Doris Duke Theatre Becket MA, Massachusetts building, Mecanoo American architecture design
Doris Duke Theatre in Becket, MA
November 20, 2024
Architects: Mecanoo
Location: 358 George Carter Rd, Becket, MA 01223, USA
Jacob’s Pillow To Open Landmark New Dance Theatre By Mecanoo
Rendering of the Doris Duke Theatre Artist Quad:
Rendering courtesy of Mecanoo Architects and Marvel
JACOB’S PILLOW, LEADING VENUE FOR DANCE IN THE UNITED STATES, ANNOUNCES OPENING DATE AND ARTISTS OF LANDMARK NEW THEATER
DESIGNED BY LEADING DUTCH ARCHITECTS MECANOO
• The new Doris Duke Theatre to open on July 9, 2025 as part of Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, America’s longest-running international dance festival
• Doris Duke Theatre aims to become one of the most technologically advanced theaters in the world dedicated to dance
• Opening season dancemakers to include Faye Driscoll, Shamel Pitts, Andrew Schneider, Elle Sofe Company (Norway), Eun-Me Ahn (Korea), and Huang Yi (Taiwan)
• International design team is led by Francine Houben, founding architect of Mecanoo, in partnership with architecture and landscape architecture firm Marvel, and theater and acoustics consultants Charcoalblue
Doris Duke Theatre building construction on Jacob’s Pillow campus (October 2024):
photograph : Robert Benson, courtesy of Jacob’s Pillow
Renders by Mecanoo and Marvel
Doris Duke Theatre – New Massachusetts Venue for Dance
Wednesday 20 November 2024 – Jacob’s Pillow today announces the opening date of, and artists to perform in, the new Doris Duke Theatre, a landmark international venue for dance and America’s only purpose-built new dance theater to open in 2025. The multi-day opening celebration will begin on July 9, 2025, with programming continuing throughout the summer as part of the nation’s longest-running dance festival, located on Jacob’s Pillow’s beautiful destination campus in the Berkshire mountains of Massachusetts.
Designed by the leading Dutch architecture firm Mecanoo, the reimagined Doris Duke Theatre occupies the site of the former studio theater from 1990, destroyed by fire in November 2020. The new theater aims to become one of the world’s most technologically advanced dance venues, providing a makerspace for artists seeking to integrate artificial intelligence, extended reality, robotics, and immersive platforms into live performance. The Doris Duke Theatre will include such capacities as a spatial audio system, infrared camera tracking of performers for interactive video content, and live performance interactions with recorded/projected dance content, among many other capabilities.
Rendering of Doris Duke Theatre East Entrance:
image : Marvel, courtesy of Jacob’s Pillow
The first group of dance and technology makers invited to present work at the Doris Duke Theatre are interactive-electronics dance and theater artist Andrew Schneider, with the world premiere of HERE; Shamel Pitts (2020 Pillow Lab resident) with Touch of RED; the return of Korean choreographer Eun-Me Ahn with her innovative ensemble work, Dragons; and the Pillow debut of Taiwanese dancer/choreographer and robotics inventor Huang Yi. The inaugural season will also host the U.S. debut of Indigenous Sámi choreographer Elle Sofe and her Elle Sofe Company from northern Norway, performing Vástádus eana – the answer is land. The season will also feature Faye Driscoll (2022 Pillow Lab resident) and her masterpiece Weathering. Additionally, Shamel Pitts and Andrew Schneider will each create a digital-first work, designed to be experienced virtually and available to audiences around the world. Grisha Coleman will lead the first Pillow Lab residency in fall 2025 to develop The Movement Undercommons, a new motion capture movement project creating kinetic haiku from movement data.
Pamela Tatge, Jacob’s Pillow Executive and Artistic Director, said: “We envisioned and built the new Doris Duke Theatre grounded in the Indigenous history of the land on which we dance. At the same time, it is a global hub for innovation. I am excited to see how artists and audiences join together and move beyond the limits of a traditional performance venue. In the new Duke, we will offer not just compelling and wide-ranging works that already exist today—but also some of tomorrow’s most innovative mixed reality movement and dance experiences, which meld the virtual and the physical in deeply affecting ways.”
