Media Release Meet the New Breed

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Media Release Meet the New Breed NS MEDIA RELEASE June 16, 2014 For immediate release MEET THE NEW BREED Five young up and coming Australian choreographers invited to create works on Sydney Dance Company in 2014 Sydney Dance Company and Carriageworks have developed an exciting new partnership to commission and present five up and coming Australian choreographers’ work. Each will be given the opportunity to create work on Australia’s leading contemporary dance company, ahead of a limited season at Carriageworks from 5 to 8 November this year. The quintet have been selected as the first round of participants in New Breed, a three-year program co-presented by Sydney Dance Company and Carriageworks, which will see the next generation of Australia’s choreographers given a coveted opportunity, to create works on some of Australia’s leading and most versatile contemporary dancers. Over the coming months independent choreographers Lee Serle and Gabrielle Nankivell and Sydney Dance Company dancers Cass Mortimer Eipper, Charmene Yap and Juliette Barton, will each be given time in the studios with the Sydney Dance Company ensemble, to create their short works, ready for a November premiere. Serle, Nankivell and Mortimer Eipper, each have some choreographic experience and will create works of approximately 20 minutes duration, whilst Yap and Barton will create shorter pieces, to mark their choreographic debuts. Sydney Dance Company Artistic Director Rafael Bonachela says he’s thrilled that through this partnership with Carriageworks and the support of the Balnaves Foundation, Sydney Dance Company is able to build on its history of supporting the next generation of young up and coming Australian choreographers. Sydney Dance Co Sydney Dance Company, The Wharf, Pier 4, 15 Hickson Road, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia NS MEDIA RELEASE June 16, 2014 For immediate release “The reason that I am here now, working in this position is because when I was a dancer, full-time for 12 years, I also had the curiosity and the desire to choreograph,” Bonachela comments. “Within the structure of the company I was working for I was given the opportunity to create work and to practice the craft of choreography. Without practice it is impossible to learn and grow. It’s about doing it, putting your ideas on the stage and seeing what works.” Bonachela says he wanted to showcase the diversity of choreographic ideas through the New Breed initiative and he formed the backbone of the 2014 program by selecting two independent choreographers with distinct choreographic styles. Whilst Serle, an inaugural recipient of the Australia Council’s Creative Australia Fellowship in 2012, and the first Australian to be awarded the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Initiative for dance, is interested in abstract works that are conceptually driven and structurally complex, Nankevill’s works are typically high energy and theatrical, informed by her extensive physical theatre experience. New Breed also provides a unique opportunity for some of Sydney Dance Company’s dancers to step off stage and into the choreographic arena, where they can apply the knowledge and ideas they have gained working with the incredible range of choreographers that contribute to the Company’s program each year. Cass Mortimer Eipper was an obvious choice for the program based on his experience and interest in choreography over a number of years. Prior to joining Sydney Dance Company last year he was co-director of the Australian dance/media company, Ludwig. He has choreographed numerous works, including several pieces for West Australian Ballet, and in 2013 was the recipient of a 2013 West Australian Dance Award for Most Outstanding Choreography for his co-creation with Emma Sandall, Fleck&Flecker. Bonachela then invited senior dancers Charmene Yap and Juliette Barton to take part in the program, each making their choreographic debuts with a five to ten minute work. “I know how creative they are and what they’re like when they’re working with me as performers,” says Bonachela. “Ultimately New Breed is an opportunity for them to see if choreography is something they enjoy and want to pursue.” “For me, it’s also an opportunity to follow my instinct and test the water, to see who’s out there who can filter into the main repertoire of the company in the future,” he concludes. Lisa Havilah, Director of Carriageworks said ‘Carriageworks has a strong history of commissioning and presenting national and international contemporary dance within its Artistic Program so collaborating with Australia’s leading contemporary dance company is an exciting partnership for the institution. Carriageworks is unrelenting in its support of artists and we are thrilled to be working with Sydney Dance Company to support the next generation of Australian choreographers for New Breed.’ New Breed will be presented as an exclusive season of five shows only, from 5 to 8 November 2014, at Carriageworks. Tickets are on sale now, all $35, for more information and bookings go to www.sydneydancecompany.com/newbreed or www.carriageworks.com.au. The New Breed 2014 program has been made possible through generous support from the Balnaves Foundation. ENDS Image: The five New Breed 2014 choreographers – (L to R) Cass Mortimer Eipper, Gabrielle Nankivell, Charmen Yap, Lee Serle and Juliette Barton. Photo by Peter Greig. Sydney Dance Co Sydney Dance Company, The Wharf, Pier 4, 15 Hickson Road, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia NS MEDIA RELEASE June 16, 2014 For immediate release MEDIA CONTACT For more information, images or interviews contact: UNTIL JULY 25 Chontelle Clark, Marketing Coordinator, Sydney Dance Company, / [email protected] / 02 9258 4821 / 0402 623 199 FROM JULY 28 Julie Clark, Publicist, Sydney Dance Company, / [email protected] / 0409 517 738 ABOUT SYDNEY DANCE COMPANY Sydney Dance Company is Australia’s leading contemporary dance company, presenting new works in Sydney, around Australia and internationally under the artistic direction of Rafael Bonachela. More information, www.sydneydancecompany.com ABOUT CARRIAGEWORKS Carriageworks is the largest and most significant contemporary multi-arts centre of its kind in Australia. Engaging artists and audiences with contemporary ideas and issues, Carriageworks has a reputation for presenting large scale immersive programs that are artist led and emerge from Carriageworks’ commitment to reflecting social and cultural diversity. The Carriageworks artistic program is ambitious, risk taking and unrelenting in its support of artists. carriageworks.com.au ABOUT NEW BREED Sydney Dance Company’s New Breed program debuted in 2009, as a platform for the ‘New Breed’ of Australian choreographic talent to introduce their work to local audiences. The program is being continued in 2014 – 2016, thanks to a new partnership with Carriageworks, and generous support from the Balnaves Foundation. Being given such an opportunity to work with the Sydney Dance Company dancers has been likened to ‘being taken into a Rolls-Royce showroom [and] … given a bunch of keys ’ (The Australian). Set to be a wonderful exploration of fresh ideas and movement, New Breed will unleash the prowess of our dancers through five short works. Sydney Dance Co Sydney Dance Company, The Wharf, Pier 4, 15 Hickson Road, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia NS MEDIA RELEASE June 16, 2014 For immediate release CHOREOGRAPHER BIOS Juliette Barton Juliette was born in Perth, where she completed the majority of her dance training, first at the Graduate College of Dance with Terri Charlesworth, and then at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA) with an Advanced Diploma in Dance in 2003. Her studies followed with a Bachelor of Arts in Dance in 2004, obtained as a member of LINK Dance Company in affiliation with Edith Cowan University. She also studied at Purchase College Dance Conservatory in New York for 6 months through the exchange program at WAAPA. In her early professional career Juliette worked with Australian choreographers Sue Peacock and Olivia Millard before heading overseas in 2006. During this time she performed with Diversions Dance Company in Wales before joining Russell Maliphant Company, with whom she toured extensively over a period of three years. Throughout 2008 Juliette worked on a new creation with London based choreographer Zoi Dimitriou, Goddesses in Exile, a duet which premiered at The Robin Howard Dance Theatre, The Place, London, followed by performances at the Athens Festival and at the Bonnie Bird Theatre, Laban, London. She also performed in The Place Prize with choreographer Kyoung Shin Kim in his new creation, Oblivion, and was employed as a dancer for a choreographic research project directed by Wayne McGregor at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden. Juliette joined Sydney Dance Company in 2009 and has since worked with choreographer / director Rafael Bonachela as well as guest choreographers Aszure Barton, Kenneth Kvarnstrom, Adam Linder, Emanuel Gat, Lisa Wilson, Emily Amisano, Alexander Ekman, Jacopo Godani and Gideon Obarzanek. Juliette has toured with the Company to Venice, New York, Barcelona, London, South America, North America, Russia and China. Cass Mortimer Eipper Born in Melbourne, Cass trained at the Australian Ballet School and performed with the West Australian Ballet from 2006-2009 being named Most Outstanding Dancer and Choreographer to Watch in Dance Australia’s Critics Survey 2009. While working with the West Australian Ballet, Cass was commissioned to choreograph numerous works, including It Is, Soul Searching, Adaptation, Ludwig Ravelling and in 2013, Yes I’ll move for you which was recently mentioned in the 2013 Dance Australia Critics Survey for Best New Work and Most Outstanding Choreographer. In 2010 Cass became co-director of the Australian dance/media company, Ludwig, where he created and performed in several dance works including Solo 1.5, which was awarded Most Outstanding Performance at the 2011 Rome International Choreography Competition. In 2012 he was awarded 3rd prize at the Stuttgart International Dance Theatre Festival for his performance in BodySong, choreographed by Emma Sandall.
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