibilities. We throw audiences into this world, asking them to make sounds en-masse enveloping and activating space. Characters climb over the audience – removing the barriers that normally separate us, creating an environment that arouses our interconnectedness." -Kohl

The group has performed both music shows and dance/theater performance works in 10 countries of North America and Europe in festivals, theaters, clubs and museums.[2]

Style and Influences

Co-founder Nishimura uses her study of Butoh dance and experimental physical theater to create the imagery Degenerate Art Ensemble has come to be synonymous for. As a director and performer, Nishimura has been inspired to explore the relationship between performer's and the patrons; which can often be experienced in attending one of their performances. Nishimura and the team are inspired by the idea of "collision and conflict—with the goal of awakening and transformation".[3] Kohl, whom both composes and conducts the music for the group, utilizes both traditional and newly designed instruments to create the unique sounds for DAE and the Big Band Garage Orchestra.[4] Kohl's approach to the sound of the group is to create music that is "genere-free"- a sound that crosses boundaries and blurs the lines between classical, punk and indie styles.[5]

Big Band Garage Orchestra (2001–2006)

In 2001 Degenerate Art Ensemble formed its first "Big Band Garage Orchestra" with a lineup of drums, guitar, bass, two trumpets, tenor sax, violin, percussion and Nishimura on vocals with Kohl conducting.[6] The group played a punk-jazz style with extreme dynamics ranging from gentle lullabies like Dreams from Wounded Mouth (co-composed by Kohl and Nishimura) to furious jazz/punk/thrash tunes like "Oni Goroshi" (composed by Jherek Bischoff). From 2001 until 2006 the big band toured Europe four times with shows in Germany, Netherlands, France, Italy, Slovenia, Slovakia, Czech Republic and Poland including both music shows and dance theater engagements.[7]

At the Frye Art Museum

The first art exhibition and museum project showcasing Degenerate Art Ensemble was the culmination of a year-long dialogue between Frye Art Museum curator Robin Held and the artists of Degenerate Art Ensemble in 2011.[8] The survey of the group's work filled the entire museum, featuring 14 artists and five large scale works inspired by the ambitious all-sensory productions the group is known for creating: a Weeble Wobble princess that battles ninjas, a surgery ice cream truck, a tuning nest in a listening forest, and the Slug Princess that devours cabbages in a microscopic world.[9]

Grants and Awards

Collaborations

Degenerate Art Ensemble has collaborated with many influential and highly respected groups and individuals. DAE has worked with Seattle photographer Steven Miller on multiple projects including Predator's Songstress and Cuckoo Crow to create the elaborate visuals used in performances.[10] In November 2013, Degenerate Art Ensemble collaborated with classical chamber ensemble Kronos Quartet for their 40th anniversary celebration at the Neptune Theatre in Seattle.[11][12] Over the years Jherek Bischoff has collaborated with Degenerate Art Ensemble on many different compositions and projects including co-producing their 2007 album Cuckoo Crow. In February 2012 Kohl conducted the music of Bischoff at the Lincoln Center in New York with the Wordless Music Orchestra and vocalists David Byrne and Mirah.[13] In April 2012 DAE was commissioned by renowned theater director Robert Wilson and the Watermill Center to create an interpretation of his and Philip Glass's epic work Einstein on the Beach for the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York. This piece marked the 35th anniversary of the original Einstein On The Beach and was the first time Wilson and Glass have allowed a new interpretation of this work.[14] For their work UNDERBELLY Degenerate Art Ensemble collaborated with cutting edge Olson Kundig Architects. This collaborative multi-media performance was a part of Seattle's Next 50 celebrations in 2012 marking the 50th anniversary of Seattle's World Fair. Olson Kundig has previously worked with the group to create a piece dubbed the Concorde Table for DAE's performance On The Beach in 2012.[15] The group has also worked alongside inkBoat Artistic Director and renowned dancer Shinichi lova-Koga.Koga collaborated on DAE's Rinko as special guest choreographer and dancer in 2000.[16] Composer Violinist Eyvind Kang has also collaborated with Degenerate Art Ensemble on multiple compositions and performances.[17]

Early years – The Young Composers Collective (1993–1998)

Degenerate Art Ensemble grew out of an earlier group led by Kohl and Nishimura called The Young Composers Collective founded in Seattle in 1994, a morphing 17-20 member big band / orchestra that hosted performance artists, modern classical / jazz / rock composers and world-music practitioners performing wildly mixed programs in rock clubs around Seattle and eventually the San Francisco Bay Area.[18] By the late 1990s the collective had shifted towards more visual and dance-centric performances and in 1999 during the creation of their work Scream!Liondogs, which explored the psychology of fascism, renamed the group Degenerate Art Ensemble as it is known today – named after the Degenerate Art Exhibition in Munich in 1937. For the group the name is a "freak flag" of free expression.[19]

Notable performance works

Discography

DAE has recorded and released nine albums of their music including recordings of works for stage, silent film and music for music's sake.

With Eyvind Kang

References

  1. "Degnerate Art Ensemble". Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  2. "Degnerate Art Ensemble". Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  3. "Degnerate Art Ensemble". Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  4. "Frye Art Museum: Artist Bios". Frye Art Museum. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  5. "Creative Capital Grantee: Joshua Kohl". Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  6. "inkBoat: Bios". Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  7. "inkBoat: Bios". Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  8. Frye Art Museum. "Frye Art Museum". Retrieved 27 March 2014.
  9. Upchurch, Michael. "Seattle's Degenerate Art Ensemble gets the museum treatment at the Frye". Retrieved 27 March 2014.
  10. Upchurch, Michael. [.http://seattletimes.com/html/thearts/2014767411_dae17.html "Seattle's Degenerate Art Ensemble gets the museum treatment at the Frye"] Check |url= value (help). Seattle Times. Retrieved 17 December 2013.
  11. Upchurch, Michael (14 November 2013). "Kronos Joins Forces with DAE for Show at the Neptune". Seattle Times. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  12. Upchurch, Michael (14 November 2013). "Kronos Joins Forces with DAE for Show at the Neptune". Seattle Times. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  13. "Kaufman Music Center Lineup" (PDF). Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  14. "Creative Capital Grantee: Joshua Kohl". Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  15. "Concorde Table for Degenerate Art Ensemble". Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  16. "inkBoat Bio: Koga". Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  17. "Frye Art Museum: DAE Members". Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  18. "Frye Art Museum". Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  19. "Frye Art Museum: Exhibitions". Retrieved 18 December 2013.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.