Work samples
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Equinox and Solstice
Equinox and Solstice is a movement research project that combines Chinese Classical dance and Modern dance to create my unique aesthetic. It is also a collaboration project with my designers, dancers and production team. It is an after-life world following the theory of the circle of life in Chinese Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism. It starts from death and follows the soul after death through the journey to start a new life again. There are four main sections that follow the seasons of Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter in terms to design elements, with the Equinox and Solstice representing the lightest and darkest days of the year. The five elements from Chinese Fengshui theory, water, fire, wood, gold and earth, are used to highlight the Chineseness in this piece.
About Allen
Allen Xing is a dancer, choreographer, and teaching artist based in Baltimore, MD. He began professional dance training in ballet and Chinese classical dance at age thirteen, holds a B.F.A in dance from Shanxi Academy of Arts in China, a M.Ed. from Salisbury University, and a M.F.A in Dance from University of Maryland.
He is a former member of Huajin Dance Drama Ensemble from 2007-2011. He performed as a dancer in production Forbidden Fruit Under the Great Wall and… more
Equinox and Solstice
Equinox and Solstice is a movement research project that combines Chinese Classical dance and Modern dance to create my unique aesthetic. It is also a collaboration project with my designers, dancers and production team. It is an after-life world following the theory of the circle of life in Chinese Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism. It starts from death and follows the soul after death through the journey to start a new life again. There are four main sections that follow the seasons of Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter in terms to design elements, with the Equinox and Solstice representing the lightest and darkest days of the year. The five elements from Chinese Fengshui theory, water, fire, wood, gold and earth, are used to highlight the Chineseness in this piece.
Length 70 minutes
Choreographer/Costume Designer: Allen Chunhui Xing
Scenic Designers: Ryan Fox, Grace Guarniere
Lighting Designer: Brandi Martin
Sound Designer: Jeffrey Dorfman
Projection Designer: Dylan Uremovich
Stage Manager: Sydney Ziegler
Dancers: Emily Ames, Laurie Dodge, Conmay Rose Du ,Amanda T. Fair, Reyna Fox, Erin Lenahan, Daria Mozolina, Katie Nerud, Rose Xinran Qi, Shawn Stone, Olivia Xia, Allen Chunhui Xing, Huiwang Zhang
Seleted pieces from Equinox and Solstice have been seleted and invited to perform at the 2018 Maryland Campaign, 2018 Washington DC Global Perspectives Festival, 2019 Beijing Dance Festival, 2019 The Kennedy Center China Spring New Year Festival Gala, 2019 Jacobs Pillow Dance Festival, 2020 Japan SAI International Dance Festival, 2019 City Dance Festival Choreography Showcase -Taiyuan, 2020 Shanxi Modern Dance Exhibition of New Works China and Dance Place 2020 Season Washington DC.
Duplicity
We live in the modern world, and our lives are impacted by the environment. The environment around us is multi-faceted with each having may vehicles to embrace or influence. As people of a society, a country, a world, we face many different challenges. We have our own evaluation system holding us true, but the living environment often forces us to hide the true value of what we believe; or to pretend to be someone that is not truly who we are and hide the inner self. We are afraid of other people's judgments; we fear receiving labels and being ourselves. Duplicity tells a story of the conflict between a person's outward-facing persona and internal voices.
Choreographer: Allen Chunhui Xing
Dancer: Klinskiy Igor, Salogub Egor, Fomin Egor, Chemilevskaya Diana, Kulakovskaya Maria
Music: Original composition by Svyatoslav Melik
Lighting Design: Allen Chunhui Xing
Video: Paul Jackson
Photo: iskhakov.jpg, Nina N_D_image
Shape in Water
As a young child, my father taught me to swim. I enjoy swimming and go diving often. The feeling of weightlessness and lightness in the water removes pressure found on land and allows my inner-self to explore. I look to the sun through the surface, deep under water in awe. I am a good swimmer, but also afraid of the water. The silence below the surface; the danger lurking beyond sight; the seclusion; combining to create a sense of exhilaration, of anticipation. The inspiration of Shape in Water was from the image I had of a man falling to the bottom of the ocean. The subconscious thinking process that he had lingering between life and death. It embodies the memory of my sense of water and the conflict between desire and fear.
Shape in Water has been selected and invited to perform at 2018 Beijing Dance Festival, 2018 Maryland Dance Festival, 2019 Richmond Dance Festival, 2019 Japan SAI International Dance Festival, 2019 Detroit City Dance Festival, 2019 Seoul choreography International Festival South Korea, 2019 Dance Gallery Festival New York City, 2020 Joy of Dance OY Finland, 2020 Mexico City International Contemporary Dance Festival, 2020 contemporary of Ballet Asia South Korea, 2020 Shanxi Modern Dance Exhibition of New Works China.
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Shape in WaterAs a young child, my father taught me to swim. I enjoy swimming and go diving often. The feeling of weightlessness and lightness in the water removes pressure found on land and allows my inner-self to explore. I look to the sun through the surface, deep under water in awe. I am a good swimmer, but also afraid of the water. The silence below the surface; the danger lurking beyond sight; the seclusion; combining to create a sense of exhilaration, of anticipation. The inspiration of Shape in Water was from the image I had of a man falling to the bottom of the ocean. The subconscious thinking process that he had lingering between life and death.
