In duet the dancers Angela Herenda de Kroo and Camilo Chapela |
Friday, 29 January 2016
On the edge of the fear with 'Phobia'
I was waiting in the hall of the Schouwburg Theatre of Arnhem and I knew that something mysterious was hidden behind the doors. I had the same sensation when I was in row to enter the house of horrors in an entertainment park.
A girl was slowly coming downstage when suddenly somebody put hands on her eyes. Unexpectedly the lights went off. Screams, laments, thunders. Everything collected in one word: fear. Through the text written by Bas Heijne and Martijn Rijk, the duo Club Guy and Roni chose to challenge the audience and lead it on the edge of the fear. In fact this was not only the theme of the performance, but it was also what the audience started to feel.
An evening with... Shechter - Nederlands Dans Theater
ENTERTAINING AND INSPIRING
Choreographer: Hofesh Shechter
Choreography: Uprising
Date: April 11th 2014
City: Rotterdam
Theatre: Rotterdamse Schouwburg
By Ivar Draaisma
For the first time that I saw a choreography of Hofesh Shechter. and i liked it. his style and the whole design got me. the costumes, music, movement style. i really could identify myself with the whole piece.
Since this performance Shechter became a source of inspiration for me. I have been searching a lot of movement material of Shechter and hope to see more of his works in the future.
His way of moving suits my way of moving, well,that is what i think. He uses a lot of organic movements. He shows that dance does not necessary need to express emotion. I as a dancer also think that you do not have to express emotion in dance. For Shechter, dance is nothing else but dance. And that appeals a lot to me.
In my solo, which I created in december 2014, I used Shechters pieces as a source of inspiration. Sometimes that was difficult because I only had some video's and it was too quick to keep up. But it was already special that there were video of this performance on the internet. So I sometimes went into the studio and practised with Shechter's movement material. It felt great and I am happy that I used it in my solo.
Choreographer: Hofesh Shechter
Choreography: Uprising
Date: April 11th 2014
City: Rotterdam
Theatre: Rotterdamse Schouwburg
By Ivar Draaisma
For the first time that I saw a choreography of Hofesh Shechter. and i liked it. his style and the whole design got me. the costumes, music, movement style. i really could identify myself with the whole piece.
Since this performance Shechter became a source of inspiration for me. I have been searching a lot of movement material of Shechter and hope to see more of his works in the future.
His way of moving suits my way of moving, well,that is what i think. He uses a lot of organic movements. He shows that dance does not necessary need to express emotion. I as a dancer also think that you do not have to express emotion in dance. For Shechter, dance is nothing else but dance. And that appeals a lot to me.
In my solo, which I created in december 2014, I used Shechters pieces as a source of inspiration. Sometimes that was difficult because I only had some video's and it was too quick to keep up. But it was already special that there were video of this performance on the internet. So I sometimes went into the studio and practised with Shechter's movement material. It felt great and I am happy that I used it in my solo.
KAASH-Akram Kahn
Stadsschouwburg Groningen, 8 january 2016
Kaash
It is fourteen years ago (2002) that British-Bengali choreographer Akram Kahn came together with Composer Nitin Sawney and the world famous sculptor Anish Kapoor to make his first evening performance ‘Kaash’. The 55 minute during piece was an enormous succes. it became a favourite on the festivals around the world.
Now fourteen year later the Akram Kahn Company is back with a revised version of ‘Kaash’ with five new dancers
“Our new five-strong cast of international performers sheds another light and energy on the piece, focused on physicality and precision, that I believe still has all its relevance today.”
Akram Khan
the performance starts with one male dancer (Sung Hoon Kim) standing still on stage, dressed in a traditional black costume, facing the back wall with Anish Kapoor's big black rectangle. He stands for minutes and stays still when suddenly hell breaks lose.
Four female dancers (Kristina Alleyne, Sadé Alleyne, Nicola Monaco and Sarah Cerneaux) dance around him exhausting the audience in an ever changing chess game of geometrical patterns and lines, alternating between fast complex movements with al lot of the kathak influences, and complete statue like stillness.
piece with references to hindu mythology like shiva and his love life but also of physics like the chaos theory and black holes. it's on the line between reality and illusion, Facts and myths.
