Jennifer Monson
Taking Wing: Jennifer Monson Celebrates Bird Migration Through Dance
Artist Residency
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  September 2003 - May 2004
"Dancing is powerful; it's how I experience my own wildness."--Jennifer Monson in Sierra Magazine

Watching homing pigeons swirling in the sky before alighting on the rooftops in her Brooklyn neighborhood, Jennifer Monson began to see the similarities between her work as a dancer-choreographer and the birds' movements. "A bird's sense of navigation is like a dancer's sense of location while improvising. Both have to know where they are, where they're going, and how fast they're going to get there," she told AI: Performance for the Planet. From this private observation, Monson and her dance company set out on a migration of their own, a five-year journey that brings them to the Twin Cities this spring while tracing the northward journey of geese and ducks, from Texas to Canada, through dance.

The project, Bird Brain: Ducks and Geese, culminates in four free dance performances in key outdoor sites, from the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden to a courtyard adjacent to the Bell Museum of Natural History on the University of Minnesota campus to a former Super Fund site maintained by the National Guard. Two of the four performances involve area grade school students. The dances don't seek to interpret avian movements, says Senior Curator of Performing Arts Philip Bither, but instead use the processes involved with migration as a choreographic structure for the work. "Jennifer is completely redefining the traditional framework of dance as a touring art form, allowing natural phenomenon--in this case, the migratory pattern of ducks and geese--to set her schedule and to deeply influence how the dance is created, how the audience interacts with it, where it is performed, and what the desired impact is on those experiencing it," he says.

While the choreography is first and foremost a work of dance art, Monson's overall project and her Walker residency are both built around environmental stewardship goals. The residency, seeking to examine the physical and metaphorical relationship between human activity and natural habitats, has involved area schoolchildren in monthly bird-watching activities and educational programs. . . .
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Related Events
Related Links
The Artist's Bookshelf
http://calendar.walkerart.org/event.wac?id=1095
Jennifer Monson leads a discussion of The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami at the May meeting of the Walker's new book club.
Follow the Flight
http://www.learner.org/jnorth/
Track Monson and her dancers on their spring migration from Texas to Canada.
Bird Brain Dance
http://www.birdbraindance.org
Find out more about the other tour activities.