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Shape in WaterPhoto by Paul Deziel
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Citizen
Choreographer: Allen Chunhui Xing
Dancers: Jovannie Aranzamendi Nieves, Luis Jovanne Medina Velez, James Thomas Esquilin, Allen Chunhui Xing
Standing on the street, watching people passing through. They look different, dress different, and speak different. The facial expressions show people happy, sad, cold, positive and stressed…each of them has a story of their own lives. As citizens of a society, country, we are facing many different challenges. Challenges from the living environment, political environment, work… and most impactfully ourselves. As citizens of the society, we receive labels… labels of being a foreigner, immigrant, gay, white, black, Asian, poor, old, young, rich,……..people fight for the label they want, people fight for the label they don’t….we fight for the opportunities, we fight to conquer diseases, we fight for our lives. But what matters? What are YOU fighting for? Standing on the stage, after we share our stories and expose our inner selves, you see skins, muscles, bones lines, movement, weight shitting, sharing, supporting, we are human bodies. What labels do you actually see?
The inspiration for creating Citizen is the personal experience of my life in the USA. I have used my own stories and inserted other performers’ stories. Four dancers on stage, we tell our stories and remove the labels; we are dancers, dancers with different colors. Dancers have the same human body structures. What labels can you still see? Does color still matter?
2021 Singapore International Dance Festival Choreography Gold Award
2021 DC Choreography Dance Festival
2022 SpectorDance’s Choreographers Showcase
2022 Japan SAI International Dance Festival
2022 Orlando Contemporary Choreography Festival
2022 Battery Dance Festival, NYC
2022 Seoul Contemporary Ballet of Asia
2022Detroit Dance City Festival
2022 Festival De Movimiento Puerto Rico
2023 Finland International Dance Gala
2023 City Dance Festival International Edition
2023 Booking Dance Festival at Jazz Lincoln Center, NYC
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CitizenCitizen (Excerpt) Choreographer: Allen Chunhui Xing Dancers: Jovannie Aranzamendi Nieves, Luis Jovanne Medina Velez, James Thomas Esquilin, Allen Chunhui Xing Standing on the street, watching people passing through. They look different, dress different, and speak different. The facial expressions show people happy, sad, cold, positive and stressed…each of them has a story of their own lives. As citizens of a society, country, we are facing many different challenges. Challenges from the living environment, political environment, work… and most impactfully ourselves. As citizens of the society, we receive labels… labels of being a foreigner, immigrant, gay, white, black, Asian, poor, old, young, rich,……..people fight for the label they want, people fight for the label they don’t….we fight for the opportunities, we fight to conquer diseases, we fight for our lives. But what matters? What are YOU fighting for?
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Another Side of You
However, Tony is living a lie. He is in love with a man. His wife longs for his attention; their marriage was to con-form to societal and family norms. Tony struggles. He wants to be a good person. He loves his wife. They are friends, but he be can’t be the person she wants. He be-comes introspective, searching within and looking around. He realizes that everyone has their own struggles. Those who appear on the outside to have everything just right, might just be fighting internally.
Tony then opens his eyes to see another side of those around him. His wife, his family, his co-workers, and friends. This awareness provides both strength and more questions. Society today is more educated, more enlightened, and more connected than any before, but why do people still feel the need to conform when conformity challenges the fabric of oneself.
Interactions are often defined by our outward persona. Sometimes there is a gap between how one is perceived and how one perceives oneself. Our own personal journeys often involve balancing where we are internally and externally. How do we perceive ourselves? How do others perceive us? There may be conflicts rooted deep emotions of happiness, sadness, hope, hopelessness, love, hate, honesty, deception, involvement, isolation, comfort, uneasiness. For all, it is a personal journey...
Opening StatementWithout love, relationships struggle. He loves her, but the love is not passionate, it is based in guilt. The marriage is a empty shell, but they have to protect it.
Emotions
Every day, people deal with emotions; expressing these emotions, hiding, exploring, changing.
Memory
Even if it has always been fake, Tony hoped the marriage would go well and feelings would develop. He reflects on the good memories when they first dated.
Withered
Truth agonizes, especially when Lily accepts the life she knows is based on a lie. Her life is like the falling leaves, withering as they hit the ground. She missed both true love and as a result part of her youthful life.
Shadows
Tony is afraid that people will find out he is gay. Hiding and living in the shadows, he begins to realize that everyone has their own struggles. Those who appear on the outside to have everything just right, often fight with their own insecurities and challenges. He lives in the shadows, and his life is passing him by.
Desire
Desire is in the body, burning beneath the surface. It hurts.
Keep Distance
Society is conflicting. Tony keeps himself at distance with the society, alone.
Dancing in the Closet
This is the realization that life has to be continue. It might be painful, not just for him, but also for his wife and child. However, life has to continue…
Choreography: Allen Chunhui Xing
Lighting Design: Dylan Uremovich
Performers: Terra Bergamy, Suzanne Creedon, Gabriella Di Giuseppe, Lauie Dodge,
Reyna Fox, Billy Griffis, Erin Lenahan, Rose Xinran Qi, Allen Chunhui Xing
The Last Solo
Kennedy Center, Washington D.C.
Choreographer: Allen Chunhui Xing
Dancer: Allen Chunhui Xing
Lighting Design: Dylan Uremovich
Photo: Mark Costello, Jonathan Hsu
Bodies
Choreographer: Allen Chunhui Xing
Dancers: Laurie Dodge, Amanda T. Fair, Shawn Stone, Allen Xing, Huiwang Zhang
Projection Designer: Dylan Uremovich
Scenic Designer: Ryan Fox, Grace Guarniere
Music: Cristobal
Video: Paul Jackson
Photo: Jonathan Hsu