fbpx
Wikipedia

Ishmael Houston-Jones

Ishmael Houston-Jones (born 1951)[1] is a choreographer, author, performer, teacher, curator, and arts advocate known for his improvisational dance and language work. His work has been performed in New York City, across the United States, in Europe, Canada, Australia and Latin America. Houston-Jones and Fred Holland shared a 1984 New York Dance and Performance Bessie Award for their work Cowboys, Dreams and Ladders [2] performed at The Kitchen[3] and he shared another Bessie Award in 2011 with writer Dennis Cooper and composer Chris Cochrane for the 2010 revival of their 1985 collaboration, THEM.[4] THEM was performed at Performance Space 122 (PS 122), the American Realness Festival, Springdance in Utrecht, Tanz im August in Berlin, REDCAT in Los Angeles, Centre Pompidou in Paris, and at TAP, Theatre and Auditorium of Poitiers, France.[5][6] The 1985 premier performance of THEM at PS122 was part of New York's first AIDS benefit.[1]

Ishmael Houston-Jones at American Realness 2011

Biography edit

Early years edit

Charles Houston Jones, born 1951 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, was the only child of North Jones and Pauline Jones, née Houston. He attended public primary and secondary school there and he attended his first dance class when he was 16 years old and a junior at William Penn High School. The Harrisburg Community Theater offered free dance classes to teenagers, and as he was involved in theater in school he went. This jazz-based show was his first experience performing dance. He enrolled as an English/Drama major at Gannon College, (now Gannon University) in Erie, Pennsylvania in 1969. There was no dance program and he only studied there for two years before he "accidentally" dropped out. He was traveling the summer after his sophomore year of college with the intention of returning to school in the fall, but he found himself in Israel, and decided to stay there for a year. He worked as a pig farmer for nine months at Kibbutz Lahav in the Negev Desert. Then he worked for three months on a banana plantation at Kibbutz Adamit in the Galilee on the border with Lebanon. Houston-Jones found 1971 to be a propitious time to be in Israel; it was the years between The Six-Day War and The Yom Kippur War and there was a calm atmosphere among the Israelis. He had always been fascinated by collective socialist living situations, so the idea of being on a kibbutz intrigued him. He had never done any kind of heavy farm work and while there he had to get up at 4 AM: feeding pigs, mating them and working in the slaughterhouse. When he moved north to Adamit he worked harvesting bananas, and at the end of most days, he and his comrades would go skinny-dipping in the Mediterranean. He would sometimes dance on the beach in the nude. Houston-Jones was able to take just one dance class that entire year; the African-American choreographer and dancer Gene Hill Sagan was teaching on a nearby kibbutz. It was around this time that he began to use Ishmael as his first name and hyphenated his parents' surnames, though he never legally changed either.

Philadelphia edit

After returning to the US in 1972 Houston-Jones moved to Philadelphia. He audited dance classes at Temple University with Helmut Gottschild and Eva Gholson. He then got into the Wigman-based company Group Motion Media Theater [7] with whom he danced for two years. After leaving Group Motion he began studying improvisation and later performing with Terry Fox and the musician Jeff Cain under the name A Way of Improvising. He also studied with Joan Kerr, Les Ditson, Contact Improvisation with John Gamble and "African" at Ile Ife, the Arthur Hall Afro American Dance Ensemble .[8] It was during this time that he formed a strong comradeship with the visual artist Fred Holland who he met through their mutual involvement with the Painted Bride Art Center. Houston-Jones and Fox were Holland's first dance teachers. Holland went on to make his own award-winning dance/theater works, some in collaboration with Houston-Jones. Houston-Jones began making his own work in 1976. That year, in collaboration with fellow ex-Group Motion dancer Michael Biello & musician Dan Martin, he formed the gay-men's performance collective Two Men Dancing. This group made four evening-length works, most notably What We're Made Of in 1980. This piece was begun during his last year in Philadelphia; after living there for seven years, he moved to New York on Thanksgiving Day, 1979.

New York edit

Houston-Jones arrived in New York in the East Village, Manhattan in early 1980. He did some Contact Improvisation performances at Danspace Project with Danny Lepkoff, with whom he had studied. The East Village community at that time was infused with punk, new wave, drag, drugs and the mixing of a hipper, younger gay population with the modern dance and experimental theater milieux. Houston-Jones, like many dancers at the time, was influenced by the gay/punk/club scene and also by break dancing, graffiti and rap music. The first time Houston-Jones heard future collaborator Chris Cochrane play was at the club 8 BC. Dancers and choreographers would go to 8 BC, Limbo Lounge, the Pyramid Club, or King Tut's Wah-Wah Hut to see shows and also to perform. There was a palpable excitement and eagerness to see what was happening at venues such as PS 122, The Kitchen, Dance Theater Workshop and Danspace Project at Saint Mark's Church. There were smaller, grittier spaces as well like Dixon Place [9] and Chandelier where something new was happening almost every night. With the exception of the Wah-Wah Hut and Chandelier, Houston Jones performed at all of these venues. It was during this time that Houston-Jones first heard Dennis Cooper read from his book The Tenderness of the Wolves, and knew that he wanted to work with him. At around this time, the pall of AIDS began to hover over the dance world. People in the dance and performance art communities were becoming sick and dying. Dance contemporaries of Houston-Jones (John Bernd, Arnie Zane, Harry Sheppard, et al.) died at this time. Houston-Jones volunteered with the organization God's Love We Deliver,[10] and brought meals to people who were left homebound by the disease.

