On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.
On April 11, 2025, at Cove Street Arts in Portland, Maine, “Bunk Beds” unfolded as an intimate, physical meditation on queer longing, devotion, and choreographic legacy. Directed by Tristan Koepke and created in collaboration with James Barrett, Emilia Bruno, Marc Macaranas, Daniel Miramontes, Benny Olk, and Curtis Thomas, the performance drew on the lives and love of Merce Cunningham and John Cage, Instagram thirst traps, and the radical possibilities of relationship anarchy.With live music composed and performed by Ethan Philbrick, lighting and production design by Audrey Kastner, and dramaturgy by Rebecca Steinberg, the piece layered movement, sound, and image into a performance that felt both deeply personal and expansively collective.