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What's On

P.O.V

Lee Serle

Presented in Season 1 2013

Presented by Arts House and Lee Serle as part of Dance Massive, 2013

8.30pm, Tue 12 Mar
8.30pm, Wed 13 Mar
8.30pm, Thu 14 Mar
8.30pm, Fri 15 Mar
8.30pm, Sat 16 Mar
50 mins

Arts House
North Melbourne Town Hall
521 Queensberry St,
North Melbourne

Accessibility:
Image result for Wheelchair accessible
Wheelchair accessible

Show Program:
PDF version
Word version

P.O.V.’s premise is to place the audience squarely within the performance environment, inviting them to cross over from spectator to participant in varying and personal degrees. Seated in a grid pattern on swivel stools, each person has their own unique perspective on the performance. The audience is the set, a permanent fixture in the space – yet each member can turn independently.

In this new work from Lee Serle (recent alumnus of the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Initiative) the choreographer asks: how can we expand our awareness in our daily lives and interact more meaningfully with others? So often we are spectators in life, but what if we start getting more involved, rather than just watching?

Proximity, reactions and interactions – whisperings, rushes of air, the growing intensity of movement, the risk of closeness. P.O.V. blurs boundaries  and shifts perspective, creating space to observe and participate – from slow dance to love-song dedication – in a geometrical but fluid space.

Presented by Arts House and Lee Serle as part of Dance Massive, 2013

8.30pm, Tue 12 Mar
8.30pm, Wed 13 Mar
8.30pm, Thu 14 Mar
8.30pm, Fri 15 Mar
8.30pm, Sat 16 Mar
50 mins

Arts House
North Melbourne Town Hall
521 Queensberry St,
North Melbourne

Director/Choreographer:
Lee Serle
Performers/Collaborators:
James Andrews, Kristy Ayre, Lily Paskas, Lee Serle
Lighting Designer:
Ben Cisterne


Composition/Sound Designer:
Luke Smiles  Set Designer: Lee Serle
Costume Design:
Lee Serle and Shio Otani in collaboration with the performers
Production Management:
Megafun

Supported by – Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body; and the City of Melbourne through Arts House
Image by – Bart Michaels for Rolex