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Burlesque
Show
Follow Diverse Dance’s sideshow freaks Betty Beard, Kylie
Quoll, Tim Tam, Maxi Mo, and Misty Stares as they explore the notion
that in these days where an unattainable ideal of beauty is the
norm, the idea of the grotesque having their sexual needs met is
relegated to carnival sideshow freak status. Parallels are here
drawn with ‘normal ‘people and what are seen as their
sexual ‘idiosyncrasies’.
Our innocence
is shattered when we reach the age of sexual exploration by the
expectations of our world, where we exist as faceless identities.
Can we become comfortable with our ‘differences’? Do
we live them out with guilt, hidden from view, or learn to celebrate
them? Which, if any, lead down the path to depravity? In the end,
does it matter? We are devoured by society and our own indulgences.
Performed at Jute Theatre for On Edge Festival July 2008 and the
Tanks Arts Centre for Kookie Cabaret September 2008
Boyhood
dreams and aspirations,
An infinite array of potentials,
A swirling world from within,
Then came thought.,.,., No thwart!!!!
When society threw their net upon me!
Entangled,,,, and ,,,,, intertwined,
I whined
I resigned.
By
Misty Stares (Joshua Percival)
17 meg .wmv file 
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The
Death Show
The
Death Show is a celebration of all that is dead or dying, ending,
resurrecting, rotting or remembering. A ten minute performance art
piece produced by Diverse Dance in collaboration with physical theatre
artist Daniel Gorski,
Designed
for The Upholstery Contemporary Arts exhibition in Cairns, June
2007.
Check
the Upholstery web site www.theupholstery.com
Your
not here
Life has gone still and cold
The air, the wood, the room,
I don’t feel…. anymore
Just memory
It comes in short, excruciating pangs
Ghost pangs
There’s no senses
No you to feel the spaces
The air is dead with you gone
Without your breath, your movement, your warmth
How can you just not be?
by Tia Adoberg
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Unexpectedly
Splattered
Upon deaths domain,
All that remain,
Less bone and brain,
Beyond the pain,
No refrain…. No name,
No game…. Look into
My frame.
By
Joshua Percival
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11 meg .wmv file 
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The
Boatman
The
installation / performance explores the interrelationship of man
made objects with the natural environment and how these are interpreted
as symbols of human experience. The imagery is evocative of world
myths including those of mythic ferrymen, fishermen, Buddhist
Boddhisattva imagery and the Hindu idea of a 'tirtha' or spiritual
crossing between worlds that has its origin in imagery of crossing
an ocean or flooded river. As such it can be interpreted as a
symbol of birth and death.
The
Boatman is an installation / performance work designed for the
On Edge Festival held in Cairns during July 2006 and for the Pacific
Edge Regional Galleries Conference in Mackay during September
2006.
Produced
in collaboration with Kevin Mayo and Sue Hayes, soundscape by
Mark Edwards.
Funded
by the Regional Arts Development Fund, supported by The Tanks
Arts Centre.
10 meg .wmv file 
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Teeter
Teeter
is a timeless, sensitive piece, where a community of women have
been without their seafaring partners for many months. The ebb
and flow of their longing bring them to the brink of desire, until
the homecoming releases a flood of emotion.
Performed
at The Tanks Art Centre for 'Deep Tank 5' and at the Cairns Centre
of Contemporary Art December 2005 for the Julie Wilson-Foster
exhibition 'Petri Dish Pink'.
5.2 meg .wmv file 
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Sample
Society
Designed
for ‘Spark’ as part of Australian Dance Week 2005. The
electronic sound track being the basis for the movement composition,
which was inspired by the concept of belonging to and/or opting
out of society's ordered system. The bar code design symbolises
conformity to mass production, mass consumption. Every now and then,
a sample of the individual expression is revealed before being consumed
by the hegemonic rhythm.
The
sound track was devised by local sound artist and Diverse Dance
performer Mark Edwards.
“The
Spark events are great for Cairns, they are the only place experimental
electronic artists can express themselves freely without commercial
pressure” says Mark.
6 meg .wmv file

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Australian
Dance Week 2005
Student
workshops
As
part of Dance Week Diverse Dance hosted an interactive workshop
for children at the Tanks Art Centre. The workshop included performance,
movement skills, body percussion, warm up and relaxation exercises
in a 3 hour session.
The Performance
The
Island a performance piece inspired by the symbiotic relationship
between the ocean and an island. Two stilt walkers and five dancers
form two groups to represent the interaction of the elements of
water and earth.

