Sha Sha Higby Dance in Sculptural Costume
(USA)
Sha Sha Higby with Keith Evans “Feathered Fox”
(2025, World Premiere)
Date(s) & Time(s): Sat May 10, 2:00pm; Sun May 11, 1:30pm
Duration: 60 minutes (No Intermission)
Location: Theatre of Yugen's NOH Space
Venue: 2840 Mariposa St. SF, CA 94110
Ticket Information
Early Bird: $20, Advance: $25, Door: $28
For the best deals, see multiple shows with a discount Festival Pass.
TICKETSFESTIVAL PASS
Artist Information
Performance: Sha Sha Higby
Projections: Keith Evans
Artist Website
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Production Details
Sha Sha Higby with Keith Evans “Feathered Fox”Using mobiles, puppets, micropuppetry, and magic spears, Sha Sha Higby’s metaphoric multi-layered masks and costume dance through the symbolic plight of our sky’s forests, and our own demise. Projection collaborator Keith Evans with his fascination devices will transform Sha Sha’s handmade artifacts with moving light. A battle of demons of fire in the forests is extinguished by the force of the oceans. A hole then opens in the sky and it begins to blow. Fish fly up catching the remains of dying souls. The fox appears and picks the souls as a bouquet and flies them home to safety.
Artist Biographies
Sha Sha Higby
Sha Sha Higby pursued the art of puppetry and sculpture in her early years, then spent one year in Japan studying the art of Noh Mask and theater, followed by a Fulbright-Hayes Scholarship to study dance and shadow puppet making in the villages of Indonesia for five years at the Academy of Music and Dance, lacquer arts in Tokyo and Kyoto under the Japan-United States Friendship Commission, an Indo-American Fellowship to study the textile arts of India, and a Pilot Travel Grants Fund from Arts International for Bhutan. She is a recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Solo Theater Fellowship, U.S. Artists at International Festivals and Exhibitions, Theater Bay Area CASH, and support from the California Arts Council.
Keith Evans
Keith Evans is a paranaturalist, bridging cinema and sculpture. His work incorporates natural materials and e waste into whimsically repurposed audio-visual instruments. He has had many residencies, participated in festivals internationally and was featured in the Whitney Biennial in 2002.