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Choreographer premieres video
The screenings at the Dryden Theater also will include a 1976 film of Rainer's signature dance work, Trio A. The conversation with the filmmaker will be conducted by Douglas Crimp, professor of art in the Graduate Program in Visual and Cultural Studies. Rainer has received many honors as she has pursued multiple careers as choreographer, dancer, filmmaker, and writer. The central figure of the Judson Dance Theater in New York in the early 1960s, she is credited as a founder of postmodern dance. She turned her attention to filmmaking with her first feature, Lives of Performers. Her second film, Film About a Woman Who..., is considered one of the first significant feminist films. After completing seven features, Rainer returned to choreography in the late 1990s in order to work with Mikhail Baryshnikov. She choreographed After Many a Summer Dies the Swan for Baryshnikov's White Oak Dance Project, a work that premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in 2000. Rainer also has published widely, including two volumes of essays, interviews, and film scripts. Friday's lecture in the Gowen Room of Wilson Commons, titled "Feelings Are Facts," is drawn in part from a memoir Rainer is currently writing. Her work has been recognized with many prestigious awards, among them the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Wexner Prize, a Bessie Award, the Maya Deren filmmaking award, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. The presentation at the Dryden Theater is free to University faculty, students, and staff; $6 for the general public; and $4 for Eastman House members. The Owens Lecture is made possible by the College Dean's Office and is cosponsored by the Departments of Anthropology, Art and Art History, English, and Modern Languages and Cultures; the Susan B. Anthony Institute for Gender and Women's Studies; the Film and Media Studies Program; the Dance Program; and the Graduate Organizing Group at the University. Free and open to the public, the annual lecture was established in memory of Craig Owens, who taught in the Department of Art and Art History from 1988 to 1990 and who died of complications resulting from AIDS in 1990. For more information, call x5-9249.
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