Picnic
This is a delightful, short, crisp lyrical work that is great fun from go to woe. It is the type of sparkling lovely show that one could base a light and happy night out with friends, or that special person you have been meaning to catch up with, on. It is a delicate sensitive joyful work, for which, Marieke Hardy has written a lovely ‘springboard’ that Gerard Van Dyck has fleshed out.
Picnicopens with the magic of sound and trilling birds that indicate the countryside, and I for one kept thinking of Chekhov, as we were taken along for a picnic - a quirky time in a liminal space with eskys and an eccentric family.
Van Dyck engages us with anecdote and his charismatic personality.
He is a beautiful expressive lyrical dancer. His work is joyful, nimble, agile, and has a sense of weightlessness. In fact the whole ends with a delightful homage to the magic of elevation.
As a fun poetic work highlighting true creative mastery, like all good art, it speaks to the creative urge in the viewer. I noticed the woman next to me drew two beautiful little birds on the tiny small bit of paper the audience is given to write a love letter.
Hopefully this specific offer (the love letter) to respond to the work can be ironed out, a bit. It could be suggested that the love letter everyone writes could be generic and un-gendered and glowing. So as one leaves the performance space and takes a lucky dip written by someone else it can have a beautiful - neutrality and offer the illusion it was meant for you and you alone (the one I picked out was addressed to Bree - so I had no doubt that all the love and passion wasn’t directed to me).
Grab the opportunity to see this delightful work.
Suzanne Sandow
Photographer: Jeff Busby
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