paul kolnik
Gallery 100: Jerome Robbins Continuum
antique epigraphs | ballet | bart cook | dance | dance blogs | dance photography | gallery 100 | jerome robbins | jerome robbins continuum | new york city ballet | patricia mcbride | paul kolnik | photography | saratoga | sebastien marcovici | spac | the cage | wendy whelanImage from Gallery 100, photographs of Antique Epigraphs by Paul Kolnik While I was in Saratoga for NYCB’s Gala at SPAC, I stopped by Gallery 100 to see Jerome Robbins Continuum, a display of photographs by Paul Kolnik that show New York City Ballet in Robbins’ ballets. Kolnik has been photographing the company for over thirty [...]
New York City Ballet - Bach to Glass: A Musical Odyssey II
2 and 3 part inventions | a suite of dances | adrian danchig-waring | akhnaten | alban berg | bach | bach to glass | ballet | baryshinkov | baryshnikov | charles askegard | choreography | criticism | dance | dance writing | facades | glass pieces | glassworks | in memory of | international | jacques moatti | jared angle | jerome robbins | maria kowroski | music | new york city ballet | nicolas le riche | nycb reviews | paris opera ballet | paul kolnik | philip glass | philip neal | photography | rebecca krohn | reviews | rubric | school of american ballet | tyler angle | wendy whelan | white oak dance projectNYCB dancers in the final pose from Robbins’ Glass Pieces, photo by Paul Kolnik Tuesday’s evenings program at New York City Ballet took the audience on a musical journey from Bach’s solo piano and solo cello pieces, to an early twentieth century violin concerto by Alban Berg, to Philip Glass’s minimalist music of the 1980s. The [...]
New York City Ballet- French Cuisine
afternoon of a faun | antique epigraphs | damian woetzel | french cuisine | in g major | janie taylor | jerome robbins | magnolia bakery | new york city ballet | paul kolnik | teresa reichlen | uncategorized | wendy whelanTeresa Reichlen in Antique Epigraphs Admittedly, ‘French Cuisine’ was not one of the programs I was looking forward to most this season at New York City Ballet. I’m partial to Balanchine over Robbins, Tchaikovsky over Debussy, and plotless ballets over princes and princesses. But Thursday’s night’s program certainly exceeded my expectations and I particularly relished Antique [...]