Also during the early 1980s Houston-Jones traveled twice to Nicaragua. He was there while the Sandinista government was at war with the US-funded Contras. For two weeks in 1983 he was part of a North American delegation at a theater festival and as a guest of the state. He was chauffeured in buses, housed in a hotel, fed in restaurants and generally pampered. The following year, 1984, he returned on his own, staying in a family's rented room and getting around on his own, which he found extremely difficult. He had met some people on his first trip who had arranged for him to teach at the University of Central America, Managua. He taught contact improvisation to Sandinista soldiers. Students would show up in their fatigues, wearing leotards underneath. They would change and prop their rifles against the wall. He was in Nicaragua only over a month but after this second visit he became much more engaged with progressive politics and social issues. It was from these experiences, plus losses due to AIDS, and Reaganomics that his work began to shift and pieces like f/i/s/s/i/o/n/i/n/g, Radio Managua and THEM were created. He also made several collaborative pieces, some with Fred Holland and later with the writer Dennis Cooper. He collaborated with several musician/composers who came from the punk and club scenes, most notably, Chris Cochrane from the bands No Safety and Suck Pretty. During this time he was funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York Foundation for the Arts and other agencies and he traveled several times to Europe and Venezuela to perform and to teach.

Professional work edit

Other significant choreography by Ishmael Houston-Jones includes: 13 Love Songs: dot dot dot, Houston-Jones' collaboration with Emily Wexler which premiered at American Realness in 2014.[11] No Where /Now Here was commissioned for Mordine and Company in Chicago in spring 2001 and Specimens was commissioned for Headlong Dance Theater in Philadelphia in 1998. In 1997 Houston-Jones was the choreographer for Nayland Blake's Hare Follies at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. From 1995 to 2000 Houston-Jones was part of the improvisational trio Unsafe / Unsuited with Keith Hennessy and Patrick Scully .[12] In 1990 he and Dennis Cooper presented The Undead at the Los Angeles Festival of the Arts. In 1989 Houston-Jones collaborated with filmmaker Julie Dash on the video Relatives, which featured a performance by his mother, Pauline H. Jones and was aired nationally on the PBS series Alive From Off-Center (Alive TV). Houston-Jones has collaborated with composers King Britt, Chris Cochrane, Fast Forward, Dave Pavkovik, Chris Peck, Tom Recchion, Leslie Ross and Guy Yarden. He was also a longtime collaborator of Blondell Cummings.

In addition to his own choreography, Houston-Jones has performed in the work of John Bernd, Ping Chong, Dancenoise, Terry Fox, Beth Gill, Miguel Gutierrez (choreographer), Lionel Popkin, Mike Taylor, and Yvonne Meier. He has a small role, (Dancer) in the John Sayles 1984 film The Brother from Another Planet. and he appears in Caspar Strache's 1998 film Circle's Short Circuit [13] and The Situation Room, 2004,[14] directed by Steve Staso.

Recent edit

In the early 2000s Houston-Jones made a deliberate decision to stop making dance pieces. He felt that he didn't know what he wanted to say and that he didn't want to just make work just for the sake of making work. He was committed to performing in other people's pieces (Yvonne Meier, Lionel Popkin, and others), but he didn't feel he had anything new to offer of his own. He did, during this time, make pieces with students at Alfred University, the New School, and at the American Dance Festival. He concentrated on teaching, writing, and serving on the boards of several not-for-profit dance organizations: (Headlong Dance Theater,[15] Danspace Project, Movement Research, and Ashley Anderson Dances .[16])

Then in 2009, after not making professional dance pieces for eight years, Houston-Jones made The Myth and Trials of Calamity Jane and the Son of the Queen of the Amazons in collaboration with Ashley Anderson and This Ring of Fire in collaboration with Daniel Safer both at Dance New Amsterdam, (DNA). Also in 2009 he was asked to revive three of his works from the 1980s: What We're Made Of (1980), DEAD (1981), and THEM (1986). All three revivals were completed and performed in 2010. The re-imagined THEM has since toured to four cities in Europe and to Los Angeles. His most recent piece, 13 Love Songs: dot dot dot, a collaboration with Emily Wexler premiered in January 2014 at the American Realness Festival in New York and toured to the American Dance Festival in North Carolina.

Publications edit

As an author Ishmael Houston-Jones' essays, fiction, interviews, and performance texts have been anthologized in the books:

Dance, Documents of Contemporary Art, (White Chapel gallery, 2012); • Conversations on Art and Performance, (Johns Hopkins, 1999); • Footnotes: Six Choreographers Inscribe the Page, (G+B Arts, 1998); • Caught in the Act: A Look at Contemporary Multi-Media Performance, (Aperture, 1996); • Aroused, A Collection of Erotic Writing, (Thunder's Mouth Press, 2001); • Best Gay Erotica 2000, (Cleis Press, 2000); • Best American Gay Fiction, volume 2, (Little Brown, 1997); • and Out of Character: Rants, Raves and Monologues from Today's Top Performance Artists, (Bantam, 1996). • His articles have also been published in the magazines: Bomb (magazine), PAJ (journal)), Movement Research Performance Journal; Contact Quarterly; Real Time; Mirage, FARM; and others.

