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* Macaulay, Alastair. "Light, Birds, Action! Cunningham and Company in Rehearsal." ''The New York Times''. 4, Nov 2009. Available Online: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/05/arts/dance/05dean.html?_r=2&pagewanted=1
* Macaulay, Alastair. "Light, Birds, Action! Cunningham and Company in Rehearsal." ''The New York Times''. 4, Nov 2009. Available Online: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/05/arts/dance/05dean.html?_r=2&pagewanted=1
* Macaulay, Alastair. "Dance: An Artist Turned Towards Complexity." ''The New York Times''. 20 Sept 2007. Available Online: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DEFDC1638F933A1575AC0A9619C8B63
* Macaulay, Alastair. "Dance: An Artist Turned Towards Complexity." ''The New York Times''. 20 Sept 2007. Available Online: http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DEFDC1638F933A1575AC0A9619C8B63
*[http://eai.org/artistBio.htm?id=281 Charles Atlas Artist Biography] at Electronic Arts Intermix


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Revision as of 20:03, 15 March 2012

Charles Atlas is a video artist and film director who also does lighting and set design.

He is a pioneer in developing media-dance, also called dance for camera. Media dance is work that is created directly for the camera. While Atlas’ primary artistic medium is video, he also began to experiment with live electronic performance in 2003. Atlas worked collaboratively with Merce Cunningham from 1975 to 1981. Before his time as the Cunningham company’s filmmaker-in-residence (1978 – 1983), when he made 10 dance films, Atlas was an assistant stage manager for the company, and was already filming Cunningham in little experimental movement studies during breaks from rehearsal.[1] Following his work with Cunningham, he worked independently in film while collaborating with other professionals in the field.

Collaboration with Merce Cunningham

1973: "Changing Steps" Atlas designed jumpsuits in various colors for the dance.

1974: "A Video Event" Cunningham and Atlas collaborated on a two-part program for CBS Camera Three, directed by Merrill Brockway.

1975: "Blue Studio: Five Segments" solo-video collaboration with Cunningham created in such a small space that they choose to superimpose different backgrounds on the image, making the space seem larger than in actuality.

1976: "Event for Television" Cunningham, Atlas and Brockway collaborated on filming National Educatoinal Television's "Dance in America" series.

1977 "Fractions" is a videodance showing multiple perspectives simultaneously of the same dance, one of the greatest achievements of dance on camera.

1979: "Locale" was one of the first short films of Cunningham's work. Atlas used a Steadicam shot shifting from one group of dancers to another, cross-cutting to jump from rehearsal to performance, close-ups, and distance shots.

1981: Channels/Inserts A video performance of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company directed and edited by Atlas. Choreography and film maker as equal partners. Lighting establishes a somber mood, creating darkness and tunnels of light. Costumes are an intelligent mixture of street and dance-practice attire.

Independent Work

1999: "Teach" is a short film made in collaboration with the late British performer Leigh Bowery inspired by paintings of him done by Lucian Freud

June 2003 "Instant Fame!" An interactive show offering anyone the opportunity to create their own short video, which Atlas morphs using graphic magic and video technology.

2009: Danspace Project "What Does Dance Have to Say?" was the organizing theme of this year's festival, put together by Lucy Sexton and Charles Atlas.

Selected Live Performance Work

2004 Turning, live video performance in collaboration with Antony and the Johnsons, St. Ann's Warehouse, Brooklyn, New York

2003 Muscle Shoals, live video and costume design; collaboration with Douglas Dunn (choreographer) and Steve Lacy; performed at Théâtre de la Bastille, Paris and Danspace Project, New York

1994 Delusional, multi-media performance/theater work; collaboration with Marina Abramovic; co-produced by Theater Am Turm (Frankfurt), Munty Theater (Antwerp), and Consort (Amsterdam)

Selected Media Work

2003 Instant Fame, installation and real-time video performance, Participant, Inc., New York

2002 Rainer Variations, video montage. First shown as an installation at Rosenwald-Wolf Gallery, University of the Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

2002 The Legend of Leigh Bowery, documentary film, commissioned by ARTE France. First theatrical showing: Cinema Village, New York

2000 Merce Cunningham: A Lifetime of Dance, documentary film, commissioned by ARTE France, BBC, WNET-TV. Acquired by the Museum of Modern Art

1997-99 The "Martha" Tapes, video collage. First shown at "Mother", New York

1997 The Hanged One, four multi-channel video works installed at the Whitney Museum, New York

1994 Superhoney, eroto-horror video/dance collaboration with Thomas Hejlsen. Commissioned by The National Film Board of Denmark

1992-98 Teach, video portrait/installation, XL Gallery, New York. Collection Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, Germany

1991 Son of Sam and Delilah, video feature. Produced in association with The Kitchen, New York

1986 Hail the New Puritan, a "mockumentary" broadcast featuring Michael Clark. Commissioned by Channel Four Television, London

1983 Secret of the Waterfall, video/dance collaboration with choreographer, Douglas Dunn and poets, Reed Bye and Anne Waldman. Commissioned by New Television Workshop, WGBH-TV, Boston, Massachusetts

1981 Channels/Inserts, 16mm film, collaboration with Merce Cunningham. Produced by Cunningham Dance Foundation.

Selected Grants and Awards

2003 Melbourne Queer Film Festival, Best Documentary for Legend of Leigh Bowery

2000 Dance Screen, Best Documentary for Merce Cunningham: A Lifetime of Dance

1998 Bessie Award for The "Martha" Tapes

1988 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship

1987 Bessie Award for Sustained Achievement in Video

1986 Bessie Award for Costumes for Michael Clark Dance Company

References

  1. ^ Milder, Patricia (2011). "Charles Atlas: Joint Array". The Brooklyn Rail. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

Sources

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