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April 15, 2015 Princeton Arts Fellows for 2015-17 Announced Choreographer/director Pavel Zuštiak and documentary filmmaker Pacho Velez Photo caption (left): Pavel Zuštiak, director, choreographer, performer, and founder/artistic director of the New York City- based contemporary performance group Palissimo Company Photo credit: Jan Hromadko Photo caption (right): Documentary filmmaker Pacho Velez who works at the intersection between ethnography, contemporary art, and political documentary Photo credit: Courtesy of Pachoworks (Princeton, NJ) Choreographer and director Pavel Zuštiak and documentary filmmaker Pacho Velez have been named Princeton University Arts Fellows for 2015-17 and will begin two years of teaching and community collaboration in September.

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Page 1: rag532wr4du1nlsxu2nehjbv-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com…  · Web viewApril 15, 2015. Princeton Arts Fellows for 2015-17 Announced. Choreographer/director . Pavel. Zuštiak. and documentary

April 15, 2015

Princeton Arts Fellows for 2015-17 AnnouncedChoreographer/director Pavel Zuštiak and documentary filmmaker Pacho Velez

Photo caption (left): Pavel Zuštiak, director, choreographer, performer, and founder/artistic director of the New York City-based contemporary performance group Palissimo CompanyPhoto credit: Jan HromadkoPhoto caption (right): Documentary filmmaker Pacho Velez who works at the intersection between ethnography, contemporary art, and political documentaryPhoto credit: Courtesy of Pachoworks

(Princeton, NJ)  Choreographer and director Pavel Zuštiak and documentary filmmaker Pacho

Velez have been named Princeton University Arts Fellows for 2015-17 and will begin two years

of teaching and community collaboration in September.

The Princeton Arts Fellows program provides support for early-career artists who have

demonstrated both extraordinary promise and a record of achievement in their fields with the

opportunity to further their work while teaching within a liberal arts context. The Mellon

Foundation awarded Princeton a $3.3 million challenge grant in September 2012 to endow and

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launch the program, which was matched by an anonymous alumnus.  The program is also

supported by the $101 million gift of the late Peter B. Lewis, a 1955 alumnus, which established

the Lewis Center for the Arts.

Fellows are selected for a two-year residency to teach one course each semester or, in lieu of a

course, to undertake an artistic assignment, such as directing a play, conducting a student music

ensemble, or choreographing a dance with students. Fellows are expected to be active members

of the University's intellectual and artistic community while in residence; in return, they are

provided the resources and spaces necessary to their work.

Zuštiak and Velez were selected from a large, diverse, and multi-talented pool of over 500

applicants from dance, music and visual artists – the fields targeted for 2015-2017. “As has been

the case in the first two years of the program, the competition was fierce," said Michael Cadden,

Chair of the University’s Lewis Center. "Reading through the applications, the selection

committee was yet again amazed by the rich diversity of the contemporary arts scene. Pavel and

Pacho emerged as the most remarkable of a remarkable lot.”

Pavel Zuštiak is a director, choreographer, performer, and founder/artistic director of the New

York City-based performance group Palissimo Company. Born in Czechoslovakia, he trained at

the School for New Dance Development in Amsterdam. His work, often described as both

human and humane, merges the abstract aspects of dance with nonlinear qualities of “theatre of

images” and cinematic mise-en-scene. His approach results in work that is rich in evocative

imagery, strong emotional resonance, and non-narrative/nonverbal content, and it strives to

provide both creators and spectators with innovative, transformative insight into the human

condition. The New Yorker observed that, “a vivid, often anguished imagination shines through

in [Zuštiak’s] work” and The New York Times critic Claudia La Rocco wrote, “Mr. Zuštiak, a

striking performer who projected an exquisite, unknowable vulnerability.”

