Posts Tagged ‘pix’

WestWave Dance Festival – Pictures

Monday, March 7th, 2011

Last November I lit a showing of the WestWave Dance Festival in San Francisco. The evening consisted of a selection of shorter works, averaging 15-20 minutes in length, by five different choreographers.

Festivals like this are a ton of fun to light. Not only do you get to work with a range of amazing people, but the styles of choreography are so different that they each demand a very different approach to color, intensity, movement, and atmosphere of the light.

Below are several images from the different works shown that evening.





Et choreographed by Andrew Skeels



Me No You choreographed by Robert Dekkers



Full Moon Syndrome choreographed by Erika Tsimbrovsky


Colombia Chasing choreographed by Brittany Brown Ceres



So You See… choreographed by Lisa Townsend

All images courtesy David DeSilva

Of The Earth – Pictures

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Below are images from the Shotgun Players 2010 production of Salt Plays Pt. 2 – Of The Earth

Written and Directed by: Jon Tracy
Scenery by: Nina Ball
Costumes by: Christina Yeaton
Video by: Lloyd Vance
Sound by: Brendan West


All photographs courtesy Pak Han

From the Archives: Lighting the Body in Space (Part 1)

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Note: This post first appeared in October 2006. I thought it was a nice compliment to my post last Monday

Something I have not spoken of in this forum, at least not much, is the relationship of light to the performer. Concept, space, time and story are all here, but what of the performer? First, before anything, we are lighting the performer. Be they dancer, singer, actor or DJ. The performer and their body.

But what is that body? In dance it is Body as kinetic sculpture. In theatre it is Body as language made form. In opera it is Body in the world. On the dance floor it is Body as extended psychic presence. How do we see these bodies? What are they and what do they mean? Do we see them differently?

Body. Literally it is a physical composition of living cells. It is organic matter. And it reacts to light in a particular and unique way because of that nature. One of the primary qualities of light that can assist us in doing this is color. Through the use and manipulation of color one can make the body appear dead or alive. Real or artificial. The control of and transformation of the skin tone of the performer is a vital and necessary aspect of the lighting designers job.

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In 1986, John Gleason wrote a series of articles for Lighting Dimensions magazine titled “What is the Color of White Light?” In it he explored the myriad variety and variation that commonly comes under the title ‘white light.’ This light refers to both the cold dead green of fluorescent lighting and the vital red warmth of a candle. White light is not a single thing, rather it is a variously aspected dynamic transformative entity.

Transforming skin tone as I mentioned above does not necessitate heavy use of chromatic color, although that too can be effective. Rather the very subtle alteration from a slight green to a slight red can radically alter our entire perception of a body in space. The line between life and death is thin and mutable.

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Angle too is a key element of this revelation of the body. The low side lighting so common in dance helps to bring out the sculptural nature of the human form. The angle of the light determines, by necessity, the angle of the shadows. Thus one is designing not only the light, but also the shadows on a performers body.

But then this performer exits within some context. They exist in some physical location, but also in a psychological space as well. So the surrounding environment must be lit to show them and their relationship to that context. As each and every element is added to the equation the frame of reference changes and the balance shifts. It is a constant negotiation. An ever shifting lens that must keep a narrow depth of field on the performer. The focus must always be clear. Sometimes that is difficult and sometimes impossible, but it must always be the first intent.

Medea with Chorus

How a body is revealed determines how we interpret their words and actions. Do we trust them or not? Are we looking for comedy or tragedy? Is it ok that we are confused? What is the nature of their soul?

Light does not and can not answer these questions. Light can be a lens through which these questions are asked. Light can make an action seem natural or forced, it can cause our initial impression to be one of trust or mistrust, confusion or clarity. The focus of the composition can in many ways determine the focus of the performance. Light can not hide a bad performance, but it can make a good performance great.

Don Giovanni Pictures

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Below are images from Berkeley Opera’s production of Don Giovanni that I lit in February.

Directed by Mark Streshinsky
Scenery by Mark Streshinsky
Projections by Jeremy Knight
Costumes by Romy Douglass

All photographs courtesy Steve Hughes

Don Giovanni Picture

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Here’s a peek at one of my pictures of Don Giovanni I lit last month with Berkeley Opera.

More coming soon.

A Look at Past Dances

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Here is a sampling of some dances and ballets I have lit over the last few years. It provides a nice overview of the range of lighting design I have done.

Click on any image to see more. Photo credits and collaborator info available on click-through.


Dracul: Prince of Fire


Romeo and Juliet


Mazurkas


Color Codes: A Point of Hue


Le Combat


Mother GOOSE!


Prayer

A look at past plays

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Here is a sampling of some plays I have lit over the last few years. It provides a nice overview of the range of lighting design I have done.

Click on any image to see more. All photo credits and collaborator info available on click-through.


Desperate Hours


Antigone


Medea


The Last Word . . .


Sake With the Haiku Geisha


Of Mice and Men


The America Play


Lovers and Executioners


Dracula


Fate’s Imagination


Artfuckers


Becoming Adele


Windows


Antigone


Beginning of the And

Of Mice and Men – Pictures

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

Directed by Katy Brown
Scenery by Cheri DeVol
Costumes by Amanda Aldridge

This production will be touring the US throughout the fall of 2009.

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Photography courtesy Cheri DeVol

Dracul Preview

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Designed and Directed by: Michael Sturtz
Choreography by: Viktor Kabaniaev
Stage Direction by: Mark Streshinsky
Scenery by: Benjamin Carpenter
Costumes by: Anna Prisekin

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Photography by Stephen Loewinsohn

Altered State

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

Altered State by Kate Raudenbush
Lighting by Lucas Krech

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