Choreographer Mark Morris     doesn’t see cultural boundaries when he’s creating art. In a social     landscape where appropriation is a hot-button issue, he refuses to block     himself off from other cultures. “That’s not how the art works, and     certainly not how I work as a choreographer,” says Morris. “I’m going from     the text, the music, the rhythms. I make it afresh based on a certain     amount of knowledge and experience.”



      Morris starts with the music, and strives to fully understand the histories     and traditions behind whatever piece he’s interpreting. He spent ten years     doing research for Layla and Majnun, an evening-length work based on     a classic Arabian love story that has gone through multiple permutations     over the centuries and even served as the inspiration for Eric Clapton’s     “Layla.” Morris teamed up with visual artist Howard Hodgkin and the     musicians of Silkroad (formerly the Silk Road) Ensemble to create a     vibrant, kinetic take on the tragic romance.



      “I’m a choreographer who works in what people call ‘modern dance,’ but that     doesn’t mean I take a little bit of Azerbaijani ethnic movement and combine     it with the general language of American modern dance,” says Morris. “Those     things don’t exist in my world. This is a dance that I made up, and it     incorporates what I need it to: a particular way of dancing that is     communicative based on the culture. The story has been through a lot of     different points of view, and I want to unite them in producing this     show.”