Close Menu
    Trending
    • BTS’ Tour Is Sold Out — Here’s How You Can Still Get Tickets
    • DAVID ELLEFSON Announces Bass Warrior European Tour, Playing MEGADETH’s Countdown To Extinction In Full
    • “IDOL I” Stars Say Goodbye + Tease What To Look Forward To In Final 2 Episodes
    • Charli XCX Mines the Tension of Success
    • ERRA Teases “THE ERRA LP 7” In The Theme Of Elder Scrolls 6
    • Choi Jin Hyuk Sacrifices Sleep To Take Care Of Oh Yeon Seo In “Positively Yours”
    • Congressman Maxwell Frost Attacked in Racially-Charged Incident at Sundance
    • SUICIDAL TENDENCIES Reveal Their New Drummer, X (XAVIER WADE)
    Dance-On-Air
    • Home
    • Latest News
    • Dancing News
    • Dance Guide
    • Music
    • Music News
    • Classical Music
    • Pop Music
    Dance-On-Air
    Home»Dancing News»del Amo, Healey, Dinh and Christie in ‘MSTM’
    Dancing News

    del Amo, Healey, Dinh and Christie in ‘MSTM’

    Dance-On-AirBy Dance-On-AirNovember 9, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Share


    Tweet


    Share


    Share


    Email



    Campbelltown Arts Centre, Western Sydney.
    6 November 2025.

    In the current landscape of Australian dance, the conditions for independent artists to develop full-length work have narrowed significantly. Against this backdrop, MSTM is both timely and quietly defiant. Commissioned by Campbelltown Arts Centre, the project brought together four artists – Martin del Amo, Sue Healey, Tra Mi Dinh and Mitchell Christie – whose practices span different generations, training lineages and performance histories. The result is not simply a collaboration, but an inquiry into what collaboration can look like when authorship is genuinely shared.

    The work begins before the audience enters the theatre. Instead, we are guided into a side space where the performance is already in motion. Projections are placed across the irregular surfaces of the room – bodies walking through bright white space, rolling slowly and viewed from top view, images that gently disorient perspective while amplifying the dancers’ presence in the space. Imagery that disrupts fixed perspective while also grounding the performers within a perceptual environment. Healey’s longstanding engagement with the choreographic potential of film is unmistakable here: attention is invited to detail, and subtle shifts in spatial presence. 

    Across the room, del Amo moves the letters – M, S, T, M – into various configurations, a quiet yet insistent act of ordering and reordering, before settling into alignment, at which point we are invited to pass through to the main space. The sequence reads as a gesture of attunement, of waiting for something to arrive at its right place. 

    We are then invited not to our seats, but through a doorway leading directly onto the stage, entering behind the still-closed curtains. The dancers are with us, present but unassertive, sharing the space without performing towards us. Only once everyone has gathered do the curtains open, revealing the seating bank. We cross the stage to take our places. It is a subtle but potent dramaturgical gesture – one that dissolves the usual boundary between those who move and those who watch, inviting the audience into the collaborative environment from which the work was built.

    Once inside the theatre, the work unfolds through duets, trios and full quartet configurations, with dancers moving fluidly between dancing and observing. Sitting on the floor or leaning against the wall is not a retreat from action but a choreographic position – evidence of the shared process of looking, responding and attending. The theatre’s architecture becomes part of the score: curtains open and close; dancers negotiate thresholds; proximity and distance are continually recalibrated.

    What stands out is how clearly each artist’s choreographic language remains visible. Del Amo’s textured attention to detail, curiosity, and idiosyncratic gesture; Healey’s compositional clarity and spatial attunement; Dinh’s precise yet porous approach to movement; Christie’s spatially explorative phrasing, where expansiveness is held in quiet stillness and patient attention – all are distinct, yet in dialogue. The work does not attempt to merge these approaches into a single unified vocabulary. Instead, it honours difference, tracing how practices intersect, diverge and overlap. Collaboration here is not fusion, but conversation.