Doris Duke Theatre construction on Jacob’s Pillow campus (October 2024), MA, USA:
photo : Robert Benson, courtesy of Jacob’s Pillow
Francine Houben, Mecanoo’s Creative Director and Founding Partner, said: “At the heart of the new Doris Duke Theatre lies a celebration of movement, space, and connection. Inspired by Mecanoo’s core values of ‘people, place, purpose, and poetry,’ the new theater captures the essence of dance, not only as an art form but as a deeply human experience intertwined with the landscape and community. Rooted in the rolling hills of the Berkshires, the theater honors the rich heritage of Jacob’s Pillow while pushing the frontiers of the performing arts. The design draws on the rhythms of nature, mirroring the fluidity and grace of dancers.”
Sam Gill, President and CEO of the Doris Duke Foundation, said: “There is one constant at Jacob’s Pillow: pushing boundaries. The new Doris Duke Theatre exemplifies this tradition, making possible new forms of expression and new ways to move audiences. It’s not just a new theater—it’s a new chapter for Jacob’s Pillow and for American dance.”
Rendering of the garden of the Doris Duke Theatre:
image : Marvel, courtesy of Jacob’s Pillow
The New Doris Duke Theatre – Venue for Dance
The reimagined Doris Duke Theatre will be approximately 20,000 sq. ft., compared with the former Duke’s roughly 8,500 sq. ft. footprint. The design allows for multi-use flexibility, so that the building can support performances, events, residencies, and more, sometimes simultaneously. The theater will seat up to 220-400 patrons in the main performance space, with an array of seating and stage configurations.
The theater’s mass timber structure is clad in thermally treated pine, designed to weather gracefully over time. The building transforms with the seasons, its natural materials telling a story of light and shadow, time, and change—an organic register of the dance of nature. Rainwater is collected for future reuse, and the generous veranda provides natural shading, a quiet gesture of harmony between sustainability and design. Through its form, function, and connection to the land, the new Doris Duke Theatre embodies the poetry of place—an enduring testament to the power of dance, nature, and human creativity intertwined.
Inspired by the region’s natural beauty, the new Doris Duke Theatre’s landscape designed by Marvel harmonizes with its surroundings, reflecting the rich local ecology of the Berkshires. This design not only nurtures a deep connection between the performing arts and nature but also honors the area’s Indigenous history. To the west of the theater, the landscape design creates a central quad, framed by a sculptural “scramble” made from locally-sourced stone to welcome dancers and visitors and provide spaces for lounging, rehearsal, and celebration. To the east, landscapes designed by Indigenous artists celebrate Indigenous knowledge, with a garden and a communal fire pit that reflect the land’s cultural traditions and recognize the original inhabitants that inform Jacob’s Pillow and its quintessential identity.
Netherlands-based architecture firm Mecanoo, led by Creative Director and Founding Partner Francine Houben, is serving as the lead architect for the new building project, in partnership with New York-based architecture firm Marvel as the local architect and landscape architect. Charcoalblue are consulting on theater and acoustics design for the project. Jeffrey Gibson, Choctaw/Cherokee, is serving as a consultant on the building’s relationship to the site and Indigenous values, a key element of the building’s design.
Venue for Dance in Becket – Opening Celebrations
The opening celebration week at the Doris Duke Theatre—highlighted by a ribbon-cutting and opening performances on Wednesday, July 9, 2025—will activate many of the communities and stories that have defined and shaped Jacob’s Pillow. This multi-day celebration will feature gatherings and pop-up performances by world-class artists, bringing the Duke and the Jacob’s Pillow campus to life from all angles. The opening-week celebration will also include open houses, community events, and a gathering to activate the communal fire pit and Indigenous garden, designed by Indigenous artists Andre StrongBearHeart Gaines, Jr., Kathi Arnold, and Misty Cook in collaboration with Marvel. Inside, a new visual art installation by Indigenous artist Brenda Mallory will serve as a focal point of the lobby in the Doris Duke Theatre. Emmy-nominated director, choreographer, and performer Katherine Helen Fisher will create the inaugural exhibition in the new Duke’s gallery space. The interactive exhibition, Hyperreal Futures: Choreographing the Algorithmic Body, invites audiences to experiment and play within embodied installations that challenge the perceived boundaries between performer and spectator, physical and digital, human and machine.
