Numeridanse est disponible en français.
Souhaitez-vous changer de langue ?
Warning, sensitive content.
This content contains scenes that may shock an uninformed audience.
Do you still want to watch it?

1664

Choreography
Director
Réalisation Centre national de la danse
Year of production
2022
Year of creation
2022

The creation of the Kronenbourg Brewery in Strasbourg; Nicolas Fouquet being sentenced to life in prison, after being the creator of celebrations of the arts in his property Vaux-le-Vicomte; the first edition of the “Plaisirs de l’île enchantée” in Versailles to celebrate Louis 14th; the creation of the Compagnie des Indes by Colbert, a company dealing in coffee, tobacco, rum, sugar and opium, what is the common point between all these events? They all occurred in 1664. This is not just a temporal coincidence; these events attest to a shift in perspective in terms of aesthetics and politics, from unbridled joy to the entertainment of the dominant caste, from open creation to its regulation by royal academies, from joyful inebriation to addiction. Hortense Belhôte uses these correlated events in her “mental detox” in a performative lecture to find the “joy, the madness and freedom of the first 17th century” where painting, architecture, ornamental gardens, dance, music and theatre combined in an inspired happening. The artist also calls upon her own memories as a party-loving student and blends together erudition, political commitment and performance in an updated performance of the baroque spirit.

Source: programme of the CND

Choreography
Director
Réalisation Centre national de la danse
Year of production
2022
Year of creation
2022
Art direction / Design
Hortense Belhôte
Artistic advice / Dramaturgy
Lou Cantor, Béatrice Massin
Performance
Hortense Belhôte
Production of video work
Enregistré au CND le 17 novembre 2022 dans le cadre de l’exposition “Déplier baroque”
Production of choreographic work
Production, diffusion, administration Fabrik Cassiopée – Manon Crochemore & Manon Joly
Add to the playlist