    A recurring structural device is the return of shared movement phrases introduced early in close alignment with the music.  Gestures land precisely with sound and beat at the beginning of segments, but as the phrases and the work progress, this relationship loosens. Gail Priest’s sound design shifts from rhythmic driver to atmospheric field, allowing the movement to find its own internal rhythm.  By the later sections, the dancers are not following the music so much as inhabiting it – moving with it, around it, and occasionally in deliberate counterpoint.  The sensation is that the choreography has taken on its own breath.

    The performances are thoughtful and deeply felt. Dinh and Christie offer a clarity of articulation and responsiveness to detail. Del Amo and Healey embody a grounded maturity – their movement spacious, intelligent, and subtly humorous. A moment in which the younger dancers extend into sustained leg lines while the older pair echo with understated variation speaks softly to time, continuity, and artistic evolution.

    The design elements support the work with quiet precision. Frankie Clarke’s lighting sculpts intimacy and expansiveness across the space; Aleisa Jelbart’s costumes allow neutrality without flattening individuality.

    MSTM is not a work of spectacle.  It is a work of attention – to each other, to the space, to the ongoing act of negotiation that collaboration demands.  In offering us this attention, it makes a compelling case for the value of intergenerational exchange and for the continued support of independent practice in Australia’s arts ecology.

    By Linda Badger of Dance Informa.



    Campbelltown Arts Centre, Choreographer, choreographers, choreography, Contemporary dance, dance review, Dance Reviews, Martin del Amo, Mitchell Christie, online dance review, online dance reviews, review, reviews, Sue Healey, Tra Mi Dinh






    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleJim Carrey Inducts Soundgarden Into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
    Next Article Ryu Seung Ryong Aims To Return To Headquarters Despite Jung Eun Chae’s Skepticism In “The Dream Life Of Mr. Kim”
    Dance-On-Air
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Dancing News

    2026 U.S. Championships (Senior) – Ice-dance.com

    January 24, 2026
    Dancing News

    Starbound’s Tips for Competing, Its New Studio Award, and More

    January 23, 2026
    Dancing News

    Here Are the Winners of the 2026 UDA National Championships

    January 22, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Top Posts

    Jack Black & Paul Rudd Star in Silly Remake

    December 25, 2025

    2PM’s Lee Junho Seeks Out Kim Sang Ho For Tense Confrontation In “Typhoon Family”

    November 22, 2025

    THE HALO EFFECT Unleash Cover Of W.A.S.P.’s “I Wanna Be Somebody”, Announce New EP We Are Shadows

    September 18, 2025

    Dahyun And Lee Si Woo’s Sweet Past Clash With A Painful Present In “Love Me”

    January 22, 2026

    “Queen Mantis” Heads Into Finale On Ratings Rise As “My Youth” Enters Its 2nd Half

    September 27, 2025
    Categories
    • Classical Music
    • Dance Guide
    • Dancing News
    • Latest News
    • Music
    • Music News
    • Pop Music
    Most Popular

    Rosalía’s LUX Is Orchestral Pop Worthy of an Orchestra

    November 7, 2025

    Bae Hyeon Seong’s Emotional Meeting With Kim Hee Jung Creates Rift With Lee Re In “Shin’s Project”

    October 7, 2025

    Comp Kid Turned Teacher and Choreographer Gabe De Guzman Comes Full Circle

    August 25, 2025
    Our Picks

    SHARON OSBOURNE Says She’ll Reveal Who Was Booted From BLACK SABBATH’s Final Show After It’s All Over

    July 5, 2025

    DISCIPLES OF VERITY (LIVING COLOUR, GOD FORBID, Etc.) Streams Heartfelt New Single “In My Eyes”

    August 16, 2025

    The Yardbirds Co-Founder Chris Dreja Dies at 79

    October 7, 2025
    Categories
    • Classical Music
    • Dance Guide
    • Dancing News
    • Latest News
    • Music
    • Music News
    • Pop Music
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    • About us
    • Contact us
    Copyright © 2025 Dance-on-air.com All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.