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Uberschwartz
Music
video produced in Cairns by Diverse Dance member Mark Edwards. The
video is a story about a distant all female planet that has just
received the first TV transmissions from Earth. Shocked by what
they see a team of Uber Girls beam down to save the day. Only problem
is they are 69 years too late and on the wrong side of the planet!
Check
out the website www.uberschwartz.net
2009 12 meg WMV
2005 20 meg WMV LANGUAGE WARNING
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The
Seven Minute Relationship
The
Seven Minute relationship is an emotionally charged dance exploring
the discovery and loss of love through contemporary movement, tableau
and voice.
This
expressive performance piece runs for seven minutes and has been
designed as a roving/repeat show.
8.5 meg .mov file
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Roving
Performers
Diverse
Dance has been creating installation/performance works
for Cairns audiences at community and corporate events since 2004.
For
more information check our sister site mixedlollies.com

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Japan
Week 2005
To
the sounds of taiko drums, black and white figures combine together
with visual artists to produce a kinaesthetic metaphor for Yin and
yang.
Seiji
Yamauchi and Diverse Dance combined forces to create a ten minute
performance art piece for Japan Week 2005 at the Tanks Art Centre.

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Deep
Tank 5 - Tanks Arts Centre 2005
In
the midst of a hot summer, Deep Tank 5 provided a cool respite with
a night of dance, soundscapes, and visuals. The event at the Tanks
Art Centre was presented by Diverse Dance and featured guest performers
and multi-media artists. The space and performances were themed
upon a celebration of water. That it was staged in a disused oil
storage tank was not lost in the exploration of the theme by artists
who evoked both serene, flowing images of water and those of pollution
and degradation.
The Tanks spaces are open to inspired set designs and for Deep Tank
5 it was given a relaxed intimacy by arrangements of lounge chairs
where the audience could mingle and view performances. Visual stimulation
was provided through video projections by Julie Wilson-Foster, ice
sculpture by Arcocrystallis, and light box displays by Deanna Maich
and Gabrielle Cooney. The performances opened with a soundscaped
movement piece of three women flowing in elegant imitation of seaweed.
Sound and video projection were integral to the ambience of this
and most performances of the evening, uniting the diverse explorations
of the watery theme with a sophisticated multimedia layering.
Members of Diverse Dance performed five dances including the opening
piece. Their second piece, Bags, contained a strong environmental
statement against the use of plastic shopping bags and their effects
on marine life. This social consciousness was maintained in their
study of mass production and consumer conformity entitled Sample
Society. This articulate dance featured the ensemble of ten dancers
utilizing both body and voice in imitation of electronic harmony.
The full ensemble was also present for Teeter in which women await
the return of their men folk from the sea. However by the look of
the tight sailor pants, singlets and jaunty sailor caps sported
by their men they may have been out of luck. Joking aside, it was
a pleasure to see this number of dancers working together and producing
carefully choreographed and intelligent pieces. The last piece by
members of Diverse Dance featured a comic, take-your–leg-off
trio of sharks prowling through the crowd.
Bonemap have repeatedly treated Cairns audiences to sophisticated
multi-media images and performance for over half a decade. For Deep
Tank 5 they projected images onto a 5m high cone of translucent
fabric while a pair of dancers experimented with the interior space.
Projections included live images of the dancers inside, text, and
scenes of water and oil drums. These agitated images played with
notions of containment, leakage, and pollution making clever reference
to the performance space. Of these projections, the most poignant,
providing both relief from the profusion of text and images and
an ornate disquiet, was a video projection of a Siamese fighting
fish lit huge upon the screen.
Three performances which were not so invested with multi-media were
an exquisite percussion performance by Guiseppe Vizzone, a piece
by Zane Saunders and Ian Connolly, and spoken word by Simon Tait.
Saunders and Connolly explored indigenous experience framed by the
banality of a suburban landscape of dust, beer bottles, paving blocks,
and power tools. A place where water is mediated by the garden hose
and the wading pool. An increasing environmental reality as thirsty
Cairns suburbs continue to crawl outwards. Simon Tait was concerned
with our hunger for seafood and the effects of commercial fishing.
His bizarre performance poetry was a comic cross between a bush
poetry reading of Henry Lawson and the rhyming of Dr. Seuss. One
of the final performances of the evening was a beautifully costumed
dance by Sublime Shakti after which the dance floor opened and the
DJ took over. Deep Tank 5 was a tribute to both the talented diversity
of the Cairns art scene and the commitment of those involved.
Kevin Mayo - Arts Nexus Review
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