Mexico Fundraiser

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YAY!!!  Dale! Dale Dale!  I was accepted to the residency in Mexico! So I’m having a Benefit Piñata Dance Ritual with 9 amazing artists! Please support my Artist residency with 360 Xochi Qutezal at Lake Chapala and the artist of Piñata Dance Collective by Sharing the links and by Donating!

DONATE on the Indiegogo Campaign here: “Help Liz Dance in Mexico!”

lake chapalaThe Residency: 360 Xochi Quetzal. is in Central Mexico this coming May 2014!  I was accepted with 2 other artists among 160 international applicants so this is a big honor for me.  They will be providing a place to stay at Lake Chapala, Jalisco, MX, and a food stipend.  So, my costs are airfare, travel expenses, much needed new technology to video tape and edit my work, dance classes, pay for a videographer, a  week on my own in Mexico City and to pay the 9 artists who are donating their beauty to the Piñata Celebrations Benefit on Sunday, May 4!  That’s a lot!  I will not be teaching or generating income for a month, (my 5 classes will be on hold) so please consider supporting the arts.

SEE our INDIEGOGO CAMPAIGN! “Help Liz Dance in Mexico” and SHARE it on FB 🙂 !

THE PLAN is to fly to Guadalajara after our Piñata Celebrations Benefit and my father’s 80th birthday in May.  I will spend 3 weeks in the Residency program dancing, writing, and engaging with the land and culture.  Then, on June1, I will fly to Mexico City for a week to visit more sacred sites, museums, and connect with the dance community there as well.  This will be the beginning steps over the border to cultivate an artistic bridge with Mexica people, expand my Spanish capabilities, and explore my body’s movement in the land of my ancestral roots.

403474_374725035898622_1702350054_n-001DALE! DALE! DALE! Please come celebrate and see my work in an informal showing of “Piñata Dances” at Shawl Anderson Dance Center in Berkeley on May 4, 4pm, 2014!!! $5-$50 sliding scale. Mark your calendar (with a donation above $20, you will receive 2 tickets free).

Audience will be invited to participate in an optional blindfolded exploration of the senses and invited to view excerpts of Piñata dances and improvisational scores based on a new interpretation of the Piñata ritual.

Piñata Dances confront identity, the impermanent nature of the body and offer an educational context that reveals the history and meaning of La Piñata.

Directed and Performed by: Liz Boubion

Contemporary Dance Trio: Jeanette Male, Dominique Nigro, Sophie Stanley,
Traditional Aztec Dance for Huitzilopochtli: Cuauhtemoc MitotePeranda,
Chinese Traditional dance: Katherine He, Siu-Wei Huang
Improvisation: Bricine Mitchell, Rebeca Sanchez Glazer, Meghan Ballog and all other performers.
Live Music: Afia Walking Tree, Regina Wells Rashida Oji, Bricine Mitchell

The Piñata holds ancient and contemporary implications of celebration, loss and regeneration for Latina/o culture and the world at large.  Originally, before it was the paper mache sculpture filled with candy that children smash open with a blindfold and stick, the Piñata was birthed in China as a New Year celebration. During his travels in China, Marco Polo gathered it up and brought it back to Italy where it was appropriated to Catholicism representing 7 deadly sins. From Italy it swung to the Spaniards who colonized Mexico.  The Aztecs had their own ritual during the winter solstice that included the breaking open of a clay pot filled with water as a prayer for the return of the Sun God, “Huitzilopochtli”-(“Hummingbird on the Left”). In essence, it was a prayer for sustainability which is relevant for our precarious world today.  Now, Piñata is used for many occasions including birthday parties which personalizes the game, singing “Dale Dale Dale, no pierdas el tino, porque si lo pierdes, pierdes el camino…”(Hit it Hit it Hit it, don’t loose your aim, if you loose it, you loose your way”).

As a choreographer, Piñata has a changing score. It is a symbol of impermanence and the temporary nature of Dance. “Piñata” deconstructed, has been performed in several venues as a multi-media stage piece, an outdoor ritual, a gallery installation, or a public workshop that includes an interactive performance with the audience. As performers, we embody the physical and emotional imagery of Piñata and work symbolically with what is inside shaping our movement and sound. The mythology changes with each performer and each setting.  See: http://vimeo.com/53238453

Con mucha gratitud!!!

Elizabeth

USE THE INDIEGOGO CAMPAIGN! or donate in other ways below….

***For a tax deductable donation, please send a check to my fiscal sponsor:

Anne Bluethenthal and Dancers (“FOR Elizabeth Boubion” in the MEMO field)
3574 22nd St.

San Francisco, Ca. 94114

or pay directly to me by PayPal- I will send you a receipt with fiscal sponsor Tax ID. or send me a check… email me for my address. Thank you!

When I return from Mexico: I will be fundraising and grant writing for the next full length production called “Piñatas, Spaghetti and Lace”- (The things Italian, Marco Polo brought back from China).FEED OUR ARTISTS:
Your donations will support the sustainability of our Piñata Dance Collective. We are working artists who are performing and teaching classes that include technical training in dance and music, somatic therapies, sound healing, expressive arts, and permaculture, in various communities.  The expenses for generating and producing high level dance theater productions at part-time costs are as follows:
Rehearsal space: $3240/ 6 months
9 hours per week at $15/per hour= $540/ 1 month  = $3240/ 6 months
1 Artist’s fee for 4-6months: $2880-$4320
6 Artist Fees for 4-6 months= $17,280-$25,920.
Theater Rental- $2800 ($135 seats)
Administration (publicity, graphic design, marketing, outreach)= $600/month $3600/6 months
Publicity= $200
Tech support= $300
Video artist- camera person- $100 per day
Editing- $300 approximately

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  1. Pingback: Liz Boubion’s March Piñata News | Elizabeth Boubion, MFA, RSMT

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