He is a subject of the chapter "Speech as Act" in the book Dances that Describe Themselves by Susan Leigh Foster (Wesleyan University Press, 2002). and the chapter "Crossing the Great Divides" in the book Taken by Surprise by Ann Cooper Albright and David Gere, (Wesleyan University Press, 2003).

Curating edit

Ishmael Houston-Jones' work as a curator includes being the chief curator for PLATFORM 2012: Parallels at Danspace Project in New York, which marked the 30th anniversary of the original Parallels series he curated at Danspace in 1982. PLATFORM 2012: Parallels was a two-month-long survey that looked at the intersection of African-American choreographers and post modern dance. Houston-Jones curated eight weeks of performances, panel discussions, video screenings and special events that included a diverse range of African, Caribbean and African-American experimental dance artists.[17] Some participating artists both in 1982 and 2012 were Bondell Cummings, Fred Holland, Ralph Lemon, Bebe Miller, and Jawole Willa Jo Zollar. In choosing those who may become the next generation of Black dance makers Houston-Jones curated works by Will Rawls, Kyle Abraham, Okwui Okpokwasili, Marjani Forté, Darrell Jones, Zimbabwe-born Nora Chipaumire, and approximately 30 other artists. PLATFORM 2012: Parallels also included evenings curated by Ralph Lemon, Bebe Miller, Will Rawls, Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, and Dean Moss. Film clips of the original 1982 Parallels Series as well as of an historic 1983 debate between choreographers Bill T. Jones and Steve Paxton verbally sparring over the place of Blacks within the "postmoderns." The Platform concluded with a 12-hour marathon curated by Ralph Lemon in which 12 artists of color interacted (one each hour) with sculptures created for the event by the artist Nari Ward .

In 1999 Houston-Jones, along with Yvonne Meier, curated a festival of New Swiss Dance, at the Swiss Institute New York. Ishmael Houston-Jones is also the current curator for the DraftWork series for works-in-progress at Danspace Project.

Teaching edit

Ishmael Houston-Jones has been a guest or adjunct professor at:

Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts;[18] • New York University, (Tisch School of the Arts, the Experimental Theater Wing and Playwrights Horizons), • University of the Arts (Philadelphia), • Sarah Lawrence College, • Hollins University, (Virginia), • Hollins University / American Dance Festival MFA Program • Bennington College, (Vermont), • the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, • University of Memphis, • Wesleyan University, (Connecticut), • University of California, Los Angeles, UCLA, and • the California Institute of the Arts.

Houston-Jones has also been on the faculty of:

• the American Dance Festival [19] at Duke University, • Movement Research, (New York), • the European Dance Development Center and the School for New Dance Development [20] in Holland, • Urban Bush Women Summer Institute at Florida State University • the Seattle Festival of Alternative Dance and Improvisation, (SFADI), • La Escuela de Danza Nacional in Managua, Nicaragua, • El Instituto de la Danza Moderna in Caracas, Venezuela, • The Anti Static Festival, Sydney, Australia, and at • the London International Summer School 2002, (Greenwich Dance, Chisenhale Dance Space and Independent Dance).

The Lambent Fellowship in the Arts edit

From 2002 to 2007 Ishmael Houston-Jones was the Coordinator for the Lambent Fellowship in the Arts of Tides Foundation. In this capacity he spearheaded and structured a program that awarded unrestricted, multi-year grants to individual visual and performing artists in metropolitan New York. For five years under Houston-Jones' guidance, fellowships of $21.000 were awarded to six artists annually.

A partial list of artists funded through this program overseen by Ishmael Houston-Jones includes: Sanford Biggers, Patty Chang, Miguel Gutierrez, Emily Jacir, John Jasperse, Noémie Lafrance, Julie Atlas Muz, Sekou Sundiata, Swoon (artist), Ricardo Miranda Zuñiga, Elana Herzog, Deborah Grant, Mary Ting, Nicolas Dumit Estevez, Clifford Owens, Bradley McCallum & Jacqueline Tarry, Yoko Inoue, Cathy Weis, Yvonne Meier, RoseAnne Spradlin, Ivan Monforte, Judi Werthein and Jennifer Monson.

