Performances: Friday February 22 7pm; Saturday February 23 7pm
Venue: Underground Theater, Abrons Arts Center, 466 Grand St, New York, NY 10002
Video Trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qvDP-KJLdI
How can the art of opera relate to you? Maybe your experience has been dressing up nicely to attend the Met in New York, or seeing an opera at Milan’s La Scala. Maybe it seems like something foreign and exclusive to the wealthy, or simply old-fashioned and too difficult to understand. Voice artist Ju-eh and composer Hwarg present a brand-new work with powerful singing and delicate electronics that makes the art of opera directly relatable to your emotions and experiences: The Living Dying Opera.
In our fast-paced, technologically saturated world, we are surrounded by 'micro-dilemmas’: I am in the subway and someone next to me is so smelly! Should I stay, or get off the train? My alarm rings and rings and I snooze and snooze; should I wake up, or sleep for 2 more minutes? I have had 9 cups of coffee already; should I have the 10th to make it an even number?
The fundamentals of opera are drama and bel canto (beautiful singing). Ju-eh, who has studied opera for over a decade, dramatizes his personal dilemmas through voice. Hwarg, an expert in electronics and sonic arts, creates an immersive and intriguing sound world. As historical opera speaks for the people of its time, Ju-eh+Hwarg present a theatrical musical drama that speaks for now, investigating space, memory, and personal identity. While their work is layered and complex, it is also easily accessible to those without musical training.
The show will be followed by a Q&A session to allow the audience to further explore and understand the work through conversation with the artists.
Ju-eh (Juecheng Chen) + Hwarg (Howie Kenty)
With François-Thibaut Pencenat, visual artist
Special thanks to Peichao Lin, photography and videography
The Living Dying Opera’s presentation at The Abrons Arts Center is made possible by The New York Chinese Culture Salon.
Bios
Ju-eh (Juecheng Chen) is a conceptual virtuosic countertenor from Canton, China. With 10 years of classical singing training in Europe, he specializes in presenting what classical music can be today. Ju-eh is known for his musicality, delicacy and his powerful high pitch voice. His recent performance highlight includes Improvised Opera Salon series in New York City and his performance with Sylva Dean and Me at Venice Biennale; his future engagements include Meredith Monk's opera Atlas with LA Phil in 2019 among others.
Artist website: juechengchen.com
Hwarg (Howie Kenty) is a Brooklyn-based composer and performer. His music, called “remarkable” with “astonishing poetic power” by the International Compendium Prix Ars Electronica, is stylistically diverse, encompassing contemporary classical, electronic, rock, sound art, and everything in between, occasionally with theatrical elements. Recent recognition includes a 2017 Copland House residency, a 2018 Virginia Center for the Creative Arts residency, first prize commission in the 2017 Null-state Chaosflöte competition, competition winner for the 2018 Open Space Festival of New Music, competition winner for the 2018 RED NOTE New Music Festival Composition Workshop, and an ASCAP Plus+ award.
Artist website: hwarg.com
François-Thibaut Pencenat is a French visual artist from Paris, now based in New York City. His work uses the idea of staging to establish a relationship between reality and fiction. Through his working process, he refines his artistic materials and their staged settings to reach the simplest and most visually effective forms. Notions of absence and erasure recur in his work, raising questions about visual memory and the permanence of certain forms in art history.
Artist website: francoisthibautpencenat.com
New York Chinese Culture Salon is a 501(c)(3) organization registered in New York. The organization is for educational purposes. It offers a multi-disciplinary platform where experts in various areas share voluntarily their knowledge and thoughts with the general public. Attendees are mainly graduate students and young professionals. The audience has various degrees of background about the domain. The mission of the salon is to enhance this open-source, high quality, multi-disciplinary, thought-provoking knowledge-sharing platform, where people with curiosity and an open mind have access to the areas they are interested in but that they may have little knowledge of.
Abrons Arts Center is a home for contemporary interdisciplinary arts in Manhattan’s Lower East Side neighborhood. A core program of the Henry Street Settlement, Abrons believes that access to the arts is essential to a free and healthy society. Through performance presentations, exhibitions, education programs and residencies, Abrons mobilizes communities with the transformative power of art.