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Thursday, March 20, 2025

Massive questions, common themes: IMGE Dance’s ‘(no)man’


Talking with dancemaker Ishita Mili looks like an encounter with a kaleidoscope of qualities: pleasure and the unhappiness of previous expertise, erudition and heat accessibility, realism and the visionary shine of huge desires. She’s bringing that multiplicity to bear in (no)man, a brand new evening-length work from her firm IMGE Dance (“picture”; New Jersey and NYC-based). 

It’s the primary main work from the corporate that’s probed huge, common questions she’s had for many years, grounded in a culturally dynamic motion language – one which’s additionally long-standing. Dance Informa speaks with Mili in regards to the new work, the bigger mission and ethos guiding the corporate, the place it’s all going from right here, and extra.

IMGE Dance's '(no)man.'

IMGE Dance is a ‘genre-blurring dance firm that unravels conventional types…to reinvent how motion connects our experiences.’ How will (no)man replicate this mission and work? How would possibly it advance that work; is there something notably new and daring that you just’re bringing to the desk right here?

no(man) is a product of my life thesis: an amalgamation of my life experiences, the bins that I’ve been sorting by my complete life, from Bengali, American, minority, higher caste, classical Indian dancer, feminine, the listing goes on. It references the values from these cultures, and the way I noticed clashes between them that by no means made sense to me. Once I was rising up, I used to be one of many solely individuals I knew that have been asking questions on these issues. 

After which, as a youngster getting into Black American avenue kinds, I had a little bit of an identification disaster. I had been framed as a marginalized identification, however I acknowledged hierarchies and energy dynamics inside that framing. I by no means felt residence in any neighborhood, actually – not within the dance neighborhood, both. Via IMGE, I made an area the place I may floor all of those clashes and discover a strategy to exist as myself. Seems that’s referred to as being a ‘insurgent.’

The dancers I’ve labored with convey a variety of motion and ancestral histories that add extra views to those questions. We share experiences of cultural isolation, and illustrate how motion might be connective tissue between cultures. no(man) is our first evening-length manufacturing that actually examines all of that. 

I have a look at choreography like a jigsaw puzzle; items seem that appear to not have a spot, however ultimately all of it comes collectively. For this work, it’s coalesced into that thesis on questions which have been requested repeatedly for hundreds of years — from life/loss of life, to energy/loss, to inclusion/exclusion. 

IMGE Dance's '(no)man.' Photo by Malcolm Blaze.
IMGE Dance’s ‘(no)man.’ Picture by Malcolm Blaze.

These questions haven’t any reply, however we maintain asking them. What we can do is settle for common truths, in addition to discover methods to floor ourselves and join with one another in a world the place everyone seems to be taught to fend for themselves and climb to the highest.” 

(no)man investigates ‘who’s included – and who’s excluded – throughout house and time.’ What else would possibly you want viewers members, and our readers, to know in regards to the work? What do you assume the work uniquely contributes — to the modern dance panorama and past it? 

“The work investigates some seemingly huge and summary ideas, however can be extraordinarily accessible. All of us dwell in steady cycles of ache and sweetness in methods even the various youngsters who’ve seen this present simply perceive. The cultural patchwork we create within the work – by music, motion and extra – builds that sense of universality. Viewers members will discover experiences they relate to and others that they may not – however nothing is fully overseas. 

Utilizing dance to seek out ways in which we’re totally different but the identical is our means of sparking empathy. You don’t should be a ‘dance aficionado’ to enter the work. We actually reject and don’t relate to that type of requirement. In case you’ve ever thought of these common questions, you’re welcome. You’ll find one thing you relate to in what we do.

As for the novelty of what we do, I believe that it’s within the dance vocabulary. It’s a novel strategy to a transcultural but grounded movementscape. The vocabulary desconstructs bharatanatyam, hip hop, Mayurbhanj chhau, home, vogue, modern, and a lot extra throughout Indian to American kinds. 