List of choreographic works edit

  • 1974-76A Way of Improvising; with Terry Fox, Jeff Cain
  • 1976Two Men Dancing (an improvisation on their maleness); collaboration with Michael Biello; music, Jeff Cain; sets Deryl Mackie
  • 1978Dances Round The Faggot Tree; collaboration with Michael Biello & Dan Martin (music) as Two Men Dancing
  • 1979Night/Light; collaboration with Michael Biello, Dan Martin as Two Men Dancing
  • 1980What We're Made Of; collaboration with Michael Biello, Dan Martin as Two Men Dancing
  • 1981DEAD; solo
  • 1982Part 2: Relatives; with Pauline H. Jones
  • 1983Untitled (sometimes called Oogala); collaboration with Fred Holland
  • 1983Babble: First impressions of the white man; collaboration with Fred Holland
  • 1984f/i/s/s/i/o/n/i/n/g; solo
  • 1984Cowboys, Dreams, and Ladders; collaboration with Fred Holland
  • 1985THEM; collaboration with Dennis Cooper, text & Chris Cochrane, music, and performers John B. Walker & Donald Fleming
  • 1986THEM; collaboration with Dennis Cooper and Chris Cochrane
  • 19862 solos: Radio Managua and 3 folk dances; solos; music for 3 Folk Dances: Chris Cochrane
  • 1986Adolfo und Maria: "Duh Guvnuh's Dancin' Gal; music Doug Henderson & Guy Yarden; sets and costumes Huck Snyder
  • 1987Tell Me; collaboration with Yvonne Meier; song score, 3 TEENS KILL 4
  • 1987How to Pray for 21;collaboration with Fred Holland
  • 1987The Onyx Table; collaboration with Fred Holland
  • 1988Prologue to the End of Everything; music, Chris Cochrane with Doug Seidel and Zeena Parkins; sets, Robert Flynt, Impala
  • 1988Slow Motion Suicide; collaboration with Fast Forward
  • 1989Relatives; film: directed and produced by Julie Dash; with Pauline H. Jones
  • 1989HOLE; collaboration with Dennis Cooper
  • 1989Knife/Tape/Rope; collaboration with Dennis Cooper, John DeFazio & John B. Walker
  • 1989HOLE: (The spoken word);collaboration with Dennis Cooper
  • 1990The Undead; choreography and direction: Peter Brosius & Ishmael Houston-Jones; text: Dennis Cooper; design, Robert Flynt; music, Tom Recchion
  • 1990In the dark / Without hope; solos
  • 1995-2000Unsafe/Unsuited; collaboration with Keith Hennessy and Patrick Scully
  • 1995Rougher; collaboration with Steven Craig
  • 1996Eyes, mouth and all the rest : surrendering to the desire(s) of others; solo plus
  • 1997Hare Follies;conceived and directed by Nayland Blake; choreographed by Ishmael Houston-Jones
  • 1998Specimens; with D. Brick, S. Kahn, A. Simonet, A. Smith, P. Turner
  • 2001Nowhere / Now here; for Mordine & Co.; music, David Pavkovic; film Relatives, directed by Julie Dash
  • 2009The Myth and Trials of Calamity Jane and the Son of the Queen of the Amazons; with Ashley Anderson
  • 2009This Ring of Fire; collaboration with Daniel Safer
  • 2010Revival of What We're Made Of;collaboration with Michael Biello, Dan Martin
  • 2010Revival of DEAD;solo performed by William Robinson
  • 2010-2013Revival of THEM; collaboration with Dennis Cooper & Chris Cochrane
  • 2014 13 Love Songs: dot dot dot; collaboration with Emily Wexler
  • 2016 Variations on Themes From Lost and Found: Scenes From a Life and Other Works by John Bernd; collaboration with Miguel Gutierrez and composer Nick Hallett[21]

Awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . The Estate Project. Artists with AIDS. Archived from the original on 2012-05-31. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  2. ^ ArchiveGrid : Cowboys, dreams, and ladders [videorecording] / [created by] Ishmael Houston-Jones and Fred Holland
  3. ^ The Kitchen: Ishmael Houston-Jones and Fred Holland
  4. ^ http://www.redcat.org/sites/redcat.org/files/event/linked-files/2012-10/tbspMGMT_THEM_Info%2BPress.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ "Them Ishmael Houston-Jones, Dennis Cooper, Chris Cochrane". PS 122. 21 October 2010. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  6. ^ "Ishmael Houston-Jones". Miguel Guitierrez and the Powerful People. Retrieved 2014-04-08.
  7. ^ About | Group Motion Dance
  8. ^ The Arthur Hall Collection and Ile Ife Films, Inc
  9. ^ mission/history
  10. ^ God's Love We Deliver: About Us: Mission In Action
  11. ^ Ishmael Houston-Jones and Emily Wexler talk about heartbreak
  12. ^ Unsafe Unsuited – YouTube
  13. ^ Circle's Short Circuit (1998) - IMDb
  14. ^ Ticket Sales - Art Basal Weekend: THE SITUATION ROOM #2 at Miami Beach Cinematheque on 12/4/2005 8:30 PM
  15. ^ ABOUT | headlong dance theater
  16. ^ about |
  17. ^ What is black dance?
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 2014-07-05.
  19. ^ Faculty Bios American Dance Festival
  20. ^ About SNDO – de Theaterschool – AHK
  21. ^ Burke, Siobhan (5 November 2016). "Dancing Back the Spirit of an Old Friend". The New York Times.
  22. ^ "Ishmael Houston-Jones | the Herb Alpert Award in the Arts". 29 April 2016.
  23. ^ "2015 Doris Duke Impact Awards".
  24. ^ "Ishmael Houston-Jones | FCA Grant Recipient".
  25. ^ a b "Dance et danseurs" (PDF).
  26. ^ http://arts.gov/sites/default/files/NEA-Annual-Report-1985.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  27. ^ https://s3.amazonaws.com/NYFA_WebAssets/Pictures/6b2ad3f7-2970-4032-9d75-d886c72943cd.pdf [bare URL PDF]

