Drawing inspiration from research into fungal modes of communication and movement, Ambulatory Nature asks questions about the connections between human animals and mycelial consciousness, considering the possibility of a body that is always more than one. At once visual, sensorial and visceral the dance invites the possibility of a body without a plan, one that is constituted through its willingness to stay in motion. Through tasks of orienting and disorienting, becoming and unbecoming, Ambulatory Nature offers a meditation on the beauty of unfixing, unraveling, failure and decay.
“Wildness has no goal, no point of liberation, no shape that must be assumed, no outcome that must be desired”
(Jack Halberstam, Wild Things, The Disorder of Desire)
On a shared bill with Rosemary Hannon, Miriam Wolodarski and Alma Esperanza Cunningham.