Contraband (performance group)
Encyclopedia
Contraband, a collection of artists led by director/choreographer Sara Shelton Mann, was a dance-based, live performance ensemble, that worked together from 1985 to the mid ‘90s. Based mainly in San Francisco, the group became known for its lively, electrifying performances, often politically-charged and community-engaging. By utilizing dance, music, set, text/spoken word, and site-specific work, Contraband came to develop a cross-disciplinary performance aesthetic, as well as approach to dance
and dance training, that would have a profound influence on Bay Area dance, performance art
, and culture, as well as performance practice abroad.
Emerging with the 1985 work Evol, the group went on to combine contemporary dance
with contact improvisation
, live music, ritual
, activism
, innovative set design, and work with experiential states (see essential states), developing a more expressionistic
approach to dance and theater on the West Coast. Many members have continued on to further professional careers in art, music, dance, and circus. Members include director Sara Shelton Mann with Lauren Elder, Keith Hennessy
(Circo Zero Performance), Jess Curtis (Jess Curtis/Gravity), Norman Rutherford, Rinde Eckert, Kim Epifano (Epiphany Productions), Jules Beckman (libertivore, Collectif AOC), Elaine Buckholtz, Nina Hart, Brenda Munnell, Kathleen Hermesdorf (La Alternativa), Brook Klehm, Julie Kane, Shannon McMurchy (McGuire), and Peter Kadyk. The company dissolved in the mid-90s due to financial concerns.
Dance
Dance is an art form that generally refers to movement of the body, usually rhythmic and to music, used as a form of expression, social interaction or presented in a spiritual or performance setting....
and dance training, that would have a profound influence on Bay Area dance, performance art
Performance art
In art, performance art is a performance presented to an audience, traditionally interdisciplinary. Performance may be either scripted or unscripted, random or carefully orchestrated; spontaneous or otherwise carefully planned with or without audience participation. The performance can be live or...
, and culture, as well as performance practice abroad.
Emerging with the 1985 work Evol, the group went on to combine contemporary dance
Contemporary dance
Contemporary dance is a genre of concert dance that employs compositional philosophy, rather than choreography, to guide unchoreographed movement...
with contact improvisation
Contact improvisation
Contact improvisation is a dance technique in which points of physical contact provide the starting point for exploration through movement improvisation...
, live music, ritual
Ritual
A ritual is a set of actions, performed mainly for their symbolic value. It may be prescribed by a religion or by the traditions of a community. The term usually excludes actions which are arbitrarily chosen by the performers....
, activism
Activism
Activism consists of intentional efforts to bring about social, political, economic, or environmental change. Activism can take a wide range of forms from writing letters to newspapers or politicians, political campaigning, economic activism such as boycotts or preferentially patronizing...
, innovative set design, and work with experiential states (see essential states), developing a more expressionistic
Expressionist dance
Expressionist dance is a European dance form that is part of the German Expressionist movement. Although considered a part of the modern dance movement, it is separate from modern dance per se. Other names for it that have fallen out of use include Moderner Tanz, Absoluter Tanz, Freier Tanz,...
approach to dance and theater on the West Coast. Many members have continued on to further professional careers in art, music, dance, and circus. Members include director Sara Shelton Mann with Lauren Elder, Keith Hennessy
Keith Hennessy
Keith Hennessy is a San Francisco-based dancer, choreographer, and performance artist regarded as a pioneer of queer and AIDS-themed expressionist dance...
(Circo Zero Performance), Jess Curtis (Jess Curtis/Gravity), Norman Rutherford, Rinde Eckert, Kim Epifano (Epiphany Productions), Jules Beckman (libertivore, Collectif AOC), Elaine Buckholtz, Nina Hart, Brenda Munnell, Kathleen Hermesdorf (La Alternativa), Brook Klehm, Julie Kane, Shannon McMurchy (McGuire), and Peter Kadyk. The company dissolved in the mid-90s due to financial concerns.