External links edit

  • Archival Footage of "Them" conceived by Chris Cochrane, Dennis Cooper, and Ishmael Houston-Jones and made available via New York Public Library.

ishmael, houston, jones, born, 1951, choreographer, author, performer, teacher, curator, arts, advocate, known, improvisational, dance, language, work, work, been, performed, york, city, across, united, states, europe, canada, australia, latin, america, housto. Ishmael Houston Jones born 1951 1 is a choreographer author performer teacher curator and arts advocate known for his improvisational dance and language work His work has been performed in New York City across the United States in Europe Canada Australia and Latin America Houston Jones and Fred Holland shared a 1984 New York Dance and Performance Bessie Award for their work Cowboys Dreams and Ladders 2 performed at The Kitchen 3 and he shared another Bessie Award in 2011 with writer Dennis Cooper and composer Chris Cochrane for the 2010 revival of their 1985 collaboration THEM 4 THEM was performed at Performance Space 122 PS 122 the American Realness Festival Springdance in Utrecht Tanz im August in Berlin REDCAT in Los Angeles Centre Pompidou in Paris and at TAP Theatre and Auditorium of Poitiers France 5 6 The 1985 premier performance of THEM at PS122 was part of New York s first AIDS benefit 1 Ishmael Houston Jones at American Realness 2011 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Philadelphia 1 3 New York 2 Professional work 2 1 Recent 3 Publications 4 Curating 5 Teaching 6 The Lambent Fellowship in the Arts 7 List of choreographic works 8 Awards 9 References 10 External linksBiography editEarly years edit Charles Houston Jones born 1951 in Harrisburg Pennsylvania was the only child of North Jones and Pauline Jones nee Houston He attended public primary and secondary school there and he attended his first dance class when he was 16 years old and a junior at William Penn High School The Harrisburg Community Theater offered free dance classes to teenagers and as he was involved in theater in school he went This jazz based show was his first experience performing dance He enrolled as an English Drama major at Gannon College now Gannon University in Erie Pennsylvania in 1969 There was no dance program and he only studied there for two years before he accidentally dropped out He was traveling the summer after his sophomore year of college with the intention of returning to school in the fall but he found himself in Israel and decided to stay there for a year He worked as a pig farmer for nine months at Kibbutz Lahav in the Negev Desert Then he worked for three months on a banana plantation at Kibbutz Adamit in the Galilee on the border with Lebanon Houston Jones found 1971 to be a propitious time to be in Israel it was the years between The Six Day War and The Yom Kippur War and there was a calm atmosphere among the Israelis He had always been fascinated by collective socialist living situations so the idea of being on a kibbutz intrigued him He had never done any kind of heavy farm work and while there he had to get up at 4 AM feeding pigs mating them and working in the slaughterhouse When he moved north to Adamit he worked harvesting bananas and at the end of most days he and his comrades would go skinny dipping in the Mediterranean He would sometimes dance on the beach in the nude Houston Jones was able to take just one dance class that entire year the African American choreographer and dancer Gene Hill Sagan was teaching on a nearby kibbutz It was around this time that he began to use Ishmael as his first name and hyphenated his parents surnames though he never legally changed either Philadelphia edit After returning to the US in 1972 Houston Jones moved to Philadelphia He audited dance classes at Temple University with Helmut Gottschild and Eva Gholson He then got into the Wigman based company Group Motion Media Theater 7 with whom he danced for two years After leaving Group Motion he began studying improvisation and later performing with Terry Fox and the musician Jeff Cain under the name A Way of Improvising He also studied with Joan Kerr Les Ditson Contact Improvisation with John Gamble and African at Ile Ife the Arthur Hall Afro American Dance Ensemble 8 It was during this time that he formed a strong comradeship with the visual artist Fred Holland who he met through their mutual involvement with the Painted Bride Art Center Houston Jones and Fox were Holland s first dance teachers Holland went on to make his own award winning dance theater works some in collaboration with Houston Jones Houston Jones began making his own work in 1976 That year in collaboration with fellow ex Group Motion dancer Michael Biello amp musician Dan Martin he formed the gay men s performance collective Two Men Dancing This group made four evening length works most notably What We re Made Of in 1980 This piece was begun during his last year in Philadelphia after living there for seven years he moved to New York on Thanksgiving Day 1979 New York edit Houston Jones arrived in New York in the East Village Manhattan in early 1980 He did some Contact Improvisation performances at Danspace Project with Danny Lepkoff with whom he had studied The East Village community at that time was infused with punk new wave drag drugs and the mixing of a hipper younger gay population with the modern dance and experimental