Saturday, 3 August 2019

The Week in Arts: Dancing Around Graves, Beach Read Flicks and ‘GLOW’

Art: The Singular Photography of Alvin Baltrop
Through Feb. , ; bronxmuseum
Born in the Bronx in , Alvin Baltrop returned to New York after serving in Vietnam with the Navy and stayed until his death in . Though his work was rarely exhibited in his lifetime, he was a singularly dedicated photographer. His major project was documenting the intense sexual and creative autonomy of the city’s abandoned Hudson River waterfront between and , and he stayed there for days at a time, capturing runaway teens, men cruising and experimental artists like Gordon Matta-Clark with the same eager lens. Blunt images of sex or nudity, like the ones included in “The Life and Times of Alvin Baltrop” at the Bronx Museum, only make explicit a quality that’s equally present in his early shots of antiaircraft guns at sea, or in stately, unpopulated views of the decaying piers: It’s an experience of the erotic as essentially volatile, impossible to fix, even in a still print. Be sure to pick up the catalog, which includes a tender and insightful introduction by Douglas Crimp, a critical champion of Baltrop’s work, who died in July. WILL HEINRICH
Dance: Circles in a Cemetery
Aug. , pioneerworks
The body on the ground, moving slowly or approaching stillness, is a recurring image in the work of Kim Brandt. An architect of large-group constellations that hover between sculpture and dance, she can hint at monumental events through acts as simple as crawling and lying down. In her new “Untitled Green-Wood,” presented by Pioneer Works as part of its Graveyard Shift series, Brandt brings these inclinations to Green-Wood Cemetery in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, where themes of loss can’t help but surface. “I’m kind of always thinking about inertia,” she said in a phone interview, “but that has taken on sort of a new meaning in the cemetery.”
Her first outdoor site-specific work, “Untitled Green-Wood” unfolds in the open circular space of Cedar Dell, which lends itself to explorations of loops and spirals, physical and metaphorical. With tombstones dating to the s, the space invites contemplation of endings, beginnings and where they meet. SIOBHAN BURKE
Pop Music: Oshun Will Bring the Love
Aug ; eventbritem
Borrowing its name from a Yoruba deity who symbolizes water, femininity and prosperity, this vocal duo makes music that honors a “lifelong commitment to representing love,” Thandiwe, one of the singers, told The Fader. She and Niambi Sala have channeled activist instincts — honed by the N.Y.U. community service and social justice program, where they met — into songs like “I wake upstay woke,” from their mixtape, and the buzzy anti-Trump single “Not My President”; they championed self-worship on “Glow Up,” from their debut album, released last April. Titled “Bittersweet Vol. ,” the record weaves together strands of rap and soul, nodding to their creative and spiritual ancestry while cultivating a sound that is distinctly futuristic. On Sunday, Oshun will appear at an outdoor concert as part of the Open Air series, alongside the New York-based Resistance Revival Chorus, at Scott in Brooklyn. OLIVIA HORN
Classical Music: Free Concert of Iranian Female Composers
Aug. , lincolncenter
For some time, the young composer Niloufar Nourbakhsh sought out compatriots in a field that has long been predominantly white and male. “Growing up in Iran, I was actively discouraged from pursuing composition, and I never got to know a female composer as a mentor,” she told the web magazine I Care If You Listen last year. When studying in the states, though, Nourbakhsh connected with two peers, Anahita Abbasi and Aida Shirazi, and they decided to form the Iranian Female Composers Association. Since , the organization has promoted the work of Iranian women in music, and on Monday, Aug. , as part of the Mostly Mozart festival, the International Contemporary Ensemble will present a concert of works by composers associated with the group. The music explored in the free performance at Bruno Walter Auditorium includes Nourbakhsh’s darkly lyrical reed quintet “Firing Squad” and Shirazi’s angularly searching violin solo “longing for a distant memory …” and should provide a wide-ranging portrait of a compelling cohort. WILLIAM ROBIN
Film: It’s a Scorcher at the Quad With ‘Beach Reads’
Aug. -; quadcinemam
We all love a juicy, lusty, pulpy summer book — just maybe not when our sunglasses are steaming over. Take respite from the heat and eye strain with “Beach Reads: From Sand to Screen,” nine days of guilty pleasures spun from popular midcentury potboilers, starting Aug. at the Quad in Manhattan.
Grace Metalious’s scandalous “Peyton Place,” about a quaint New England town racked by secrets — Murder! est! Moral hypocrisy! — and starring Lana Turner and Hope Lange, fittingly kicks things off. Peter Benchley is represented with “The Deep,” featuring Nick Nolte and Jacqueline Bisset as Bermuda lovebirds who dive into sunken artifacts and trouble; Arthur Hailey with his disaster thriller “Airport,” which finds Burt Lancaster, Dean Martin and George Kennedy averting a blizzard and a bomb threat; and Jacqueline Susann with her campy showbiz cautionary tale, “Valley of the Dolls,” with Patty Duke, Barbara Parkins and Sharon Tate as actresses mired in addiction, self-esteem and man problems.
The lineup also includes adaptations of Benchley’s “The Island,” Hailey’s “Hotel” and Susann’s “The Love Machine” as well as Harold Robbins’s “The Lonely Lady,” Alistair MacLean’s “Ice Station Zebra” and Sidney Sheldon’s “The Other Side of Midnight.” KATHRYN SHATTUCK
Theater: Jonathan Cake as Coriolanus in Central Park
Through Aug. , publictheater.
If escape from political tumult is what you want from an evening at the theater, Shakespeare’s tragedy “Coriolanus” is not the answer. But if you find it comforting, amid the barrage of grim headlines, to consider that human folly has been ever thus — and the species somehow has managed to soldier on — then the Shakespeare in the Park revival may be just the ticket.
Directed by Daniel Sullivan, who has a quiet flair for bringing clarity to dense complexity, this “Coriolanus” stars a rather ripped Jonathan Cake in the title role of a military hero whose sense of entitlement leads him into politics despite his stubborn contempt for the suffering populace. Cake, who played the part in in London, at Shakespeare’s Globe, has called Coriolanus a “manchild,” and many have called this Shakespeare’s most political play. In previews at the Delacorte Theater in Central Park, it opens on Monday, Aug. . LAURA COLLISIONS
TV: It’s Vegas or Bust, on ‘GLOW
Aug. ; Netflixm
As Netflix’s “GLOW” enters the ring for Round , the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling are off to a spectacularly rocky start. It’s Jan. , , the morning of the Challenger launch and just hours before the opening night of their residency on the Vegas Strip. Debbie Betty Gilpin and Ruth Alison Brie are channeling their alter egos, Liberty Belle and her Soviet archenemy, Zoya the Destroya, during a live broadcast on local TV.
Then the space shuttle explodes in the midst of Zoya’s anti-American rant, sending Ruth spiraling into an emotional crash and burn. But the show must go on, and it belongs to Brie and the Emmy-nominated Gilpin more than ever this season as Debbie struggles with misogyny and long-distance motherhood, and Ruth tries to love Russell Victor Quinaz while denying her feelings for Sam Marc Maron.
All hail Geena Davis as the newest guest star, the Fan-Tan Hotel and Casino entertainment director, Sandy Devereaux St. Clair. Late in the season, in a moment of pure razzle-dazzle, she uncloaks the assets that captured the title of Miss Las Vegas Showgirl and proves she still has it years later. KATHRYN SHAT TUCK 

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