Works
Canada- The Float with Belinda Weitzel, Freddie Long, John LeFan, Ernie Adams, Sara Shelton Mann
- The Child with Byron Brown, Andy Warshaw, Sara Shelton Mann
San Francisco- Evol (1985)
- Religare: Hope of the Impossible (1986) at the Gartland Pit, 16th & Valencia
- The (Invisible) War (1987)
- Mandala (1987)
- Oracle (1988)
- Religare II (1989) at Plaza West housing projects
- Mira Cycle I (1990)
- Mira Cycle II: The Fall
- Mira Cycle III: Return to Ordinary Life
Evol
Premiered in 1985 at The LABThe LABThe LAB, located in San Francisco's historic Redstone Building, is a not-for-profit arts organization and performance space founded in 1984.The Lab "supports interdisciplinary artists in the development and exhibition of new visual, media, literary, and performing art, with a focus on emerging and...
, in San Francisco. Evol (love spelled backwards) began as a performance research project, developing into a show that attained a cult-like following amongst audience members. Integrating dance with spoken word/text, the performance dealt with issues of gender and identity politics.
Religare
A site-specific work, developed at the Gartland Pit in the Mission District of San Francisco. Religare mixed installation and live art with dance and music to create a ritualized performance for renewal of a site traumatized by arsonry and neglect. It received unprecedented support from the community, inspiring participation by audience members (in music-making, site maintenance, crowd safety, publicity, as well as a mural). The title Religare comes from the Latin to bind fast or to reconnect, the Latin root for religionReligionReligion is a collection of cultural systems, belief systems, and worldviews that establishes symbols that relate humanity to spirituality and, sometimes, to moral values. Many religions have narratives, symbols, traditions and sacred histories that are intended to give meaning to life or to...
. It was restaged at Laney College, and in 1989 as Religare II at the Plaza West Eddy St Projects.
The (Invisible) War
A piece on gender and relationships, collaging wild, inventive movement duets with experimental theater and song.
Oracle
Premiered at Theatre Artaud, SF, in 1988. Featured a set of "junkyard" objects, including electrified barbed wire and a refrigerator swung as if a pendulum, inducing a hypnotic effect to the dancing. This durational, physical quality to the set anticipated further design by Elder, such as the use of melting ice blocks in Mira, Cycle I, where the set moved with, and was as dependent on the laws of physics, as the dancers. Spoken text backgrounded the dancing, lending an idiosyncratic character to each dancer's movements.
Mandala
Mandala explored themes of masculinity and upbringing; weaving music, movement, ritual, and storytelling together into a pastiche of performance work. Evocative of a personal inner journey, Mandala experimented with a re-imaging of male culture. It was performed by male company members Jess Curtis, Keith Hennessy, and Jules Beckman; directed by Remy Charlip and Sara Shelton Mann.
The Mira Cycles
Inspired by the 16th Century Hindu poet, Mirabai, The Mira Cycles was a trilogy exploring the mystic and the journey to a higher self. The first, Mira I, took place beneath melting blocks of ice, containing embedded flower branches. Mira II: The Fall worked with the "otherOtherThe Other or Constitutive Other is a key concept in continental philosophy; it opposes the Same. The Other refers, or attempts to refer, to that which is Other than the initial concept being considered...
," or Mirabai's theme of the "dark one," delving into the unseen part of the psyche. The use of free-flowing water pervaded in Mira III: Return to Ordinary Life.