The boundary-pushing program of artists featured in the new Doris Duke Theatre will appear as part of Jacob’s Pillow’s renowned international dance festival, which will return for a 93rd summer. The Festival will offer nine weeks of performances on its campus in the Berkshires, as well as streaming and online events for audiences worldwide, from June 25 through August 24, 2025. The 2025 summer festival will mark the first time in six years that all three onsite performance venues are open to the public: the historic Ted Shawn Theatre, the outdoor Henry J. Leir Stage, and the new Doris Duke Theatre.
The Duke’s opening date of July 9 holds a special significance to Jacob’s Pillow, as this was the same date in 1942 that the dance festival opened the Ted Shawn Theatre, the first performance space in America designed exclusively for dance, which continues to serve as Jacob’s Pillow’s flagship venue for festival performances.
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Doris Duke Theatre construction on Jacob’s Pillow campus in Becket, Massachusetts, (October 2024):
photo : Robert Benson, courtesy of Jacob’s Pillow
Doris Duke Foundation
Lead support for Doris Duke Theatre is provided by the Doris Duke Foundation.
About the Doris Duke Foundation
The mission of the Doris Duke Foundation (DDF) is to build a more creative, equitable and sustainable future by investing in artists and the performing arts, environmental conservation, medical research, child well-being and greater mutual understanding among diverse communities. DDF focuses its support to the performing arts on contemporary dance, jazz and theater artists, and the organizations that nurture, present and produce them. Visit www.dorisduke.org to learn more.
Additional major support for the Doris Duke Theatre is provided by the Arison Arts Foundation, Barr Foundation, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund, a program of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, administered through a collaborative arrangement between MassDevelopment and the Mass Cultural Council, and funded in part by the Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism.
Jacob’s Pillow
Jacob’s Pillow is a National Historic Landmark, recipient of the National Medal of Arts, and home to America’s longest-running international dance festival, which will celebrate its 93rd season in Summer 2025. Jacob’s Pillow acknowledges that it rests on the ancestral homelands of the Muh-he-con-ne-ok or Mohican people. We pay honor and respect to their ancestors and elders past and present as we commit to building a more inclusive and equitable space for all. In addition, we acknowledge the Nipmuc, the Wampanoag and other tribal nations who also made their homes in what is now known as Massachusetts.
Founded by Ted Shawn in 1933, each Festival includes national and international dance companies and free and ticketed performances, talks, tours, classes, exhibits, events, and community programs. The School at Jacob’s Pillow, a prestigious professional dance training center, advances the careers of the upcoming generation of performers and choreographers; during the Festival, 100 international dancers evolve as artists in ballet, choreography, contemporary, musical theatre, tap, and other genres, and year round, artist faculty and accomplished alumni nurture younger dancers in a series of Jacob’s Pillow 360 workshops and intensives offered in partnership with leading dance institutions worldwide. The Pillow also provides professional advancement opportunities across disciplines of arts administration, design, video, and production through its seasonal internship program. Through its community engagement programs, the Pillow serves as a partner and active citizen in its local community. The Pillow’s extensive Archives, open year-round to the public and highlighted online at danceinteractive.jacobspillow.org, chronicle more than a century of dance in photographs, programs, books, costumes, audiotapes, and videos.
Notable artists who have created or premiered dances at the Pillow include choreographers Antony Tudor, Agnes de Mille, Alvin Ailey, Donald McKayle, Kevin McKenzie, Twyla Tharp, Ralph Lemon, Susan Marshall, Trisha Brown, Ronald K. Brown, Wally Cardona, Andrea Miller, and Trey McIntyre; performed by artists such as Mikhail Baryshnikov, Carmen de Lavallade, Mark Morris, Dame Margot Fonteyn, Edward Villella, Rasta Thomas, and hundreds of others. On March 2, 2011, President Barack Obama honored Jacob’s Pillow with a National Medal of Arts, the highest arts award given by the United States Government, making the Pillow the first dance presenting organization to receive this prestigious award. The Pillow’s Executive and Artistic Director since 2016 is Pamela Tatge. For more information, visit www.jacobspillow.org.
