SOLD OUT! Moriah Evans, Social Dance 1-8: Index

Thu 22 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Fri 23 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Sat 24 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Sun 25 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Thu 29 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Fri 30 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Sat 31 Jan, 2015, 8pm
Sun 01 Feb, 2015, 8pm
($5 - 0) All-Access

All performance are now SOLD OUT! In eight performances, January 22nd through February 1st, 2015, choreographer Moriah Evans premieres Social Dance 1-8: Index, commissioned as part of ISSUE Project Room's Artist-In-Residence program. Created especially for ISSUE's 22 Boerum Place theater, the work investigates a system of patterns that propel bodies through space and affective states. Social Dance 1-8: Index considers how we dance together, and build social relationships through choreographic pathways that are known and practiced in dancing and witnessing.

Featuring performers Maggie Cloud, Lizzie Feidelson, Benny Olk, Sarah Beth Percival and Jeremy Pheiffer; light design by Madeline Best, sound score by David Watson, and costumes by Alan Calpe and Christopher Crawford.

This will be the final performance in our 22 Boerum Place theater before our 18-month renovation period begins. Seating is extremely limited for all shows, advance tickets are required.


Social Dance 1-8: Index asks us to witness a dance as a means of sharing within the geometric architecture of ISSUE Project Room's historic McKim Mead and White-designed ballroom. Dancers travel along various trajectories in modes that imply unity, differentiation, competition, cooperation and partnership through the practice of dancing together within the theatrical paradigm of this particular location.

Social Dance 1-8: Index explores movement's constant states of relation through a choreographic system. A series of rules operate as momentary technologies for embodiment and codes of behavior. Body parts and positions, space and selves are examined through pattern and its variation. The simple yet intricate forms of Social Dance 1-8: Index ask: when does a dance / a dancer decimate choreography? When does a dance / a dancer ensure the regimen of choreographic structure? When does choreography decimate the possibility for the emergence of a dance or an individual personality? Personalities of the individual performers are sometimes showcased and sometimes muted through the adherence to and departure from the demands of the group. Embedded within the quest of abstract and expressive steps is a wish to reveal a portrait of a person in the act of dancing.

Social Dance 1-8: Index attempts to acknowledge the performance event as a site for a precious yet impermanent community gathering. A dance exists only in the present; all the while, it must contain the past, present and future. Can the structure and strategies of this choreography produce a means to read the creation of a dance, a community and the personalities of those performing and observing within it?
— Moriah Evans



Moriah Evans’ choreographic work has been presented at Danspace Project, the Kitchen, MoMA/PS1, Judson Church, AUNTS, American Realness, BAX, DNA, The New Museum, The Chocolate Factory, Dixon Place, CalIT2, Kamp Nagel and Theatre de l’Usine. She is the Editor-in-Chief of the Performance Journal and has been involved with the publication since 2009. During her 2011-2013 residency at Movement Research, she initiated The Bureau for the Future of Choreography. In recent years, she has had the pleasure to work with Trajal Harrell, INPEX, Tino Sehgal, Sarah Michelson and Xavier Le Roy.



"Artforum Picks: Moriah Evans", Abraham Adams reviews in Artforum.

"Choreography is very rarely natural", Gia Kourlas interviews Moriah Evans in Time Out New York.

"Dace Review: Moriah Evans’s ‘Social Dance 1-8: Index’ at Issue Project Room", Brian Seibert reviews in The New York Times.

"Everyone Here is Part of the Act", Brian Schaefer previews Moriah Evans in The New York Times.

Established in 2006, ISSUE's annual Artist-in-Residence program provides 5 emerging artists each with a year-long residency including rehearsal space, production, curatorial, and pr/marketing support to create new works, reach the next stage in their artistic development, and gain exposure to a broad public audience.

ISSUE’s Artist-in-Residence program is made possible, in part, through generous support from the Jerome Foundation, with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and with the support of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.