BOOKING


_RESIDENCIES
_PERFORMANCE
_CHOREOGRAPHY / CLASSES
_MIXED MEDIA WORKSHOPS / SYMPOSIA

_Dance on film

For more information, email: contact@now-id.com

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RESIDENCIES

NOW-ID IS ABLE TO PROVIDE A NUMBER OF DIFFERENT RESIDENCIES, CUSTOMIZED TO YOU.

The below descriptions outline a number of options that can be offered singularly or in combination.  Our offerings range from classes and workshops in dance and design to re-staging or adapting an original works or new performances crafted specifically for a venue in your community. You may choose to work solely with artistic director Charlotte Boye-Christensen or with a team of collaborators we pull from our network in collusion with yours.  Please contact us to discuss how we can best work with you to create an inspiring performance or education event for your community.


1. PERFORMANCE

a. RE-STAGING AN ORiGINAL NOW-ID WORK

RITE OF SPRING

(37 minutes long with no intermission)

Premiering in 2019, NOW-ID’s unique rendition of Rite of Spring was staged below a highway overpass in downtown Salt Lake City in June, 2019. It includes one choreographer, four contemporary dancers, one opera singer, one set designer, one lighting designer and one sound engineer. This rendition can be re-created at a different industrial site and can be done both outdoors again or indoors - we are open to ideas.

A TONAL CARESS

(45 minutes long with no intermission)

Premiering in 2018, A Tonal Caress was staged at Utah Museum of Fine Arts in Salt Lake City and was a collaboration with V.Project in Salt Lake City and Arts Access Victoria in Melbourne, Australia. The production includes 3 contemporary dancers, 1 deaf poet/performer, 2 Auslan sign-language interpreters, 1 choreographer, 1 set designer, 1 sound engineer, 1 lighting designer and 6 performance artists. We would love to adapt this piece in which we aim to seek a deep communicative connection for both deaf and hearing audience and communities to a space or venue in your community.

It's Not Cracker, the title of our contemporary, abbreviated rendition of The Nutcracker, evokes the original in familiarity and seasonality, but is different, contemporary, unique, fun, diverse and serious too.

It's Not Cracker 

(30 minutes long with no intermission)

Premiering in 2016, It's Not Cracker was staged at Utah Museum of Contemporary Art in Salt Lake City. It includes 2 contemporary dancers, 1 performance artist, 7 street dancers, 1 choreographer, 1 set designer, 1 DJ and 1 lighting designer. We would love to adapt this piece which evokes the original Nutcracker in familiarity and seasonality, but is different, contemporary, unique, fun, diverse and serious too to a space or venue in your community.

 

NOW-ID’s fourth major site-specific performance of contemporary dance and design took place July 27, 28 & 29th at Marriott Center for Dance in Salt Lake City and then at the Copenhagen Opera Festival August 2 and 3rd and at Fyn's Opera in Odense, Denmark August 5, 6th 2016. EXODUS was co-produced by NOW-ID and the Figura Ensemble of Copenhagen, Denmark: Choreographed by Charlotte Boye-Christensen Directed by Rolf Heim Composed by Peter Bruun Stage design by Nathan Webster Lighting by Cole Adams Writing by Ursula Olsen Performed by Musicians: Jesper Egelund, Frans Hansen, Anna Klett Performed by Opera Singers: Jakob Bloch Jespersen and Nana Bugge Rasmussen Performed by Dancers: Tara McArthur, Katherine Lawrence and Adrian Fry (courtesy of Ballet West) EXODUS focuses on the human necessity to move, whether because of persecution, poverty, religious beliefs or opportunity/adventure. It is a 60-minute long multi-disciplinary, multi-cultural work, involving 15 local and international artists, original choreography, opera, music, design, and contemporary dance. The work explores the implications of "exodus" - a mass movement, a coming together both in spite of and because of diversity—regarding what we may learn in collective experience, in spectacle, about collective identity. The arc of the performance is informed by the trajectory of the experience of EXODUS: 1. Crisis/Hope 2. Home 3. Separation 4. Dream 5. Wave 6. Borders 7. Hope/Crisis EXODUS, like its collaborators, takes a both an international and domestic perspective. EXODUS will explore human migration and movement, a topical subject nationally in political debate, and globally - most pressingly observed in the exodus from the Middle East and North Africa to Europe.

