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REVIEW Intrinsic Romance By Ashley P. Taylor Managing Editor The New England contradance is a familyfriendly activity. Men and women of all ages pair up to form long lines “up and down the [grange] hall.” The band puts bow to string, and the dance begins, a repeating sequence of dosi-dos, figure eights, and, of course, swings. The lady and her partner (or whoever plays those roles—same-sex couples are common) hold each other by the shoulders on one side, and on the other, hold out clasped hands like the spoke of a wheel. They spin, pivoting around on the ball of one foot, pulling apart like samples in a centrifuge, staring into each other’s eyes, the only relatively still points in the whirling room. As the dance progresses, each dancer travels toward or away from the band, taking a new partner with each repetition of the sequence. Everybody dances with everyone; there’s nothing personal about it. And yet every once in a while, a young woman gets swung so fast, by someone tall and straight and solid, that she SciArt in America April 2014 “4Chambers” dancers. Photo credit: wowe. Image courtesy of Jody Oberfelder. feels effervescent, as if she is going to catch the breeze with her skirt; this fellow’s touch has momentarily transformed her world. The same woman occasionally wishes she didn’t have to dance with certain particularly sweaty or bossy or creepy partners, but she can’t avoid it, either; it’s part of the dance. Contradances are a blend of romance and formality. These magnetic moments of attraction and repulsion exist as a milky cloudiness beneath the smooth surface of ritual. Similarly, submerged romance is stirred up by “4Chambers,” the interactive dance by Jody Oberfelder Projects at Arts@Renaissance in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on view this past February and March. In the piece, audience participants interact with dancers while traveling through four rooms representing various aspects of the heart: physical, medical, emotional. “4Chambers” puts 35