PRODUCTION INFO EVOL Religare The (Invisible) War Oracle Mandala Religare II Mira, Cycle I Mira, Cycle II Mira, Cycle III Year 1985 1986 1987 1988 1987 1989 1990 1991 1993 Direction Sara Shelton Mann, Asst. Jim Cave Sara Shelton Mann Sara Shelton Mann Sara Shelton Mann Directorial Assistance: Remy Charlip & Sara Shelton Mann Sara Shelton Mann Sara Shelton Mann Sara Shelton Mann Sara Shelton Mann Music Composition/Direction Rinde Eckert Rinde Eckert, Gwen Jones, Richard Klein, Norman Rutherford Jules Beckman, Rinde Eckert Jules Beckman, Rinde Eckert Jules Beckman, Jess Curtis Rinde Eckert, Gwen Jones, Richard Klein, Norman Rutherford Jules Beckman, Norman Rutherford 1st score: Andy Warshaw, 2nd score: Norman Rutherford Norman Rutherford Design Lauren Elder (set), Jim Cave & Benji Young (lighting) Lauren Elder (set), Julian Neff (lighting) Lauren Elder (set), John O'Keefe (dramaturgy) Lauren Elder (set), Elaine Buckholtz (lighting) Lauren Elder (set), Jack Carpenter (lighting) Lauren Elder (set), Jack Carpenter & Elaine Buckholtz (lighting) Performers/Collaborators Jess Curtis, A. Dibbs/Sara Shelton Mann, Nina Hart, Keith Hennessy, Brook Klehm Jess Curtis, Lauren Elder, Gwen Jones, Nina Hart, Keith Hennessy, Richard Klein, Sara Shelton Mann, Brenda Munnell, Norman Rutherford, 20-piece percussion/vocal choir Jess Curtis, Keith Hennessy, Sara Shelton Mann Jules Beckman, Jess Curtis, Nina Hart, Keith Hennessy, Brenda Munnell/Kim Epifano Jules Beckman, Jess Curtis, Keith Hennessy Jules Beckman, Jess Curtis, Lauren Elder, Kim Epifano, Gwen Jones, Keith Hennessy, Julie Kane, Richard Klein, Sara Shelton Mann, Norman Rutherford, 20-piece percussion/vocal choir Jules Beckman, Jess Curtis, Kim Epifano, Keith Hennessy, Julie Kane, Sara Shelton Mann, Norman Rutherford, women's chorus Jules Beckman, Jess Curtis, Kim Epifano, Julie Kane, Keith Hennessy/Peter Kadyk, Sara Shelton Mann, Norman Rutherford Jules Beckman, David Bentley, Brenton Cheng, Kim Epifano, Kathleen Hermesdorf, Peter Kadyk, Andrew Kushin, Sara Shelton Mann, Albert Mathias, Shannon McMurchy (McGuire), Norman Rutherford First performed at The Lab, SF Gartland Pit, 16th St & Valencia, SF Theatre Artaud, SF Plaza West Housing Projects, Eddy St, SF
Collaboration & Process
Inspired by a fluidity of roles, Contraband often functioned as a collective, guided by Shelton Mann's directorial vision. Though the title was originally used for pieces made in Canada by Mann, the company that came to be known as Contraband did not begin until the 1985 San Francisco group, starting as a research project for Evol. Rehearsals were highly research-based, using contact improv and theatrical experimentation from which to develop material. Collaborators regularly contributed beyond their stated role: the lighting designer sang, the composer acted, and the dancers played music, sang, and acted.
Related Projects
Other projects by Contraband members include Off-Limits, a performance happening directed by Lauren Elder, and subsequently other Contraband members. Assorted collaborations and independent projects between members are Indicative of the group's collective approach to art-making.
Style and Approach
Contraband was marked by a voracity of spirit and energy, a sense of attack driven by a desire to reignite the spirit. Mystical, athletic, and innovative, the collective energy left audiences energized. Material often combined social commentary with daring movement and acrobatics, and "live music at once primitive and eccentric." Credited with a melding of forms, Contraband's work traversed worlds "of cross-cultural ritual and contemporary punk", creating ritualized performances of sound, movement, and theater.
Common Themes
- surreal use of everyday props
- folk song
- black dresses
- natural elements in set design
- contact improv/acrobatics
- search for the mystical, the unseen thing
- healing & spiritual reconnection
Awards & Accolades
Isadora Duncan AwardsIsadora Duncan Dance AwardsThe Isadora Duncan Dance Awards or Izzies honor San Francisco Bay Area dance artists for outstanding achievements in a range of categories including: choreography, sustained achievement, individual performance, company performance, costume design, and set design. The awards are presented annually...
(IZZIES):- 1986: Musical Score to Rinde Eckert, Norman Rutherford, Gwen Jones, & Richard Klein for Religare
- 1987: Set Design to Lauren Elder for Oracle
- 1994: Outstanding Achievement for Company Performance to Contraband for Mira II
- 1994: Choreography to Sara Shelton Mann for Mira II
- 1988 NEA Grant for Interdisciplinary Arts
External links