theater milieux Houston Jones like many dancers at the time was influenced by the gay punk club scene and also by break dancing graffiti and rap music The first time Houston Jones heard future collaborator Chris Cochrane play was at the club 8 BC Dancers and choreographers would go to 8 BC Limbo Lounge the Pyramid Club or King Tut s Wah Wah Hut to see shows and also to perform There was a palpable excitement and eagerness to see what was happening at venues such as PS 122 The Kitchen Dance Theater Workshop and Danspace Project at Saint Mark s Church There were smaller grittier spaces as well like Dixon Place 9 and Chandelier where something new was happening almost every night With the exception of the Wah Wah Hut and Chandelier Houston Jones performed at all of these venues It was during this time that Houston Jones first heard Dennis Cooper read from his book The Tenderness of the Wolves and knew that he wanted to work with him At around this time the pall of AIDS began to hover over the dance world People in the dance and performance art communities were becoming sick and dying Dance contemporaries of Houston Jones John Bernd Arnie Zane Harry Sheppard et al died at this time Houston Jones volunteered with the organization God s Love We Deliver 10 and brought meals to people who were left homebound by the disease Also during the early 1980s Houston Jones traveled twice to Nicaragua He was there while the Sandinista government was at war with the US funded Contras For two weeks in 1983 he was part of a North American delegation at a theater festival and as a guest of the state He was chauffeured in buses housed in a hotel fed in restaurants and generally pampered The following year 1984 he returned on his own staying in a family s rented room and getting around on his own which he found extremely difficult He had met some people on his first trip who had arranged for him to teach at the University of Central America Managua He taught contact improvisation to Sandinista soldiers Students would show up in their fatigues wearing leotards underneath They would change and prop their rifles against the wall He was in Nicaragua only over a month but after this second visit he became much more engaged with progressive politics and social issues It was from these experiences plus losses due to AIDS and Reaganomics that his work began to shift and pieces like f i s s i o n i n g Radio Managua and THEM were created He also made several collaborative pieces some with Fred Holland and later with the writer Dennis Cooper He collaborated with several musician composers who came from the punk and club scenes most notably Chris Cochrane from the bands No Safety and Suck Pretty During this time he was funded by the National Endowment for the Arts the New York Foundation for the Arts and other agencies and he traveled several times to Europe and Venezuela to perform and to teach Professional work editOther significant choreography by Ishmael Houston Jones includes 13 Love Songs dot dot dot Houston Jones collaboration with Emily Wexler which premiered at American Realness in 2014 11 No Where Now Here was commissioned for Mordine and Company in Chicago in spring 2001 and Specimens was commissioned for Headlong Dance Theater in Philadelphia in 1998 In 1997 Houston Jones was the choreographer for Nayland Blake s Hare Follies at the Brooklyn Academy of Music From 1995 to 2000 Houston Jones was part of the improvisational trio Unsafe Unsuited with Keith Hennessy and Patrick Scully 12 In 1990 he and Dennis Cooper presented The Undead at the Los Angeles Festival of the Arts In 1989 Houston Jones collaborated with filmmaker Julie Dash on the video Relatives which featured a performance by his mother Pauline H Jones and was aired nationally on the PBS series Alive From Off Center Alive TV Houston Jones has collaborated with composers King Britt Chris Cochrane Fast Forward Dave Pavkovik Chris Peck Tom Recchion Leslie Ross and Guy Yarden He was also a longtime collaborator of Blondell Cummings In addition to his own choreography Houston Jones has performed in the work of John Bernd Ping Chong Dancenoise Terry Fox Beth Gill Miguel Gutierrez choreographer Lionel Popkin Mike Taylor and Yvonne Meier He has a small role Dancer in the John Sayles 1984 film The Brother from Another Planet and he appears in Caspar Strache s 1998 film Circle s Short Circuit 13 and The Situation Room 2004 14 directed by Steve Staso Recent edit In the early 2000s Houston Jones made a deliberate decision to stop making dance pieces He felt that he didn t know what he wanted to say and that he didn t want to just make work just for the sake of making work He was committed to performing in other people s pieces Yvonne Meier Lionel Popkin and others but he didn t feel he had anything new to offer of his own He did during this time make pieces with students at Alfred University the New School and at the American Dance Festival He concentrated on teaching writing and serving on the boards of several not for profit dance organizations Headlong Dance Theater 15 Danspace Project Movement Research and Ashley Anderson Dances 16 Then in 2009 after not making professional dance pieces for eight years Houston Jones made The Myth and Trials of Calamity Jane and the Son of the Queen of the Amazons in collaboration with Ashley Anderson and This Ring of Fire in collaboration with Daniel Safer both