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During
the last 18 years David Shimotakahara has become a notable presence
in our dance and theater community. Indeed, his successful passage
from resplendent dancer with Ohio Ballet to talented choreographer
bursting with new ideas has brought fresh excitement to audiences
of Northern Ohio and beyond: He is an outstanding example of the
fact that this community can and does nourish its creative artists.
In
1998, after 16 years as a principal dancer with Ohio Ballet, Shimotakahara
launched GroundWorks Dancetheater to advance his vision of collaboration
with artists from other disciplines and present new dances that
expand the perimeters of how and where dance is shown. Collaborators
have included composer Gustavo Aguilar and photographer Masumi Hayashi,
to name but a few, and his Landmarks Series, which takes
dance to places and buildings of architectural or historical significance,
is creating new venues and new audiences for dance performance.
His distinctive
choreography ranges from lighthearted and outright humorous to contemplative,
bittersweet, and dramatic, and expresses a high degree of emotion
without being sentimental. Provenance, a duet danced to an
original score by composer Aguilar in front of projected photographs
made by Hayashi, draws from Shimotakahara's Japanese immigrant heritage--specifically
the U.S. internment camps where Japanese-Americans were forcibly
detained--to make an eloquent statement about memory and the need
to find a way to make peace with traumatic experiences. Though his
own family had settled in Canada, the knowledge that hardworking
and loyal citizens of Japanese background just south of the U.S./Canadian
border had been suddenly seen as distrusted others in
a time of national insecurity affected him deeply. His powerful
solo, A Person, which takes its inspiration from a painting
by a mental patient, is a riveting work that resonates long after
the performance is over.
Having
discovered the power of dance in a movement class for actors as
a teenager in Montreal, Canada, Shimotakahara trained with Les Grands
Ballets Canadiens and New Yorks Joffrey Ballet School and
performed with Atlanta Ballet and numerous other companies before
he and his wife, dancer Pandora Robertson, were invited to join
Ohio Ballet. It was Heinz Poll, that troupes now retired co-founder
and artistic director, who gave him his first opportunity to choreograph.
Shimotakahara
honed his craft at the Carlisle Project, the training ground for
choreographers in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and in 1989 co-founded
the New Steps program to support new choreography in northern Ohio.
He has choreographed for Ohio Ballet, Cleveland Opera, Great Lakes
Theater Festival, and other theater and dance companies, while GroundWorks,
writes The Plain Dealer, is setting the standard for
small dance ensembles in Ohio. He has been awarded a Minnesota
Dance McKnight National Fellowship and three Individual Artist Fellowships
from the Ohio Arts Council, and has been nominated three times for
a Northern Ohio Live Award of Achievement.
text
by
Kathryn
Karipides
Chair, 2000 Dance Jury
1974 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Dance
Fall 2000
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