EXODUS 

(50 minutes long with no intermission)

Premiering at The Marriott Center for Dance (A proscenium stage) in Salt Lake City in 2016. EXODUS was co-produced by NOW-ID and the Figura Ensemble of Copenhagen, Denmark. This production was performed over several nights in Salt Lake City before touring overseas to Denmark, where it was performed at the Copenhagen Opera Festival and later at Fyn's Opera in Odense, Denmark.

EXODUS focused on the human necessity to move, whether because of persecution, poverty, religious beliefs or opportunity/adventure. EXODUS is a 60-minute long multi-disciplinary, multi-cultural work, involving 3 dancers, 3 musicians, 2 opera singers, a director, a choreographer, a lighting designer and a set designer.

NOWHERE 

(50 minutes long with no intermission)

Premiering in 2015, NOWHERE was staged in a concert hall with live music (organ and double bass), and includes 4 dancers, 1 artist, two musicians, lighting designer, set designer and choreographer. We would love to adapt this study of place to a space or venue in your community and may bring our own team, or consider integrating musicians or other artists from yours. 

> Please contact us at contact@now-id.com for price estimates.

FEAST

[60 minutes long with no intermission]

Premiering in 2014, FEAST was staged at the Great Saltair in Utah with live music (double bass), and includes 3 dancers, 2 actors, 1 musician, lighting designer, set designer and choreographer. We toured an augmented version of Feast - FEAST/KANSAS to the Kansas Dance Festival in November of 2014.

THE WEDDING

[45 minutes long with no intermission]

Premiering in 2013, The Wedding was staged at the Masonic Temple in Salt Lake City and includes 4 dancers, 4 performance artists, 1 artist, 1 set designer, lighting designer and choreographer. Similar to FEAST and Nowhere, The Wedding can be adapted to a space or venue in your community.

b. NEW PEFORMANCE

A New Performance residency will involve the following: Charlotte Boye-Christensen with the participation of company dancers and architect Nathan Webster will work with up to 50 participants to create a full-length new dance work as a stand-alone piece or create it around the company’s performances. Participants will generate material under the direction of NOW-ID and may potentially perform alongside the company dancers in the work. The scale and schedule of the residency will be decided on in dialogue with the partner organization but will culminate in the creation of a new dance piece in a venue or site-specific location.

2. CHOREOGRAPHY / CLASSES

A choreography residency will involve Charlotte Boye-Christensen coming in ahead of the company and creating a new work on the students/dancers. A further addition that has been successfully offered in the past may include integrating the student work into a NOW-ID performance.

Charlotte has choreographed Nationally and Internationally on ballet companies as well as contemporary dance companies, various Conservatories, Universities and other arts organizations.

CLASSES

CONTEMPORARY DANCE TECHNIQUE

These classes are based in Release, they will be technically challenging and reflect the idiosyncratic and dynamic movement style of Charlotte Boye-Christensen. Levels include Beginning, Intermediate, Advanced, and Professional.

IMPROVISATION/CHOREOGRAPHY

These classes will be exploratory and look at space as an additional collaborator in the process. They will also involve concept and formalistic research.  And look at effort and motion and how it pertains to concept.

REPERTORY

Here students will explore NOW-ID’s rep. This rep is mainly based on the amazingly complex and inventive choreography of Charlotte Boye-Christensen. The Salt Lake Tribune writes:

“…the gestural vocabulary she has developed in combination with her explosive movement style tells a unique story within each piece."

And Dance Magazine writes:

"Charlotte Boye-Christensen has a choreographic Knack that transcends medium...Rhythmic finesse, whimsy and a gift for conciseness make Christensen's images delightfully unique...wherever they are seen."

