Ringling International Arts Festival

Sarasota celebration features music, dance, theater and film

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Tapestries by Peter Paul Rubens hang at the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Fla. (MCT News Service)
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“There are two ways to measure size. I think we’re deeper, if maybe not as wide,” Currie says. “This is a new area of ‘collecting’ for us. We don’t get to keep these artists. But we’ve amassed a collection of experiences, of deep engagements with the artists, for us and our audiences. It’s a new way of exhibiting, curating and presenting visual and audible art.”

The two pieces of dance “art” at this year’s festival could scarcely be more different, except that each is making a Ringling Festival debut.

Shivalingappa will perform “Shiva Ganga,” a storytelling dance in the tradition of Kuchipudi, which dates back to the third century B.C. in India. The artist has performed with Pina Bausch’s company and in Shakespearean productions directed by the great Peter Brook, and this summer has been performing in a production of Peer Gynt at Austria’s Salzburg Festival. Performing with four musicians in “Shiva Ganga,” Shivalingappa conveys not just a story of gods and goddesses but also showcases different aspects of Indian dance.

“Kuchipudi comes from a strong dance and theater tradition. The masculine, strong movements are percussive; the feminine ones are soft and undulating,” Shivalingappa says from Austria. “The life of an artist is wonderful. I love dancing, and I get to do that in so many different ways, working with so many artists. Kuchipudi is so intense, but doing other things allows me to come back to Kuchipudi with as much passion as always.”

Morris’ friend and White Oak Dance Project co-founder Baryshnikov has been a presence (and in 2010, a performer) throughout the short history of the Ringling festival. The October gathering will be Morris’ first time in Sarasota, and the appearance will be just a week after the new piece “A Wooden Tree” has its world premiere in his hometown, Seattle. Morris rarely dances any more, but his wide-ranging talents have led him to choreograph for his own company, for ballet companies and for various opera companies, and he has also done some conducting for his company’s performances. He likes it all, though he remains exacting and outspoken.

“I love ballet, but the ballet world is extremely conservative politically, socially and sexually. It’s very, very old fashioned. As far as men and women go, the dancers are perpetually infantilized,” he says.

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