Michele Rizzo: HIGHER xtn.

Michele Rizzo: HIGHER xtn.

HIGHER xtn., a performance by choreographer Michele Rizzo, makes its US museum premiere at MoMA PS1.

By MoMA PS1

Date and time

Starts on Sunday, May 19 · 2pm EDT

Location

MoMA PS1

22-25 Jackson Avenue Queens, NY 11101

About this event

Saturday, May 18th at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.

Sunday, May 19th at 2 p.m.


HIGHER xtn., a performance by choreographer Michele Rizzo (Italian, b. 1984), makes its US museum premiere at MoMA PS1. Featuring eight dancers whose minimal gestures coalesce into a unified flow, Rizzo connects collective movement in social spaces to rituals of quasi-religious worship. The artist consecrates PS1 with an open-floor set synchronized to a soundtrack by electronic musician Lorenzo Senni, ushering spiritual transcendence through rhythmic dance. Underscoring nightclubs as spaces for communion and catharsis, the premiere continues PS1’s commitment to dance, performance, and nightlife communities.


Michele Rizzo is a choreographer and visual artist based in Amsterdam. Trained in visual arts as well as dance, Rizzo studied at the Sandberg Instituut in Amsterdam and at the School for New Dance Development in Amsterdam, where he often teaches choreography and movement research. Rizzo has participated in residencies at the International Choreographic Arts Centre in Amsterdam, Q21 Museum Quarter in Vienna, and Live Works Centrale Fies in Trento. His work has been presented and performed at venues and festivals including URB Festival, Helsinki; Rencontres Chorégraphiques Internationales de Seine-Saint-Denis; La Briqueterie, Paris; Santarcangelo Festival, Rimini; Short Theater, Rome; Festival DDD, Porto; CAMPO, Ghent; Triennale Teatro dell’Arte, Milan; and Actoral, Montreal.

Organized by

MoMA PS1 champions how art and artists are at the intersection of the social, cultural, and political issues of their time. Founded in 1976 by Alanna Heiss, the institution was a defining force in the alternative space movement in New York City, transforming a nineteenth century public schoolhouse in Long Island City into a site for artistic experimentation and creativity.

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