at Dance New Amsterdam DNA Also in 2009 he was asked to revive three of his works from the 1980s What We re Made Of 1980 DEAD 1981 and THEM 1986 All three revivals were completed and performed in 2010 The re imagined THEM has since toured to four cities in Europe and to Los Angeles His most recent piece 13 Love Songs dot dot dot a collaboration with Emily Wexler premiered in January 2014 at the American Realness Festival in New York and toured to the American Dance Festival in North Carolina Publications editAs an author Ishmael Houston Jones essays fiction interviews and performance texts have been anthologized in the books Dance Documents of Contemporary Art White Chapel gallery 2012 Conversations on Art and Performance Johns Hopkins 1999 Footnotes Six Choreographers Inscribe the Page G B Arts 1998 Caught in the Act A Look at Contemporary Multi Media Performance Aperture 1996 Aroused A Collection of Erotic Writing Thunder s Mouth Press 2001 Best Gay Erotica 2000 Cleis Press 2000 Best American Gay Fiction volume 2 Little Brown 1997 and Out of Character Rants Raves and Monologues from Today s Top Performance Artists Bantam 1996 His articles have also been published in the magazines Bomb magazine PAJ journal Movement Research Performance Journal Contact Quarterly Real Time Mirage FARM and others He is a subject of the chapter Speech as Act in the book Dances that Describe Themselves by Susan Leigh Foster Wesleyan University Press 2002 and the chapter Crossing the Great Divides in the book Taken by Surprise by Ann Cooper Albright and David Gere Wesleyan University Press 2003 Curating editIshmael Houston Jones work as a curator includes being the chief curator for PLATFORM 2012 Parallels at Danspace Project in New York which marked the 30th anniversary of the original Parallels series he curated at Danspace in 1982 PLATFORM 2012 Parallels was a two month long survey that looked at the intersection of African American choreographers and post modern dance Houston Jones curated eight weeks of performances panel discussions video screenings and special events that included a diverse range of African Caribbean and African American experimental dance artists 17 Some participating artists both in 1982 and 2012 were Bondell Cummings Fred Holland Ralph Lemon Bebe Miller and Jawole Willa Jo Zollar In choosing those who may become the next generation of Black dance makers Houston Jones curated works by Will Rawls Kyle Abraham Okwui Okpokwasili Marjani Forte Darrell Jones Zimbabwe born Nora Chipaumire and approximately 30 other artists PLATFORM 2012 Parallels also included evenings curated by Ralph Lemon Bebe Miller Will Rawls Jawole Willa Jo Zollar and Dean Moss Film clips of the original 1982 Parallels Series as well as of an historic 1983 debate between choreographers Bill T Jones and Steve Paxton verbally sparring over the place of Blacks within the postmoderns The Platform concluded with a 12 hour marathon curated by Ralph Lemon in which 12 artists of color interacted one each hour with sculptures created for the event by the artist Nari Ward In 1999 Houston Jones along with Yvonne Meier curated a festival of New Swiss Dance at the Swiss Institute New York Ishmael Houston Jones is also the current curator for the DraftWork series for works in progress at Danspace Project Teaching editIshmael Houston Jones has been a guest or adjunct professor at Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts 18 New York University Tisch School of the Arts the Experimental Theater Wing and Playwrights Horizons University of the Arts Philadelphia Sarah Lawrence College Hollins University Virginia Hollins University American Dance Festival MFA Program Bennington College Vermont the School of the Art Institute of Chicago University of Memphis Wesleyan University Connecticut University of California Los Angeles UCLA and the California Institute of the Arts Houston Jones has also been on the faculty of the American Dance Festival 19 at Duke University Movement Research New York the European Dance Development Center and the School for New Dance Development 20 in Holland Urban Bush Women Summer Institute at Florida State University the Seattle Festival of Alternative Dance and Improvisation SFADI La Escuela de Danza Nacional in Managua Nicaragua El Instituto de la Danza Moderna in Caracas Venezuela The Anti Static Festival Sydney Australia and at the London International Summer School 2002 Greenwich Dance Chisenhale Dance Space and Independent Dance The Lambent Fellowship in the Arts editFrom 2002 to 2007 Ishmael Houston Jones was the Coordinator for the Lambent Fellowship in the Arts of Tides Foundation In this capacity he spearheaded and structured a program that awarded unrestricted multi year grants to individual visual and performing artists in metropolitan New York For five years under Houston Jones guidance fellowships of 21 000 were awarded to six artists annually A partial list of artists funded through this program overseen by Ishmael Houston Jones includes Sanford Biggers Patty Chang Miguel Gutierrez Emily Jacir John Jasperse Noemie Lafrance Julie Atlas Muz Sekou Sundiata Swoon artist Ricardo Miranda Zuniga Elana Herzog Deborah Grant Mary Ting Nicolas Dumit Estevez Clifford Owens Bradley McCallum amp Jacqueline Tarry Yoko Inoue Cathy Weis Yvonne Meier RoseAnne Spradlin Ivan Monforte Judi Werthein and Jennifer Monson List of choreographic