Watching MOMIX’s Botanica is like travelling to another world—one where the lines between reality and illusion are blurred. The dancers and their costumes create a performance that must be recognized as the sum of its parts. In this way, Botanica uses the organic quality of dance for a completely unique representation of nature.
Conceived and directed by Moses Pendleton, Botanica is, in the most literal sense, a one act production with 23 distinct musical sections (music editing by Joshua Christopher, Andrew Hansen, and Brian Simerson). Each section, or vignette, is also set apart by the costuming (Phoebe Katzin), lighting (Joshua Starbuck and Pendleton) and video projections (edited by Woodrow F. Dick, III), props (Pedro Silva), and even puppets (Michael Curry). The scenes transition through these different settings and atmospheres, taking the audience on a dream-like journey through the four seasons.
The first few sections obscure the dancers’ bodies, making the stage feel like a foreign landscape. At first, rippling white fabric covers the ground like rushing water. Bodies press up from underneath the fabric so that only their outlines are revealed before they fall back to the ground as if swept away by the current. In another segment the stage is pitch black except for portions of the dancers bodies. Only their forearms and lower legs are visible, glowing neon green. These disembodied limbs intertwine, changing patterns like a kaleidoscope. They snake through the air like serpents before bursting apart, arms flapping like birds wings.