MAJOR INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT FOR JACOB’S PILLOW IS GENEROUSLY PROVIDED BY:
Arison Arts Foundation, Barr Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Doris Duke Foundation, Ford Foundation, John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency, Mellon Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities, Shelby Cullom Davis Charitable Fund, The Shubert Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Education. As of November 1, 2024.
Rendering of the quad lobby at the Doris Duke Theatre:
Rendering courtesy of Mecanoo Architects and Marvel
Artist Biographies and Works to be Presented
Andrew Schneider (United States) is an Obie Award-winning, Drama Desk-nominated performer, writer, and interactive-electronics artist creating original works for theater, dance, sound, video, and installation. In HERE, commissioned by Jacob’s Pillow, Schneider joins with Berlin-based dancers and collaborators Margaux Marielle-Trehouart and Joel Suarez Gomez (Sasha Waltz & Guests, Mouvoir, Lausitz Festival) to tell the story of a single space over eons, in which innumerable lives, dreams, and travesties float through the present moment. We know what it’s like to miss someone because they are not here, but what does it feel like to miss someone because they are not now? Inspired by concepts of simultaneity and quantum entanglement, and using wireless in ear technology and spatialized audio, Schneider and company explore the limits of connection and storytelling through hyper-precise attention to synchronicities of bodies in space over time—both cosmic and mundane.
To complement his week-long performance run, Schneider has been commissioned by Jacob’s Pillow to create an immersive / binaural sound experience that crossfades with reality. Audiences can access this experience using their own devices and headphones as they navigate the world around them. In his words: “I can’t control what’s in your periphery, but I can help you notice what’s there.” The piece deals with the hidden choreography of the universe and casts each audience member as the mover in the work, and their world as the stage. What if everything around you was made just for you? What if it already was?
Schneider has designed off-Broadway and is a member of the arts incubator ONX in New York City, a 2020 recipient of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists award, a Sundance “Art of the Practice” fellow, and has received a fellowship in 2022 from the Junge Akademie/Akademie Der Künste in Berlin. He was a 2019 Professor of the Practice and Visiting Fellow in Theater Arts and Performance Studies through the Brown Arts Initiative at Brown University.
Elle Sofe Company (Norway) make their U.S. debut to present Vástádus eana – the answer is land, a critically-acclaimed performance that combines dance with yoik, a traditional singing style of the Sámi people who are Indigenous to the northern parts of Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia. Supported by polyphonic music and costumes inspired by traditional clothing, the piece is inspired by political demonstrations, Sámi spiritual practices, and formation dance, and explores community and kinship between people, nature, and the earth. The yoik, composed specifically for the performance, serves as a musical pillar throughout a performance that reflects on the power of standing together and the awareness of the earth we all stand on and share. Company founder Elle Sofe Sara is a featured artist at the Arctic Arts Festival in Harstad and a winner of the 2019 Moon Jury Award at the Imagine Native Film Festival. Vástádus eana – the answer is land has toured internationally, and received the 2021/2022 Norwegian Critics Award for Dance.
Eun-Me Ahn (Korea) is a leading artist of the Korean performing arts scene, known for her avant garde choreographic worlds and technicolor productions. In her return to Jacob’s Pillow for the first time since 2000, Ahn will present the official U.S. premiere of Dragons, a work with tumbling and 3D holographic choreography that juggles speed, scale, and illusion. The work was conceived before the pandemic and transformed by the reality of her initial cast of pan-Asian dancers being split and isolated through it. Dragons incorporates the 3D holographic presence of the initially isolated cast with live choreography for eight on-stage dancers, many of whom were born in 2000—the year of the dragon on the Asian Zodiac calendar. A graduate of contemporary dance in Seoul and from NYU Tisch, Ahn is internationally renowned, with over 150 pieces in her repertoire. Her work has toured widely in Asia and Europe through invitations from the Pina Bausch Foundation in Wuppertal, Germany, and an association with Théâtre de la Ville in Paris.
