It has long been the goal of Texas Performing Arts to help “keep Austin weird” onstage, but the 2023-24 season promises to be especially experimental.
One major way that will happen this coming year is with TPA’s newly-extended partnership with Fusebox, an arts nonprofit that hosts its famous five-day festival each April (and will celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2024). Now, TPA and Fusebox are teaming up to present six bold new projects throughout the year. “Fusebox is such an essential part of Austin’s creative community and fabric of this city,” says Bursey. “We wanted to work with them to expand the offerings for contemporary, sometimes experimental art in Austin.”
Love in Exile is one such example. Grammy Award-winning Pakistani vocalist Arooj Aftab makes her Austin debut—and the only Texas stop on this tour—in September with polymath pianist Vijay Iyer and multi-instrumentalist Shahzad Ismaily. Transforming sound into sculpture, the trio creates lush, haunting, collaborative soundscapes of meditation and yearning.
Early in 2024, audience members will take a seat at the dinner table (literally) for Geoff Sobelle’s FOOD, where the renowned clown will use sounds, scents, and tactile elements to shape a conversation about personal memories, consumption, and the evolution of food production over generations. Abby Z & The New Utility’s Radioactive Practice, a Texas premiere that Bursey says “looks more like a full-contact sport than what a lot of people think of as dance,” arrives in April, along with Tania El Khoury’s Cultural Exchange Rate. In this interactive live art project, El Khoury shares her family memoirs of life in a border village between Lebanon and Syria.
The immersive documentary/sensory experience 32 Sounds from Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Sam Green places individual headphones on each audience member, to redefine the experience of a sound bath.
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Abby Z performers Benjamin Roach, Fiona Lundie, Alex Gossen, and jinsei sato in Radioactive Practice. Photo by Maria Baranova.
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Lisa B. Thompson; Photo by Anthony Artis.
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Arooj Aftab, Vijay Iyer and Shahzad Ismaily. Photo by Ebru Yildiz.
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Tremble Staves; Photo by Sutro LAEN.
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Terence Blanchard; Photo by Cedric Angeles.
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Yo-Yo Ma; Photo by Jason Bell.
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Les Ballet Trockadero de Monte Carlo in Swan Lake. Photo courtesy of the artists.
And that’s just the Fusebox collaborations. TPA has much more in store, including the return of fan favorites Yo-Yo Ma, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, MOMIX, the 50th anniversary tour of Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, and Lila Downs, who’s leading a massive Día de los Muertos celebration in October. “It was important for us to bring back major artists who have not been to Austin in quite a while,” says Bursey. “These are artists who tour on a regular basis through Dallas and Houston, and given Austin’s creativity and incredible audience, we want these leading American artists to be making appearances here too.”
—LINDSEY WILSON