Monday, October 12, 2015
It's Not That Time Yet
As much as Katja loves Christmas (and is counting the days until her trip to Germany for the Christmas markets), she was slightly disturbed to stumble upon a rather sizable display of Christmas trees and décor a few weeks ago. I mean, she hasn’t even figured out what she’s going to be for Halloween. On that subject, it most definitely is pumpkin season, as well as that time of year when the weather starts getting noticeably cooler.
While Katja has been happy to switch to her fall/winter wardrobe (as cute as they are, she was starting to get bored of her summer dresses), she’s really not a fan of the cold. She hasn’t, however, let the cooler temperatures keep her from trekking up to the Upper East Side for her ballet classes, and from getting out and about in the city. Because while she's definitely not a cold weather kind of girl, she's even less of a stay at home and just hang out kind of girl.
Besides Ballet Academy East (her home away from home), Katja has been spending a lot of time at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She can often be found researching at the Watson Library (which she highly recommends to anybody with art historical research to do), as well as waddling through the museum's endless galleries. It is, after all, no fun to just read about art when there are so many wonderful things to see. Katja also recently attended a preview and reception for Ancient Egypt Transformed: The Middle Kingdom.
She enjoyed checking out the exhibition, and then having drinks in the beautiful Carroll and Milton Petrie European Sculpture Court; she does, after all, love a glass of red wine along with her art. And even better to be able to sip that wine next to Antonio Canova's Perseus with the Head of Medusa (1804-6), which she thinks is pretty fabulous.
Katja had another opportunity to mix cocktails and culture at Choreographers and Cocktails, a benefit for the Joyce Theater, which is one of her favorite places to see dance. The event took place at the DANY Studios, where seven different companies - American Dance Machine for the 21st Century, Abraham.In.Motion, Dorrance Dance, KEIGWIN+COMPANY, MADBOOTS DANCE, Monica Bill Barnes & Company Productions, and Pam Tanowitz Dance - held open rehearsals. She very much enjoyed the evening, wandering from studio to studio, a glass of wine in hand, to watch the dancers rehearse. And afterwards, during the cocktail hour, she even got in a bit of dancing herself (she is, without question, a first on the dance floor kind of girl).
Of course she doesn't need wine to enjoy her culture, and could also be found at various performances over the past few weeks. She caught two Fall for Dance programs at the lovely New York City Center - the first one she saw featured Compagnie Hervé KOUBI (which she loved), Steven McRae, Project FFD: Pam Tanowitz, and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, and the second Nrityagram, San Francisco Ballet, Stephen Petronio Company, and Dorrance Dance.
And while Katja generally sticks to dance, she decided it was time to change things up a bit by seeing some plays. A big fan of the novels of Emile Zola, she was excited to see Thérèse Raquin at the Studio 54 Theatre. She thoroughly enjoyed the play, and was happy that it did Zola's novel justice. She also very much enjoyed seeing a friend in Letters To Sala at the Barrow Group Theatre. Of course she's biased, but she thinks she has amazingly talented friends.
Not surprisingly, Katja also managed to make her way up to Boston a few times over these past weeks. The nomadic type that she is, she can't go much more than a week without traveling somewhere, and as Boston has rather unexpectedly become something of a second home to her, she's happy for any excuse to go up there. And it's never too hard for her to find a good excuse, such as a cocktail making seminar that a friend organized at Ames Street Deli (she chooses her friends wisely). The theme of the evening was New Orleans cocktails, and the cocktail of choice was the Sazerac. Luckily the bartender let her make hers with cognac instead of whiskey, as she's not really a whiskey drinking kind of girl (cognac, on the other hand...). And not to boast, but she must say she was rather impressed with her cocktail making skills.
Katja also went up for a season kick-off party for the Young Partners of the Boston Ballet. She enjoyed catching up with friends and having a few too many glasses of red wine, but mostly she's looking forward to the start of the season, and seeing John Neumeier's Third Symphony of Gustav Mahler.
Of course Katja does more in Boston than just go to parties (not that it would be bad thing if that's all she did), and thus made her way to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, a place she hadn’t been in ages. She thinks the museum, in a building designed to evoke a 15th century Venetian palace, is ever so lovely. She's a big fan of the themed rooms, the Tapestry Room and the Gothic Room probably being her two favorites (although they're all rather wonderful, so she can't say for certain). And, as the dance lover that she is, she's partial to John Singer Sargent's painting El Jaleo (1882).
So, basically Katja's just been hanging out with friends
and doing her usual art-dance-adult beverage thing. It's a rather nice routine to have, don't you think?
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