Shamel Pitts (United States) is a performance artist, choreographer, conceptual artist, dancer, spoken word artist, and teacher whose company TRIBE will perform Touch of RED as part of the Doris Duke Theatre’s 2025 season. Touch of RED is inspired by the rapid-fire footwork of boxing, the African-American jazz dance style Lindy Hop, Gaga movement language, and nightlife culture. Set in a stylized ring, this dance duet examines the way Black men are perceived and perceive themselves in contemporary society. This is a notable homecoming for Pitts and his company, whose Pillow Lab residency work on this piece in November 2020 was disrupted when the original Doris Duke Theatre was lost to a structure fire. Since then, TRIBE premiered Touch of Red in a sold-out weekend in October 2022 at MASS MoCA, co-presented by Jacob’s Pillow. This will be the first time this remarkable duet is performed at Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival.
To complement his week-long performance run in the Doris Duke Theatre, Shamel Pitts has also been commissioned by Jacob’s Pillow to create and release a digital-first work in summer 2025 and will create a series of cinematic 3D experiences, in collaboration with TRIBE’s Transmedia Artist Lucca Del Carlo, that accompany his in-person performance of Touch of RED. These experiences will explore the intense intimacy that virtual performances make possible, with Pitts’s focus on “how can the audience feel the sweat?” Beyond witnessing the movement, viewers will also feel like they’re moving through the pieces themselves.
Pitts is a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow, and recently received a 2024 MacArthur Fellowship. He is the recipient of a 2018 Princess Grace Award in Choreography and a 2019 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Award winner in Choreography. Pitts’s “BLACK series” has toured extensively worldwide since 2016.
Faye Driscoll (United States) is a Jacob’s Pillow Dance Award and Doris Duke Award-winning performance maker who has been hailed as a “startlingly original talent” by The New York Times and “a post-millenium postmodern wild woman” by The Village Voice. She returns to the Pillow to present her piece Weathering, first developed in a Pillow Lab residency in 2022. Weathering is a multi-sensory flesh sculpture made of bodies, sounds, scents, liquids, and objects, in which ten people enact a glacially morphing tableau vivant on a mobile raft-like stage surging through the Anthropocene, with the audience embanking the performers. This symphonically active, luminously living work is a breathing, leaking, choreography of micro-events within a momentum thrusting from just beyond the perceivable. Driscoll received the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Award in 2018 and has been presented across the U.S. and internationally at Tanz im August, Kunstenfestivaldesarts, La Biennale di Venezia, Festival d’Automne à Paris, Melbourne Festival, Belfast International Arts Festival, Onassis Cultural Centre in Athens, and Centro de Arte Experimental in Buenos Aires.
Huang Yi (Taiwan) is a dancer, choreographer, and inventor creating partnership between humans and robots. Huang will appear for his first-ever engagement at Jacob’s Pillow to present Ink, in which Huang and audio-visual pioneer Ryoichi Kurokawa dismantle and reconstruct the lines from a hundred artworks in renowned calligrapher Tong Yang-Tze’s Silent Music series. Exploring textures of movement, sound, visual art, and space, Huang and his dancers perform alongside stunning holographic projection and two industrial robots he programmed. Mixing movement with mechanical and multimedia elements to create dance that corresponds with the flow of data, Ink makes each performer, whether human or machine, a dancing instrument. Named by Dance Magazine as one of the “25 to Watch,” Huang is one of Asia’s most prolific choreographers. Ink was co-commissioned by the National Taichung Theater and National Theater, Taipei in Taiwan and had its world premiere in June 2023.
Doris Duke Theatre in Becket, Massachusetts, USA, images / information received 201124
Previously on e-architect:
Aerial rendering of the Jacob’s Pillow campus with the new Doris Duke Theatre:
Rendering courtesy of Mecanoo Architects and Marvel
Renders by Mecanoo and Marvel
Doris Duke Theatre, Massachusetts
Jacob’s Pillow is excited to announce building plans for the reimagined Doris Duke Theatre, a flexible theatre on the site of the original Doris Duke Theatre, which was lost to a fire of undetermined cause in November 2020. In replacing what was lost while looking to the future, Jacob’s Pillow seeks to create a future-forward dance theatre as it looks ahead to its second century.