IMGE Dance's '(no)man.' Photo by Jim Coleman.
IMGE Dance’s ‘(no)man.’ Picture by Jim Coleman.

We unravel these motion techniques to seek out the threads which can be related to what we’re doing – with out essentially rejecting the opposite threads. All the dancers convey their kinetic histories to that course of, which creates the ever-evolving motion kaleidoscope that’s the IMGE methodology. It looks like a sophisticated map to navigate, however it feels fairly clear.” 

Creating culturally pluralistic choreography is certainly not precisely simple. It takes intention and care to form it into one thing cohesive, in addition to culturally-informed and delicate. Are there another notable and intentional methods by which you all strategy that course of? 

“Something that’s classical has a hierarchical construction. We thread collectively separate vocabularies by questioning how these hierarchies can intersect with avenue and people types, in addition to discovering constant qualities that connect with our values. That features issues like groove, alignment, gestureology by the physique, et cetera. It’s a technique that’s emerged over the eight years that we’ve been working on this means. 

I consider that you just don’t must be an expert dancer to entry these methods of shifting. The truth is, we’re increasing the methods wherein we share our methodology with all kinds of neighborhood members, with all kinds of motion histories and life experiences.” 

IMGE works throughout a wide range of totally different efficiency contexts — live performance, industrial, and musical theater. How do you see the multiplicity there – for instance, the way you strategy every context in a different way, if in any respect?

“It’s all actually occurred by chance, simply because the suitable individual noticed one thing of ours on the proper time. That factors again to universality; there’s one thing in our work that resonates in all contexts. For instance, we’ve had industrial work come to us due to social media – particularly our brief movies and content material on YouTube and Instagram. 

IMGE Dance. Photo courtesy of IMGE.
IMGE Dance. Picture courtesy of IMGE.

Digital work introduced us to audiences world wide and new alternatives that in any other case would have had no means of discovering us. That’s helped us achieve a extra complete understanding of the infinite prospects of making. The dedication to creative apply has actually been the important thing to all of it; we’ve simply stored doing the work, and alternatives have emerged.” 

The place to from right here? 

“IMGE: it’s me and I’m it. And it’s past! Due to our rising apply and ethos, the chances are always multiplying. This previous 12 months we’ve expanded our efficiency work into a bigger methodology. That opened doorways of schooling in academia and wider communities throughout the nation.

We’ve additionally stepped into our producer hat and based a number of platforms for artists and audiences. We began New Jersey’s first worldwide dance competition, in partnership with mignolo arts middle, after realizing that the fourth most various state within the nation by no means had one. We’ve additionally spearheaded the Kinetic Dance Movie Pageant, a dance movie competition that deliberately sources from underground dance communities that don’t intersect with the leisure trade. 

We additionally began a South Asian Performing Arts Summit, to attach sources, begin conversations and resolve issues between South Asian rising to veteran arts employees. We’re at the moment constructing out a mentorship platform and profession teaching companies beneath the IMGE methodology.

IMGE Dance. Photo by Purna Venugopalan.
IMGE Dance. Picture by Purna Venugopalan.

I consider that IMGE is greater than a dance firm – we’re a cultural changemaker. We actually consider within the energy of creation as a mixture of creativity assembly alternative. The one means I’ve gotten anyplace is as a result of I met the suitable individuals on the proper time who took an opportunity on me.

I host month-to-month intensives beneath the IMGE methodology in NYC, and will probably be travelling throughout the nation through the 12 months, for all of us inquisitive about embodying a world motion apply. We even have new brief movie work arriving to our already illustrious YouTube, for wherever chances are you’ll be tuning in from. We actually consider in making creativity accessible to you, in infinite methods. So discover us on Instagram, within the studio, or on a stage close to you (or convey us there)!”

IMGE Dance will current (no)man from February 14-15, at CUNY Tribeca and thru the CUNY Dance Initiative (CDI). Study extra and buy tickets right here. Discover IMGE Dance at @imgedance, and Mili at @ishitamili, on Instagram. 

By Kathryn Boland of Dance Informa.









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