British Artist Shantell Martin Brings Her Visual Flair to the New York City Ballet | Playbill

Classic Arts Features British Artist Shantell Martin Brings Her Visual Flair to the New York City Ballet The artist's work is on view at the David H. Koch Theater February 16–24, as well as a remaining Art Series performance on March 2.
Shantell Martin © Connie Tsang

On a crisp Sunday afternoon, Shantell Martin—pen in hand, game face on—is perched over an enormous roll of white paper unfurled on the floor of the Weill Art Gallery at the 92nd Street Y. It’s show time for Martin, an artist whose witty line drawings combine elements of improvisation, serendipity, and performance and “invite viewers to share in the creative process,” as she says on her website.

Bending down, she draws a line, then another and another, confident and quick. As she darts across the paper, isolated lines find each other and come together, morphing into a face, a sailboat, and abstract shapes that spring to life as part of a fast-growing, rapidly changing entity. “The first mark—that line is the hardest thing to do,” says Martin. “After that, it just comes. It’s like a dance with pen on paper.”

Martin’s pen seems to dance nonstop these days on almost anything with a blank surface—walls, floors, MaxMara sunglasses, Puma sneakers, even a customized Lexus devised for New York Fashion Week. She co-created a live performance with hip-hop artist Kendrick Lamar at Art Basel Miami. She transformed the entire Sculpture Court of Buffalo’s Albright-Knox Art Gallery into an upbeat black-and-white Shantell Martin environment. She spent two years as an MIT Media Lab Visiting Scholar, and is an adjunct professor at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts.

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Shantell Martin at work on her mural, Dance Everyday, 2017, commissioned by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery Public Art Initiative © Connie Tsang

And this Winter Season, Martin brings her signature line dance to New York City Ballet’s David H. Koch Theater as this year’s featured artist in the Company’s annual Art Series, now in its seventh year.

Like previous Art Series participants, Martin has focused on the theater’s sprawling Promenade (look for floor work and plenty of surprises). Citing intrinsic details like the gold leaf ceiling and marble floor, she says the space presented one of the biggest challenges of her career. “I would love a great white box to work in and a year to do it,” she says.

One aspect that didn’t faze her is the Promenade’s size. “I live in New York and think big,” she says during a chat in a rehearsal studio at the theater. “I have the opportunity to plant the message from my art in this space and reach people I may not have been able to reach otherwise.”

That message boils down to the question that’s at the root of her work: Who are you? And that takes us to her early life as an artist and the event that propelled her career. Born in East London, a fact that’s revealed by the lilt in her voice, Martin loved drawing from an early age. “It’s so simple but also so complex. You can’t hide anything when you draw,” she says.

She graduated from London’s elite Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design. But unable to find her place in the art world, she moved to Tokyo to teach English. Eager to go to dance clubs but strapped for cash, she found work as a visual jockey, projecting drawings made in response to the music onto a screen.

Her first night on the job was a revelation. “The band started playing, and I realized if I didn’t draw the screen would be blank. And I thought, just draw. There was no time to be anyone else, no time to think. I had to feel the music and dance with it with the tools I had. For 40 minutes, I went into this zone, and the work just happened,” she says. “If not for that experience, I don’t know where my art would have taken me.”

Her next stop was New York, where she struggled initially. Realizing she had to make her own opportunities, she offered to create an installation in a space a friend had rented. “In New York, if you can do something that’s good, it can get noticed. And that might lead to something else,” she says.

That’s more or less what happened. Commissions started coming in—museum shows, commercial installations, product collaborations, and residencies at art and academic institutions. Martin revels in the heady mix that’s allowed her to push the boundaries of her art. She recently began experimenting with keyboard music. And she designed and 3-D printed a series of connective blocks that allow her to manipulate both the thickness and number of lines drawn simultaneously. “I thought, what’s the biggest way to change the art? Change the line,” she says.

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Shantell Martin with her works © Laura Barisonzi

How does she choose who she will work with? “I’m interested in people who are obsessed with what they do. That’s one reason I wanted to work with the artists at New York City Ballet,” she says.

Martin had never been to the ballet before NYCB reached out to discuss the potential collaboration, a situation since handily remedied. The sheer variety and difficulty of what she saw the dancers do impressed her deeply and left her eager to make the project a true collaboration. “Who are you? is a question of identity exploration and self discovery that connects us. I wanted to apply that to the dancers so they would inspire the work,” she says. To that end, she interviewed Company members. “I’d say, tell me your story. Why do you dance? Why does dance obsess you? How did you end up here?” She also drew from the dancers literally, creating on canvas during NYCB working rehearsals.

The NYCB installation is, in Martin’s telling, “big and bold with lots of moving parts.” How does a complex project that requires extensive planning mesh with the spontaneity prized by an artist who draws with the thickest pen on the market?

Martin points out that drawing is a journey best made with ink. “If you erase a line, you erase part of your journey,” she says.

Besides, as anyone who has ever faced a blank page knows, spontaneity doesn’t happen without ideas. Shantell Martin has plenty.

Terry Trucco writes frequently about the arts and travel.

 

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