works edit1974 76A Way of Improvising with Terry Fox Jeff Cain 1976Two Men Dancing an improvisation on their maleness collaboration with Michael Biello music Jeff Cain sets Deryl Mackie 1978Dances Round The Faggot Tree collaboration with Michael Biello amp Dan Martin music as Two Men Dancing 1979Night Light collaboration with Michael Biello Dan Martin as Two Men Dancing 1980What We re Made Of collaboration with Michael Biello Dan Martin as Two Men Dancing 1981DEAD solo 1982Part 2 Relatives with Pauline H Jones 1983Untitled sometimes called Oogala collaboration with Fred Holland 1983Babble First impressions of the white man collaboration with Fred Holland 1984f i s s i o n i n g solo 1984Cowboys Dreams and Ladders collaboration with Fred Holland 1985THEM collaboration with Dennis Cooper text amp Chris Cochrane music and performers John B Walker amp Donald Fleming 1986THEM collaboration with Dennis Cooper and Chris Cochrane 19862 solos Radio Managua and 3 folk dances solos music for 3 Folk Dances Chris Cochrane 1986Adolfo und Maria Duh Guvnuh s Dancin Gal music Doug Henderson amp Guy Yarden sets and costumes Huck Snyder 1987Tell Me collaboration with Yvonne Meier song score 3 TEENS KILL 4 1987How to Pray for 21 collaboration with Fred Holland 1987The Onyx Table collaboration with Fred Holland 1988Prologue to the End of Everything music Chris Cochrane with Doug Seidel and Zeena Parkins sets Robert Flynt Impala 1988Slow Motion Suicide collaboration with Fast Forward 1989Relatives film directed and produced by Julie Dash with Pauline H Jones 1989HOLE collaboration with Dennis Cooper 1989Knife Tape Rope collaboration with Dennis Cooper John DeFazio amp John B Walker 1989HOLE The spoken word collaboration with Dennis Cooper 1990The Undead choreography and direction Peter Brosius amp Ishmael Houston Jones text Dennis Cooper design Robert Flynt music Tom Recchion 1990In the dark Without hope solos 1995 2000Unsafe Unsuited collaboration with Keith Hennessy and Patrick Scully 1995Rougher collaboration with Steven Craig 1996Eyes mouth and all the rest surrendering to the desire s of others solo plus 1997Hare Follies conceived and directed by Nayland Blake choreographed by Ishmael Houston Jones 1998Specimens with D Brick S Kahn A Simonet A Smith P Turner 2001Nowhere Now here for Mordine amp Co music David Pavkovic film Relatives directed by Julie Dash 2009The Myth and Trials of Calamity Jane and the Son of the Queen of the Amazons with Ashley Anderson 2009This Ring of Fire collaboration with Daniel Safer 2010Revival of What We re Made Of collaboration with Michael Biello Dan Martin 2010Revival of DEAD solo performed by William Robinson 2010 2013Revival of THEM collaboration with Dennis Cooper amp Chris Cochrane 2014 13 Love Songs dot dot dot collaboration with Emily Wexler 2016 Variations on Themes From Lost and Found Scenes From a Life and Other Works by John Bernd collaboration with Miguel Gutierrez and composer Nick Hallett 21 Awards edit2016 Herb Alpert Award in the Arts 22 2015 Doris Duke Impact Award 23 2013 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists Award 24 2011 New York Dance and Performance Bessie Award for THEM in collaboration with Chris Cochrane and Dennis Cooper 25 1985 1991 National Endowment for the Arts Choreographer Fellowships 26 1985 New York Foundation for the Arts Choreographer Fellowship 27 1984 New York Dance and Performance Bessie Award for Cowboys Dreams and Ladders in collaboration with Fred Holland 25 References edit a b Ishmael Houston Jones The Estate Project Artists with AIDS Archived from the original on 2012 05 31 Retrieved 2014 04 08 ArchiveGrid Cowboys dreams and ladders videorecording created by Ishmael Houston Jones and Fred Holland The Kitchen Ishmael Houston Jones and Fred Holland http www redcat org sites redcat org files event linked files 2012 10 tbspMGMT THEM Info 2BPress pdf bare URL PDF Them Ishmael Houston Jones Dennis Cooper Chris Cochrane PS 122 21 October 2010 Retrieved 2014 04 08 Ishmael Houston Jones Miguel Guitierrez and the Powerful People Retrieved 2014 04 08 About Group Motion Dance The Arthur Hall Collection and Ile Ife Films Inc mission history God s Love We Deliver About Us Mission In Action Ishmael Houston Jones and Emily Wexler talk about heartbreak Unsafe Unsuited YouTube Circle s Short Circuit 1998 IMDb Ticket Sales Art Basal Weekend THE SITUATION ROOM 2 at Miami Beach Cinematheque on 12 4 2005 8 30 PM ABOUT headlong dance theater about What is black dance Ishmael Charles Houston Jones Part Time Lecturer the Arts Archived from the original on 2014 07 15 Retrieved 2014 07 05 Faculty Bios American Dance Festival About SNDO de Theaterschool AHK Burke Siobhan 5 November 2016 Dancing Back the Spirit of an Old Friend The New York Times Ishmael Houston Jones the Herb Alpert Award in the Arts 29 April 2016 2015 Doris Duke Impact Awards Ishmael Houston Jones FCA Grant Recipient a b Dance et danseurs PDF http arts gov sites default files NEA Annual Report 1985 pdf bare URL PDF https s3 amazonaws com NYFA WebAssets Pictures 6b2ad3f7 2970 4032 9d75 d886c72943cd pdf bare URL PDF External links editArchival Footage of Them conceived by Chris Cochrane Dennis Cooper and Ishmael Houston Jones and made available via New York Public Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ishmael Houston Jones amp oldid 1210034491, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.