

Brent Rollins’s sentient printer is a winner in For Old Times Sake, but the work feels like too many ideas have been compressed into the allocated time (not a bad problem to have if you’re planning to develop a work further). The rest of the program contains some promising ideas. I’d rather see Richardson and Claus’s rich and rewarding work live. Though their short film The Silence Knew (shot on set during 2020’s “SITU-8” season), is beautifully filmed and edited by Fionn Mulholland, shadowy glimpses of Claus’s deep plies and slicing limbs feel taunting. Sally Richardson and Jacqui Claus are collaborators from way back and have produced award-winning work. Program A is a hard act to follow and half an hour later, “Short Cuts” Program B doesn’t feel quite as punchy. Sarah Chaffey gives an athletic performance in ‘Ceci n’est pas une chaise (this is not a chair)’. She’s accompanied by Matt Jones who uses electronics to accompany his own Theorbo, so that trickling notes have tinkling overtones and bellowing undertones. As always, Maslin is wonderful to watch and here we see her carving space, her legs scooping and circling through the air at first slowly and then faster and faster until she folds into a lake of paper. Talitha Maslin’s solo In to the Deep (pictured top) makes a sonorous conclusion to a strong program, both aurally and physically. The opening is particularly beautiful the pair stride from opposite sides of the stage until they meet in a pas de deux connected not by touch but by breath. Capturing the surges and retreats of the accompanying score – “Awe” by Roger Goula – the two dancers are somehow always in sync, even when they’re not. The highlight of the two programs, for me, is Jo Omodei’s As the Edges Soften, created and performed with Mitch Spadaro. Even when the lights are on she plays at the peripheries, inching along the wall behind the audience, using mirrors to reproduce her own body, and manipulate ours into the picture.

As she speaks into the darkness, the outline of her moving body is only just discernible. Perhaps that’s what gives her solo the grounded confidence of a more developed work. Sofie Burgoyne describes Flat and down, and down and down, and flat as “an experiment” derived from “smaller parts of a much larger project”. In both these works there’s a kernel of something interesting, not quite germinated but promising. Recent WAAPA graduates Jessica Pettitt and Nadia Priolo follow, with Heighten or Hide, which starts out slow and serious but morphs into a pop driven parody, perhaps of reality-TV/esiteddfod inspired “lyrical” dance? Hard, by Cameron Landsdown-Goodman and Samantha Crameri-Miller, also teeters between humour and something darker with its monstrous armchair that chews and spits out its solo dancer (Landsdown-Goodman). In “Short Cuts” Program A we encounter golden nostalgia for a European past in Minni Karamfiles and Giorgia Schijf’s charming duet, Ignorance is (was) Bliss. Perhaps that’s caused by a kind of group fatigue – it’s been a gruelling couple of years for the performing arts sector and, with COVID ripping through Perth, a challenging time to be creating new work – but it made for soothing viewing.

Presented in two programs of six works, this year’s offerings are characterised, in the main, by a sense of softness. The results are then presented at a studio showing.īy definition, each work or work-in-progress is short – 20 hours yields about 5-10 minutes – making each of the two “Short Cuts” programs pleasantly varied.

It’s “Short Cuts” time again, and maybe you already know the drill?Įach year STRUT Dance gives a dozen or so local independent choreographers 20 hours each in a studio, to develop a new idea. ‘Short Cuts’: Program A and Program B, STRUT Dance