University response:

“The Department of Theatre and Dance considered a number of artists to invite to create work for the prestigious Tucker-Boatwright Festival. We chose Charlotte Boye­ Christensen and NOW-ID for this important commission because of the collaborative nature of her work. We were confident that Charlotte would devise a truly unique dance piece that would activate the American Civil War Museum/Historic Tredegar Iron Works museum in a new way. It was overwhelmingly successful. Our students had the exceptional opportunity to work with a choreographer who offers an entirely different perspective on the creative process, what actually defines a dance, and more. Additionally, the impact of this commission was far-reaching, as audience members included members of the UR community, greater Richmond community, and artists and guests from other states.

I consider myself fortunate to know Charlotte and to have worked with her. I am enthusiastic about her work and the work of NOW-ID. Charlotte Boye-Christensen, by her own definition seeks to challenge the boundaries of contemporary dance through innovative practices and collaborators. She and NOW-ID absolutely achieved this goal with the University of Richmond's Tucker-Boatwright Festival commission, Cross Currents. Charlotte Boye-Christensen is brilliant!”

- Anne Van Gelder, Director of Dance at the University of Richmond, Virginia

“A hallmark of NAFA’s dance repertoire is to feature both the edge and versatility of the Dance Programme’s students. It was for this reason that I invited Charlotte to present a work for Crossings 2019, NAFA’s annual dance performance. Charlotte’s approach to dance creation was refreshingly sophisticated for the student dancers. She challenged them to think critically about the music, movement and concept of her choreography. After all, she complemented the students for ‘inhabiting the music as well as embodying with complete fearlessness the physicality as well as the subtlety of the choreography’. Thanks to Charlotte - mission accomplished!”

- Caren Carino, Vice-Dean of the Dance Program at Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts in Singapore

"Working with Charlotte Boye-Christensen during her creation of Feast was innovation at its best. This multidisciplinary experience involved the percussion program, the entire dance program and her own, NOW company dancers. Billed as a 'banquet for the senses", Feast exemplified the meaning of contemporary performance. The process was organic, intelligent and exhilarating. The dancers performed their personal best, inspired by the work, the collaboration and the professionalism of sharing the stage with the NOW dancers, themselves extraordinary artists. Charlotte approaches choreography with a specific voice she has developed during her career. Invention, originality and current are the descriptions of her process that immediately come to mind. Collaboration was easy, patient and visionary. We all grew from this remarkable 'dinner date' and look forward to a repeat effort in our near future."

– Nicholas Johnson, Director of Dance (Wichita State University)

Video above was created in connection with a residency at TCU School for Classical and Contemporary Dance, Fort Worth, Texas, 2017.


3. MIXED MEDIA WORKSHOPS AND SYMPOSIUMS

A. WORKSHOP

Based around our “Space as Collaborator” workshop, we bring designers together to work with choreographers and dancers on site-specific projects and mentor them through the process. In this process we are looking at the history of the site, marketing and stage design elements, different elements of space, such as borrowed scenery, body/scale, audience, and possibilities for technology to be added, integrating an event with other local businesses in the area, etc. The workshop is meant to create an open format for exploration and collaboration, and may include showings in process and of the ‘finished’ works over the course of the week.

Quotes from former students of this workshop:

"I was very excited about the collaboration aspect of this workshop and I felt that I had the chance to work with phenomenal artists who were respectful and full of ideas. It provided me a safe environment to experiment with aspects of choreography and site specific work that I have never tried previously. It was a place I could step out of my comfort zone knowing I would be encouraged and supported whether it was successful or not. It now gives me material and knowledge to carry over into the next steps of my career as a dance artist."

"This was such a cool workshop! It far surpassed my expectations. My favorite part was probably getting the chance to work with such talented designers since that was a completely novel experience for me."

“Thank you again for providing such a great forum for creative exploration.”

A. SymposiUM


We can provide symposiums on site-specific and interdisciplinary performances as well as on design and criticism.

Fees for residencies are subject to negotiation.

4. Dance on film

This series was created in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, in which our individual and collective movements were restricted and resulted in a longing for physical movement and connection to others.

We can provide screenings of these videos as well as create new films with your students/faculty/community.