14

On the 150th anniversary of the ratification of the U.S. Constitution’s 14th amendment, 14 investigates the crucial equal protection and birthright citizenship clauses to magnify its problematic history and current significance.

The 17-minute piece, created for RAWdance’s 15th anniversary home season, unravels complex themes of immigration, segregation, marriage equality, gender-based equality, and more, through a multi-layered performance experience with five dancers. Spoken text is combined with a collage-style sound score of music blended with samples from news broadcasts to set the tone for the deeply powerful and personal work. Stark lighting design by Allen Willner highlights the scenic design by Chad Owens which features five banners of fabric carrying excerpts of the amendment draped overhead. The banners are gradually dropped or pulled down by the dancers throughout the work to transform the space and evoke a constant sense of shifting grounds.

150 years later, the 14th amendment still stands at the heart of many current social and political battlegrounds from immigration reform to abortion rights, from Black Lives Matter to the #MeToo movement. 14 seeks to create an opportunity for communities to reflect, debate, and strive for progress together.

Artistic Collaborators

Choreography: Katerina Wong, with the performers

Lighting design: Allen Willner

Scenic design: Chad Owens

Sound composition: Katerina Wong

Performers: Kelly Del Rosario, Aaron Perlstein, Nick Wagner, Juliann Witt, Katerina Wong

Music and text resources: American Civil Liberties Union, Borrtex, CSPAN, DASK, Ketsa, More Perfect, National Constitution Center, RadioLab, What Trump Can Teach Us About Con Law, Khan Academy

Sound consultation: Natasha Adorlee Johnson

Press

★★★★ “purposely precarious and unsettled… tackl[ing] complex themes while remaining cohesive in vision”

—Heather Desaulniers, DanceTabs

Photos by Hillary Goidell and Michael Woolsey, courtesy of RAWdance