One thing that comes back every time is a build up to a point where you can't take it anymore, where it gets important and then it drops again leaving the audience in silence.
Rehearsal director Yen-Ching Lin described it like:
You come to a point and then you break it down to start over. The question is from which point you start over.
All together this reviewed version of 'Kaash' is a must see and an insuring journey.
You can still see it in holland, at the 17th of march in the Zuiderstrandtheater in The Hague.
You can still see it in holland, at the 17th of march in the Zuiderstrandtheater in The Hague.
Artistic Direction / Choreography Akram Khan
Composer Nitin Sawhney
Set Design Anish Kapoor
Lighting Design Aideen Malone
Costume Design Kimie Nakano
Additional Music ‘Spectre’ by John Oswald played by The Kronos Quartet
Composer Nitin Sawhney
Set Design Anish Kapoor
Lighting Design Aideen Malone
Costume Design Kimie Nakano
Additional Music ‘Spectre’ by John Oswald played by The Kronos Quartet
Voice Akram Khan, B C Manjunath
Sound Recording Bernhard Schimpelsberger
Sound Recording Bernhard Schimpelsberger
Producer Farooq Chaudhry
Revival for 5 dancers Performed by Kristina Alleyne, Sadé Alleyne, Sung Hoon Kim, Nicola Monaco, Sarah Cerneaux
Rehearsal Director Yen-Ching Lin
With the support of Eulalia Ayguade Farro, Moya Michael and Andrej Petrovic
With the support of Eulalia Ayguade Farro, Moya Michael and Andrej Petrovic
Technical Director Richard Fagan
Technicians Alex Castro, Peter Swikker/Paul Moorhouse
Tour Manager Mashitah Omar
Technicians Alex Castro, Peter Swikker/Paul Moorhouse
Tour Manager Mashitah Omar
EXHAUSTING SPACE
“EXHAUSTING SPACE”
By Iván Pérez
First thing I mentioned and remembered of the choreography
Exhausting Space: floating, the dancers were floating over the stage. I still have
to realize that they were not and it just looked like they were. So impressive
and inspiring. Now I really want to know how they manage to float. I want to do
it myself!
When walked in I noticed the placement of the public chairs. It was placed
in a square, what means you were able to view the performance from a whole
other perspective. I was happy that the piece gave me the change to! I took it and
sit down right in front of the actual public (of the classic tribune), what
gave me a special feeling. I felt like I was part of the performance now.
The (exhausted) space was influenced by black painted eggs, which formed lines
which showed the barrier between the viewer and performer. Although this
created the limit of the stage, you could not see this in the dancers movement.
The quality of the movement was so soft that sometimes I thought when they
would hit one of the eggs, or actually danced on them, they still would not break!
Once an egg felt down after throwing it a few times. I
was confused. Does this belong to the piece? And then, why did they not gave
this situation more time like the rest of the piece? Later on I discovered it fell
down earlier than planned . Now I understood it and could get a message out of
it: ‘’Although it looks like we fly, there is still gravity, we are still
human.’’
I was really impressed by one of the three dancers Nina
Botkay. She expressed her movement really close to her. But also you could notice
she was aware of the dancers around her. Nothing seemed impossible for her to
reach.
I was happy that I was able to talk with Iván Pérez
after the dance. He told me: ‘I just really wanted to make a dance with good
friends of mine.’ This I could see in the movement I saw one unity moving, it
felt trusted and like the dancers where used to each other’s presence. And that
is how I walked out of the theater, like I saw something where I was part of,
part of the unity, like I also floated.
Written by Femke Verbeten
VIDEO
choreografie, concept, decor Iván Pérez | dans Nina Botkay/Inés Belda Nácher, Christopher Tandy, Iván Pérez | muziek Rutger Zuydervelt |
licht Peter Lemmens
| kostuums Carlijn
Petermeijer | assistent choreografie Inbal Abir | stagiair Cristian Arenas |
première 12 februari
2015,
CaDance Festival,
Korzo theater,
Den Haag
When I saw the dance: 3th of October 18:00-19:00,
during ‘De Nederlandse Dans Dagen’
Where: The Bordenhal, Maastricht
Tour
dates of the piece: www.ivanperezaviles.com/tour-dates
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