Jessica Lang’s Unexpected Dance Company
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By SUSAN REITER
Jessica Lang already had one of the busiest freelance choreography careers around, with commissions coming at a steady clip. Since the Juilliard graduate committed herself to choreography, ballet companies from San Jose, California to Birminghgam, England have sought her services, not to mention the Joffrey Ballet and Ailey II.
“I was happy as a freelancer,” she says. “It was great. I’ve made my entire career out of that.”
“After about ten years of that, I just started to question myself,” Lang says. “I was thinking, ‘Is there anything else? Am I happy? What is my goal?’ I was creating 12 works a year. It was nonstop and exhausting.”
More reflection came after she was one of four choreographers selected for a unique 2011 creative residency initiative administered by the Joyce Theater. She realized she was the only resident that didn’t work with a regular group of dancers.
“So I didn’t teach that summer,” she recalls. “Instead I organized six dancers that I wanted to work with, and whom I knew wanted the experience.” Soon enough, this group became the seed of a new company.
“Jessica has a very clear voice, movement-wise,” Mead says. “A very clear aesthetic. You see her ballet background, her jazz background, and her Twyla background,” referencing the two years Lang performed with Twyla Tharp’s touring company in the late 90s. “It’s very physical, it’s very technical, and it really moves.”
Two works exemplify Lang’s interest in detailed, sometimes interactive, visual design elements. I.n.k. incorporates video art by Maruyama, while Lines Cubed is one of several Lang pieces incorporating Molo fabric and its possibilities for shaping the stage space. “It’s inspired by Piet Mondrian’s artwork, the white canvas with very sharp black lines, and the color blocking,” the choreographer says. “I’m intrigued and interested in working with objects and making them support the overall theme.”
Even as her company’s touring schedule is getting busier, however, Lang has decided she can still make time for freelance commissions. “You just have to adapt to what’s in front of you, and I’m capable of that,” she says. “And it doesn’t compromise my work or my vision. I enjoy that, and I know how to produce in that environment. It’s something I will continue to do, even as the company grows and takes its own shape.”
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Photo by Sharen Bradford