The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Choreograp­her brings joy to Rialto

Dance theater explores Black love through characters, movement.

- By Amanda Sieradzki

The notion that love can ignite change, empowermen­t and healing is the celebrated center of choreograp­her Kyle Abraham’s “An Untitled Love,” at the Rialto Center for the Arts today. The work, performed by his company A.I.M. (Abraham in Motion), is a dance theater “mixed tape” indulging in Black love and joy through its characters and movement while R&B legend D’angelo’s music paints a soulful backdrop.

“Bring your unapologet­ic best self to the show,” Abraham says to potential audiences. “You can laugh out loud at the work. If your song comes on, you can say, ‘Oh, that’s my song.’ It’s a lived work and I want people to live in it as they witness it.”

Abraham first fell for the neosoul singer’s debut album “Brown Sugar” during his time at Morgan State University in Baltimore.

Abraham is an award-winning choreograp­her and 2013 Macarthur fellow. He has presented work throughout the United States and internatio­nally, and has been commission­ed by the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the Royal Ballet, the New York City Ballet and Paul Taylor American Modern Dance. In 2019, Abraham created a solo work for American Ballet Theatre principal dancer Misty Copeland titled “Ash” and was commended by The New York Times for his skill at mingling ballet vernacular with African diasporic forms.

In the past, many of his dances have resonated at the crossroads of identity and history and addressed civil rights, police brutality and the impact of domestic and gang violence in Black communitie­s. “An Untitled Love,” by comparison, is a jubilant exaltation of loving oneself and allowing that love to grow and thrive as it ripples out into the community.

The piece borrows its name

from D’angelo’s Grammy-award winning track “Untitled (How Does It Feel).” Illustrato­r Joe Buckingham’s art is projected behind the dancers, echoing the album art he created for D’angelo.

A.I.M. dancer Catherine Kirk says she’s had a lifetime relationsh­ip with D’angelo’s music. “His soundtrack has accompanie­d

my life when I’m cleaning, cooking and romancing,” she says. “His music has entered so many different spaces and is so welcoming and groovy that I find it to be a safe space for some of the vulnerabil­ity that we enter in this work.”

Those vulnerabil­ities are portrayed through characters that blend Abraham’s movement vocabulary with spoken word and improvisat­ion. Early in the five-year rehearsal process, Abraham played Cupid with his dance company members, pairing them up for potential duets, but was surprised by how many of the relationsh­ips formed organicall­y over time.

Kirk plays Tina, a confident, business-minded woman who knows how to give love more than receive it. On the other end of the spectrum is Richard Lawrence Taylor (Martell Ruffin), who dances opposite Tina.

“I’m falling and have fallen in love with ‘An Untitled Love,’” says Ruffin, who was hired over the phone in 2020 at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ruffin describes Taylor as an amalgamati­on of the men he grew up around in Chicago. His character goes through a transforma­tion over the course of “An Untitled Love,” which Ruffin and Kirk agree was strengthen­ed by the hours the company spent watching romantic comedies and sitcoms while bonding over Zoom.

Abraham wasn’t keen to rehearse on the video-conferenci­ng platform, and instead tasked his company members to engage in deep conversati­ons around the kinds of Black love stories portrayed in popular culture.

“We’d watch a movie or a TV show, and from there would have these deep conversati­ons about how it connected us to our characters and the work,” he says. “The depth of the characters are that much richer from that experience.”

Kirk also recalls an influentia­l community workshop held PRE-COVID-19 in Abraham’s hometown of Pittsburgh. It had a profound effect on how she approached her character study and subsequent movement. The company played cards and shared a meal during the workshop, then gave the microphone to community members to share their love stories.

“We taped it and looked back at their mannerisms,” Kirk says. “I wanted to make sure what I represent is rooted in humanity, that I’m not becoming these tropes or stereotype­s that get placed on the Black community by the media or visual representa­tions of Black love.”

The work defies classifica­tion in its personific­ations of love, while D’angelo’s music serves as the firm foundation. “An Untitled Love’s” sound integrates jazz, funk, hip-hop, blues and soul. Kirk says it aligns with Abraham’s choreograp­hic approach, which has been described as “post-modern gumbo.”

“In the sense of a gumbo, you’re not tasting each individual flavor, you’re tasting it as one dish,” Kirk says. “I think his work really does that. It all comes together and doesn’t feel like a dance that later talks about politics or society.”

Abraham adds, “You hear that soul music and that connection to our elders, but you also get its present dayness and the grit and reality of different aspects of our community. There’s something so beautifull­y intergener­ational, but not in a way that is trying to be anything other than honest.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Kyle Abraham’s evening-length work “An Untitled Love,” at the Rialto Center for the Arts, celebrates Black love. “It’s a lived work and I want people to live in it as they witness it,” Abraham says.
COURTESY Kyle Abraham’s evening-length work “An Untitled Love,” at the Rialto Center for the Arts, celebrates Black love. “It’s a lived work and I want people to live in it as they witness it,” Abraham says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States