The new theatre’s design embraces the Pillow’s diverse history to create an accessible and inclusive space for dialogue, collaboration, and education. The new Doris Duke Theatre will maintain the intimacy of the former studio theatre while incorporating a new digital backbone. The ability for the facility to adapt to different programmatic needs as well as future technical upgrades will be key to the theatre’s purpose as a makerspace and digital lab and will ensure long-term resiliency and future growth.
Mecanoo, led by Creative Director and Founding Partner Francine Houben, is serving as the lead architect for the new building project, in partnership with New York-based architecture firm Marvel, led by Jonathan Marvel, founding principal, as the architect of record and landscape architects. Theatre and acoustics consultants Charcoalblue are working alongside the architectural team on the project.
The new building is projected to cost $30 million and is supported by a coalition of donors and foundations, with a formal campaign launching in May 2023. Since the announcement of the naming gift of $10 million from The Doris Duke Foundation in November, Jacob’s Pillow has received leadership support from the Knight Foundation to support digital implementation, as well as commitments from Barbara and Amos Hostetter, the Barr Foundation, and Sarah Arison and the Arison Arts Foundation.
The Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund supported the pre-schematic design phase of the project. An endowment of at least $5 million is being raised to help support the digital integration of the new Doris Duke Theatre and provide direct support to the artists who will make their work in Pillow Lab residencies in the future.
“We are so grateful for the leadership support that makes it possible for us to envision a re-imagined Doris Duke Theatre, one that promises to have the warmth and character of the original and beloved Duke, while at the same time being relevant and accessible to what artists and audiences will need in the future,” said Jacob’s Pillow Executive & Artistic Director, Pamela Tatge. “The building will deeply resonate with and respect the land and environment on which it rests. At the same time, it will be technologically equipped to ensure that the creative appetites of artists will be served in the decades to come.
“The design creates a year-round space,” added Tatge, “that will serve as an incubator for a new generation of artists seeking to integrate technology into live performance and create art native to the digital realm. It will be a porous, indoor/outdoor space for creation, performance, and community engagement that speaks to the lessons we’ve learned during the pandemic about the need for community-building, and our innate connection with nature, which we at the Pillow treasure greatly.”
“Jacob’s Pillow has always been at the forefront,” said Sam Gill, president and CEO of the Doris Duke Foundation. “The new Duke Theatre will enable Jacob’s Pillow to harness the digital revolution to serve a more inclusive, innovative, and engaging vision for dance.”
The reimagined Doris Duke Theatre will be approximately 20,000 sq. ft., compared with the former Duke’s roughly 8,500 sq. ft. footprint. The design allows for multi-use flexibility, so that the building can support performances, events, residencies, and more, sometimes simultaneously. The theater will seat up to 230 patrons in the main performance space, with an array of seating and stage configurations. The building will feature two lobbies with sliding doors, which will create multiple entrances and exits to the building.
The lobby on the west side of the building will serve to welcome visitors in from the spacious artist quadrangle, and will also provide a covered and ventilated space for pre-show talks alongside a new exhibition space. The lobby on the east side of the building will serve as a warm-up and rehearsal space for artists, and can also host receptions and meetings as needed. Rainwater will be collected from the extensive green rooftops of the building to be reused for flushing toilets and irrigation. This embrace of the site and nature, balanced with a need to push the boundaries of dance, embodies the ambition for the theater and captures the magic of performing at Jacob’s Pillow.
Contributions from Indigenous artists to the design will include visual art installations, a medicinal garden with local and indigenous plantings near the entrance of the building, and a fire pit for gatherings and celebrations. Jacob’s Pillow has continued to engage community members, artists, technicians, staff and Board members, and Indigenous stakeholders in workshops and engagement sessions to inform the design process.
Rendering of the Doris Duke Theatre performance space:
Rendering courtesy of Mecanoo Architects and Marvel
The robust infrastructure of the theater will include high-speed internet, as well as flexible locations for stage management and sound, and a dedicated video room for documentation and livestreams. The theater will also have improved lighting and audio capabilities, with an efficient LED stage-lighting system as the baseline, and with the ability to add incandescent fixtures. Many windows and skylights (with darkening capabilities) throughout the building will connect the theater with the surrounding campus and landscape.
