Wednesday, October 12, 2016

They’ll Perform and Talk to Remember Those Killed by AIDS

The dancer and choreographer John Bernd, who died in 1988.
 Credit Don Chiappinelli, via John Bernd Archives
One day in the middle of the 1980s, John Bernd took a taxi to St. Mark’s Church in the East Village, where he did a solo show for Danspace Project. Then he took a taxi back to where he had come from: New York University Hospital, a few blocks away. A friend had to sneak him out for his performance. Mr. Bernd had been sick with AIDS since 1981, before the syndrome had a name.

His final appearances, those of an emaciated, disoriented man, came in February 1988 at Performance Space 122, another theater in the neighborhood, where he had been a mainstay of the bold, innovative, do-it-yourself performance art scene. After he died that August, his memorial service was held in St. Mark’s Church.

Danspace Project would host many more memorials for dancers who died because of AIDS — so many deaths that the memorials became marathons. The whole dance world — ballet, Broadway, modern dance — was hit hard, and the sanctuary of St. Mark’s Church became a site of mourning for what could feel like a whole generation lost.

Mr. Bernd’s memorial was one of the early ones, and his illness and art were tangled up before that taxi ride. In his 1981 performance piece “Surviving Love and Death,” he had wondered aloud whether his mysterious disease might be “the new gay cancer.” Ishmael Houston-Jones, who performed in all three versions of Mr. Bernd’s “Lost and Found” in the early to mid-’80s, recalled how that work tracked the development of its creator’s illness, growing darker as he grew more visibly sick.

Thirty years later, Mr. Houston-Jones, 65, and now a mentor to many in the Downtown dance scene, worries that many won’t remember his friend. Young dancers might not recognize the influence of Mr. Bernd, who died too soon, and of the many like him. Reminding and informing are among the goals of “Platform 2016: Lost and Found,” a six-week series of performances, conversations, film screenings and print projects that Mr. Houston-Jones has organized for Danspace. The performances start on Thursday, Oct. 13.

Speaking recently during rehearsals with a group of young performers, several not yet born in 1988, for a re-examination of Mr. Bernd’s work that will debut on Nov. 3, Mr. Houston-Jones identified an upsurge of cultural interest in the plague years. He cited theater pieces, performance art and exhibitions like “Art AIDS America” at the Bronx Museum of Art. “People my age are ready to look back and deal with it somehow,” he said.

Not that looking back is easy. The choreographer Neil Greenberg, whose evening in the platform is Friday, Oct. 14, likens the psychological effect of the AIDS crisis on survivors like himself to post-traumatic stress disorder. “So much death,” he said. “It was painful and confusing and horrific.” His 1994 work “Not-About-AIDS-Dance” addressed his own H.I.V.-positive status and the AIDS-related death of his brother. But in the late ’90s, when antiretroviral drugs became available, everything changed. “The imperative to survive relaxed,” he said. “I ran away into my life. I wanted to move away from the pain.”

Lately, though, Mr. Greenberg has been looking at things he hasn’t looked at since the ’90s. He found a notebook in which he and the friends who were taking care of his brother in the hospital kept track of each day’s suffering: the vomiting, the diarrhea. Finding that impulse to record has surprised him, as have memories of shame. “No matter how many Gay Pride parades I went on, it didn’t go away,” he said. “It was hard not to interpret AIDS as a punishment, even though I knew it was a virus and a virus has no morals.”

Mr. Houston-Jones did not want to organize the platform by himself, so he brought in Will Rawls, a thoughtful 37-year-old choreographer, performer and writer. Mr. Rawls grew up without seeing someone close to him die of AIDS and had not heard of Mr. Bernd. Both men were very aware that for every name they picked to spotlight — either as a performer or the subject of a tribute — many would be left out. “These are very charged choices,” Mr. Rawls said. “We have to admit it can’t be a complete gesture.”

Mr. Houston-Jones and Mr. Rawls, who are black, also agreed on the need to correct the popular image of AIDS as affecting only gay white men like Mr. Bernd. “It was never the case, and it definitely isn’t now,” Mr. Houston-Jones said. And so although the platform focuses on the effect of AIDS on experimental dance in the East Village (as opposed to the world of dance more broadly), it is large and inclusive, with contributions by more than 100 artists, black, white, Latino, male, female, gay, heterosexual and transgender.

For one feature of the program, called “Life Drawings,” young artists were given dossiers of information about dead artists and asked to respond in performance. Orlando Hunter and Ricarrdo Valentine of the duo Brother(hood) Dance! (performing Nov. 17 to 19) were given a dossier on Mr. Bernd. “We thought, This has something to do with us, but it has nothing to with us,” Mr. Hunter said.

Mr. Hunter, 25, and Mr. Valentine, 29, are both black and both H.I.V.-positive. Mr. Hunter contracted the virus last year. Mr. Valentine’s previous partner died from complications of AIDS at 36. Both men spoke about continuing stigma, and skepticism is a mild word for their feelings about the pharmaceutical industry. “Yes, there is medicine,” Mr. Valentine said, “but there are days I don’t want to take it because of what it’s doing to my body, and then I have to think, Do I want to live another day?”

Mr. Hunter acknowledged the influence of those who came before him: “Now we have the courage, the support, the power to say, ‘Yes, I’m living with H.I.V.’” But he and Mr. Valentine noted that while Mr. Bernd’s papers are archived in the Harvard Theater Collection, the archives of Mr. Bernd’s black contemporaries are harder to find.

“John kept a lot of things,” Mr. Houston-Jones said. “I wonder about people who weren’t like that.”

And even at Harvard, things get lost. Judy Hussie-Taylor, the executive director of Danspace, was shocked to learn that the Harvard archive had no one listed as being in charge of Mr. Bernd’s estate. She found out from Lucy Sexton, one of the group of friends who cared for Mr. Bernd during his illness, that these caretakers were supposed to be listed. “That speaks to the young generation of artists creating new families and new ways of taking care of each other,” Ms. Hussie-Taylor said. “What happens to their belongings after they die?”

Amid many memories of shame, silence, grief, fear, loss and love in the “Lost and Found” printed catalog is a reproduction of a handwritten weekly schedule made up by the friends who took care of John Bernd: whose turn to take him to the doctor, whose to do the laundry. Scribbled in for dinner duty one of those days was Dancenoise, the performance-art duo of Anne Iobst and Lucy Sexton (who perform for “Lost and Found” Nov. 17 to 19).

Asked about the platform, Ms. Sexton said she was ready for something like it to happen 10 years ago. But she welcomes the opportunity to look back at the art and the work of the lost, at “John Bernd not just as a person who died of AIDS, but as a choreographer,” she said.

“A big event like this can put an artist back into the fabric and gain the attention of a new generation,” she said. “It would be wonderful if that happened with John.”
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A version of this article appears in print on October 9, 2016, on page AR11 of the New York edition with the headline: Ready to Look Back and Remember.

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