Themes explored in Zuštiak’s work include sensory deprivation (Blind Spot, 2003), gluttony and

obsession (Itch in the Stitch, 2007), death and sex (Le Petit Mort, 2007), and joy and terror

(Weddings and Beheadings, 2009). One of the recurring motives in many of his projects is the

interplay between performers and audiences. While occasionally using a traditional proscenium

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seating, Zuštiak often experiments with perception-changing spatial and perceptual arrangements

– as in Le Petit Mort, where the confining interior of P.S.122’s theater imposed a sense of

claustrophobia, or in the surprise ending of Weddings and Beheadings, with performers and

audience seated together, watching their reflections in a wall of mirrors. Investigation of

perceived roles of the watchers and the watched continued in HALT! (2009) – a site-specific

work for Staten Island Ferry Terminal in which dancers moved freely among travelers awaiting

their daily commute. His five-hour trilogy The Painted Bird, inspired by Jerzy Kosiński’s novel,

received a 2013 Bessie Award nomination for Outstanding Production.

Zuštiak’s work has been presented in the U.S. at Wexner Center for the Arts, Performance Space

122, Baryshnikov Arts Center, Abrons Arts Center, Legion Arts, Performance Art Dance Lab

(PADL) West, and internationally at Archa Theatre (Czech Republic), Bratislava in Movement

dance festival, Slovak National Theatre, Bytom International Dance Festival (Poland), and

KioSK Festival and State Theatre Kosice (both in Slovakia). His upcoming 2015 work was co-

commissioned by New York Live Arts, Walker Arts Center, and Legion Arts.

Zuštiak has been an artist in residence at the Grotowski Institute in Poland, Stanica in Slovakia,

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Abrons Art Center, Vermont Performance Lab, and Maggie

Allesee National Choreographic Center.

He is the winner of three Princess Grace Awards and is a recipient of 2013 Lower Manhattan

Cultural Council President's Award for Excellence in Artistic Practice, a 2012 New England

Foundation for the Arts/National Dance Project Award, and a 2010 Guggenheim Fellowship.

Pacho Velez is a documentary filmmaker who works at the intersection between ethnography,

contemporary art, and political documentary. Velez completed his M.F.A. at California Institute

of the Arts in 2010. He now lives in New York City and teaches filmmaking at Bard College and

design ethnography at Parsons The New School For Design. He is an affiliate of the Sensory

Ethnography Lab at Harvard University.

In a review of Bastards of Utopia (co-directed with Maple Razsa in 2010) American

Anthropologist stated, “In the best ethnographic tradition, Razsa and Velez take the worldview of

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their interlocutors on its own terms and use that perspective to challenge taken-for-granted

assumptions of potential viewers... the film refuses easy narratives of redemption or dismissive

narratives of youthful naïveté.”

His current project, Reagan Years, explores a prolific actor’s defining role: Leader of the Free

World. Told entirely through a largely unseen trove of archival footage, the film captures the

pageantry, pathos, and charisma that followed the 40th president from Hollywood to the nation’s

capital.

Velez’s last film, Manakamana (co-directed with Stephanie Spray), won a Golden Leopard at the

Locarno Film Festival and was shown at venues from around the world, including the Whitney

Biennial and the Toronto International Film Festival.  His earlier film and theater work have

been presented at venues such as the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, the Museum of Ethnography in

Stockholm, and on Japanese National Television. He won Best Director at the RiverRun

International Film Festival this year for Manakamana. He was also the recipient of the Best

Documentary award for two consecutive years at the Ivy Film Festival--in 2002 for Occupation

and in 2003 for Orphans of Mathare.

In a review of Manakamana, Manohla Dargis of The New York Times noted, Velez “...doesn’t try

to control your viewing experience or steer your gaze--there are no cutaways to trembling lips or

close-ups of fluttering eyes…[Velez’s style is] as ethically radical as it is formally rigorous: By

refusing to reduce his characters to a documentary prop, Mr. Velez affirms both the limits of his

own knowledge...and the ethical obligations that come when people become subjects.”

"We are very pleased to welcome Pavel and Pacho to Princeton and look forward to what they

bring to the table," Cadden said. “They both have distinguished themselves in pushing the

boundaries of their art forms in ways that will challenge our students, faculty, and the larger

Princeton community. The arts thrive on challenge.”

The next round of Fellowship applications, which will be open to artists in all disciplines, will

begin in July with a mid-September deadline. Guidelines posted on the Lewis Center website at

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arts.princeton.edu. For questions about the Fellowship program write to which is lca-

[email protected].

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