The building’s infrastructure will support technological capabilities including the use of a digital spatial audio system with live tracking of dancers correlated to moving sound images, infrared camera tracking of performers for interactive video content, and live dance performance interaction with recorded/projected dance content. Hard-wired connectivity between buildings will enable real time collaboration across Pillow venues using simultaneous filmed performances.
“I can’t overstate the importance of this sort of technologically-forward space for the dance field right now,” said Sydney Skybetter, Choreographer and Founder of the Conference for Research on Choreographic Interfaces at Brown University. Skybetter is a consultant on the Doris Duke Theatre project. “Dance artists sorely need the sorts of space, tech, and expertise that the Pillow is assembling right now. This is where the future of the field will come from.”
Safety, comfort, and accessibility will be improved for audiences, artists, and staff compared with the former Duke. This will include the addition of catwalks for easy technical installation, additional bathrooms, and an enlarged green room and dressing rooms for artists. New seating arrangements will include mezzanine access to the top of the retractable seating to allow for late seating and more accessible seating options. Additional functions include a support box office and office spaces for staff.
Netherlands-based architecture firm Mecanoo, led by Creative Director and Founding Partner Francine Houben, is serving as the lead architect for the new building project, in partnership with New York-based architecture firm Marvel, led by Jonathan Marvel, founding principal, as the architect of record and landscape architects. Theater and acoustics consultants Charcoalblue are working alongside the architectural team on the project.
“For me, what was inspiring arriving at Jacob’s Pillow is the energy of the festival and experiencing performance in this unique natural setting,” said Francine Houben. “We wanted to make a building which embodied Indigenous principles of connecting with the land and thinking seven generations forward. The sequence of moving between outdoors and indoors and the sculptural layering of the building emphasizes the feeling of movement in space, while firmly rooted to the site in this special place in the Berkshires.”
Jeffrey Gibson, a member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and of Cherokee descent, is serving as a consultant on the building’s relationship to the site and Indigenous design values, a key element of the building’s design. The Pillow seeks to honor the building’s context on the ancestral lands of the Muh-he-con-ne-ok, or Mohican peoples, who are now known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community and reside in Wisconsin. Additionally, the Pillow honors the Agawam, Nipmuc, and Pocumtuc who also made their homes in what is now known as Western Massachusetts. Gibson has participated in regular design sessions and has helped steward stakeholder engagement with Indigenous community members to seek feedback on the evolving design.
“It’s been great working with Jacob’s Pillow and Mecanoo to develop the new Doris Duke Theatre,” Gibson said. “The current design takes into account important Indigenous values and supports multiple kinds of performances that can engage the inside and the outside of the building and traditional and more intimate performances. Certain Indigenous materials, patterns, and processes will be reflected in the interior and exterior, and I’m excited to see the submissions from Indigenous artists to help realize the final iteration of the building.”
Rendering of the Doris Duke Theatre performance space:
Rendering courtesy of Mecanoo Architects and Marvel
The original Doris Duke Theatre at Jacob’s Pillow was built as the Studio/Theatre in 1989 as one of three primary performance spaces on Jacob’s Pillow’s 220-acre campus in Western Massachusetts and opened for its first full season in 1990. For 30 years, it was a beloved blackbox theater and incubator for groundbreaking artists including Reggie Wilson, Michelle Dorrance, and Kyle Abraham, as well as the place where international artists including Black Grace, Chandralekha, and Danish Dance Theater made their U.S. debuts.
The new Doris Duke Theatre will restore a second indoor theater space for Jacob’s Pillow’s annual summer Dance Festival alongside the flagship Ted Shawn Theatre, and provide year-round studio space on the Pillow campus, in addition to the Perles Family Studio, which is home to The School at Jacob’s Pillow and the Pillow Lab, artist-in-residence program.
Architecture: Mecanoo – https://www.mecanoo.nl/
Images: Mecanoo and Marvel
Doris Duke Theatre, Becket, Massachusetts images / information received 120523 from Mecanoo architecten
Location: 358 George Carter Rd, Becket, Massachusetts 01223, USA
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