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Physical theatre: drawing inspiration from the physical grace and power of dance, a new student theatre at the University of Arizona is a bold new campus landmark that enhances cultural life.


The University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  (UA) came into being in the late nineteenth century at a time when college education in the USA was neither common nor an especially high civic priority. In 1885, when Tucson was named the site of Arizona's new university (rather than its capital, state prison, or insane asylum), residents were thoroughly dismayed. As no one was willing to provide land for the new institution, the city was on the verge On the Verge (or The Geography of Yearning) is a play written by Eric Overmyer. It makes extensive use of esoteric language and pop culture references from the late nineteenth century to 1955.  of returning the $25 000 funding to the state legislature A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system.

The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions:
, but a pair of gamblers and a saloon-keeper saved the day by donating 40 acres of land to the east of town. Classes convened in 1891 with 32 students, six teachers and two departments, agriculture and mines, all sharing one building, which is still in use.

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From such frontier beginnings, UA has grown to a lively and respected regional institution. Today it has over 36 000 students, the vast majority drawn from Arizona and the American South-West. Its Dance Division, which forms part of the College of Fine Arts
COFA redirects here. for the "Compact of Free Association" see that article.


The College of Fine Arts (COFA) is the creative arts faculty of the University of New South Wales and is located on Oxford Street, Paddington, Sydney, Australia.
, is particularly popular and is one of the top ranked arts educational programmes in the US. Rigorous training in ballet, modern and jazz dance is underscored by an emphasis on live performance and UA student ensembles have toured extensively to great acclaim. Paradoxically, for such a prestigious course, facilities for performance on the campus were limited, but with the recent inauguration of the new Stevie Eller Dance Theatre, the university now has a venue that not only matches the ambitions of its students and teachers, but also adds to Tucson's wider cultural life.

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Phoenix-based Gould Evans were commissioned to design the new theatre which forms a landmark and gateway at the eastern end of the campus. At the heart of the building is a 300 seat theatre with a full flytower, orchestra pit, scene and costume shops, lobby and outdoor stage. These performance spaces are augmented by a rehearsal studio that forms the project's public face as a big box teeteringly supported on (apparently) randomly angled pilotis that rise up from the theatre lobby below. The huge vitrine of the dance studio overlooks the university's main mall The Main Mall was an outdoor pedestrian shopping plaza in downtown Poughkeepsie, New York, which was in existence from 1973 until 2001. A urban renewal project designed with the intention of stopping the decline of the central business district of downtown Poughkeepsie, the mall , revealing tantalizing tan·ta·lize  
tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es
To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach.
 glimpses of activity and animation as the students go through their paces. At night, the studio is transformed into a softly luminous box as light percolates through an external carapace carapace (kâr`əpās), shield, or shell covering, found over all or part of the anterior dorsal portion of an animal. In lobsters, shrimps, crayfish, and crabs, the carapace is the part of the exoskeleton that covers the head and thorax  of rusted woven wire panels that are kinked and cranked like powerfully rippling muscles.

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Rusted metal has become something of a South-West signature material, enthusiastically employed by an emerging generation of architects to evoke a sense of the region's vernacular tradition. Rusted steel farm buildings and structures This is a list of famous or notable buildings with articles about them. By Category
  • List of abbeys and priories
  • List of amphitheatres (contemporary)
  • List of amphitheatres (Roman)
  • List of ancient pyramids
  • List of ancient Roman triumphal arches
 are a common sight in the Arizona countryside, yet because of the hot, dry climate, the steel weathers quickly but does not rust through, so it is rarely necessary to use costly proprietary types of oxidized oxidized

having been modified by the process of oxidation.


oxidized cellulose
see absorbable cellulose.
 steel cladding. Here the metal scrim scrim  
n.
1. A durable, loosely woven cotton or linen fabric used for curtains or upholstery lining or in industry.

2. A transparent fabric used as a drop in the theater to create special effects of lights or atmosphere.
 is held well clear of the main building envelope A building envelope is the separation between the interior and the exterior environments of a building. It serves as the outer shell to protect the indoor environment as well as to facilitate its climate control. , dematarializing and subverting the orthogonal mass of the dance studio and theatre, which in turn forms a dark, neutral background for the callisthenics of the external skin. Capable of accommodating projections of light and images, the scrim can also function as an eye-catching theatre billboard.

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The irregular form of the outer envelope is carried through into the intimate, cavern-like, interior of the theatre. The two principal volumes of dance studio and auditorium are necessarily separated (for acoustic and circulation purposes) by a narrow cleft-like corridor, lit by a glazed slot incised incised /in·cised/ (in-sizd´) cut; made by cutting.  into the east facade. Nestling underneath the hull of the dance studio, the public lobby is a fluid, permeable space. Support functions such as dressing rooms, costume store and scene dock are arranged on the east edge of the auditorium, forming a link between the new building and the existing faculty. Male and female dressing rooms are separated by a roll-up divider on performance nights, but the two rooms can also be connected to form a single studio space for Pilates classes. A pair of garage doors allows the studio to extend outside into an adjoining courtyard garden.

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As well as efficiently accommodating the various elements of the programme, the project is also an exploration of how to interpret the movement and physicality of dance in built form, reconciling the apparently incompatible intangible, fleeting qualities of movement with architectural solidity and permanence. Key to this process was an investigation of graphic representation of dance or Labanotation, a system of written symbols developed by Hungarian choreographer Rudolf Laban Rudolf (Jean-Baptiste Attila) Laban, also known as Rudolf Von Laban (December 15, 1879, Pressburg, Austria-Hungary (today Bratislava, Slovakia) - July 1, 1958, Weybridge, England) was a notable central European dance artist and theorist, whose work laid the foundations for  in the 1920s, that records and describes dance performances in the manner of a musical score. Jory Hancock, head of UA's Dance Division, suggested that the architects look at the Labanotation of Serenade serenade [Ital. sera=evening], term used to designate several types of musical composition. Opera and song literature yield numerous examples of the serenade sung or played by a lover at night beneath his beloved's window; outstanding is , the first piece that George Balanchine (founder of the School of American Ballet The School of American Ballet is located in New York City, in Lincoln Center. It is considered one of the most prestigious and notable ballet schools in the United States and teaches some of the most talented young dancers in the country. ) created for his students. The plans of the starting positions for each movement of Serenade were used to create a matrix from which emerge a grid of tilted columns that support the dance studio. The pervading impression is of mass gracefully poised and rendered almost weightless by the balletic slenderness of the columns and the supple contortions of metal outer casing.

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In a satisfying artistic twist, the students are due to perform Serenade later in the spring, as part of a gala event commemorating the centenary of Balanchine's birth. Having lived and worked in a building inspired by the piece, the students will extend this lyrical fusion of dance and architecture through the act of performance. C. S.

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Architect

Gould Evans Associates, Phoenix, Arizona

Project team

Trudi Hummel hummel

entire, naturally polled deer.
, Donna Barry, Jose Pombo, Kyle Houston, Jason Boyer, Jay Silverberg, John Cooper, Adam Odgers, Kari Smith, John Dimmel, Jennifer Little, Tamara Shroll, Krista Shepard, Betsy Lynch, Jorge Colon, Barbara Hendrix, Shane Hawkins, Brian Avery

Structural engineer

Rudow + Berry

Electrical engineer

Associated Engineering

Photographs

Timothy Hursley

DANCE THEATRE, TUCSON,

ARIZONA, USA

ARCHITECT

GOULD EVANS
COPYRIGHT 2004 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:The Architectural Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2004
Words:1003
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