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Schritte verfolgen 2007 Reconstruction
Susanne Linke
Hunt
Tero Saarinen
Khaddem Hazem
Aïcha M’Barek , Hafiz Dhaou
vsprs
Alain Platel
Hymne aux fleurs qui passent : La Déesse des Fleurs
Lee-Chen Lin
Blanche Neige
Angelin Preljocaj
Tango Vivo
Claudia Codega
Samanvaya
Madhavi Mudgal , Alarmel Valli
21
Rodrigo Pederneiras
The dance of nothing
Charles Picq
La légende de Logwé
Biennale de la danse
Blue Lady [revisited]
Tero Saarinen , Carolyn Carlson
El Farruquo y su grupo
Antonio Montoya Flores
Kamanda, qu’en penses-tu ?
Georges Momboye
La mirada del avestruz
Tino Fernandez
La mirada del avestruz
Tino Fernandez
C’est ça la vie !?
Riyad Fghani
L’homme de l’Atlantique
Olivier Dubois
Still-Here
Bill T. Jones
30 jours avec Paul-André Fortier
Paul-André Fortier
Vu
Aïcha M’Barek , Hafiz Dhaou
Sete ou oito peças para um ballet
Rodrigo Pederneiras
Two thousand and three
Gilles Jobin
Del amor y otras cosas
Rafaela Carrasco , Daniel Doña
Miroirs de vie
Lee-Chen Lin
Benjamin de Bouillis
Foofwa d’Imobilité
Aphasiadisiac
Ted Stoffer
Parades & changes, replays
Anna Halprin , Anne Collod
Quando l’uomo principale è una donna
Jan Fabre , Lisbeth Gruwez
A Benguer
Serge Aimé Coulibaly
The Art of Urban Dance
Niels “Storm” Robitzky
Les Murs-Murs de la Méditerrannée
Raza Hammadi
Un pas de côté
Salia Sanou , Seydou Boro
Eye of the Heaven
Kim Mae-Ja
Chum, Ku Shinmyung
Kim Mae-Ja
Geografia
Frank Micheletti
Absolute Zero
Saburo Teshigawara
Génération
Madhavi Mudgal
Resistencia
Annick Charlot
Petrushka
Tero Saarinen
Next of Kin
Tero Saarinen
Wrapped
Inbal Pinto
Moon looking dog
Hong Sungyop
Déjà vu
Hong Sungyop
Tangos y Valses
Ana-Maria Stekelman
Temps de feu
Sophie Tabakov , Laurent Soubise
Chant VI
Sophie Tabakov , Laurent Soubise
Le Défilé de la Biennale de la Danse 2000
Charles Picq
Um Olhar
Henrique Rodovalho
Palpable
Andonis Foniadakis
Rendez-vous avec Laurent Goumarre : Robyn Orlin
Robyn Orlin
STILL-life
Qudus Onikeku
Le défilé de la Biennale de la Danse 2008
Charles Picq , Fabien Plasson
Les damnés de la terre
Fred Bendongué
Parades & changes, replays
Anna Halprin , Anne Collod
Weaving Chaos
Tânia Carvalho
Panorama
Philippe Decouflé
Panorama
Philippe Decouflé
Têtes à têtes
Maria Clara Villa-Lobos
BiT
Maguy Marin
Bosque Ardora
Rocío Molina
Gerro, Minos and Him
Simon Tanguy , Aloun Marchal , Roger Sala Reyner
Democracy
Maud Le Pladec
Tabac Rouge
James Thierrée
Magical
Anne Juren , Annie Dorsen
Mouvement sur Mouvement
Noé Soulier
Admiring la Argentina
Kazuo Ohno , Tatsumi Hijikata
Esse Alguém sabe quem
Jomar Mesquita
You walk ?
Bill T. Jones
Nicht Schlafen
Alain Platel
Jessica and me
Cristiana Morganti
A.H.C. – Albertine, Hector et Charles
Denis Plassard
Dans les plis du paysage
Fabien Plasson
Relic
Euripides Laskaridis
The Art of Urban Dance
Niels “Storm” Robitzky
Loïe Fuller, la danse des couleurs
Loïe Fuller , Brygida Ochaim
Loïe Fuller – la danse des couleurs
Loïe Fuller , Brygida Ochaim
Vertikal
Mourad Merzouki
Eins Zwei Drei
Martin Zimmermann
BROTHER
Marco Da Silva Ferreira
Hard to Be Soft
Oona Doherty
Ligne de crête
Maguy Marin
Mnémosyne
Josef Nadj
L’exode
Karin Waehner
L’oiseau qui n’existe pas
Karin Waehner
Les marches
Karin Waehner
Sehnsucht
Karin Waehner
Violatus
Abou Lagraa
Ma
Lia Rodrigues
Folia
Lia Rodrigues
Medea
Dimitris Papaioannou
Kuarup
Decio Otero
Shonen-Shojo Boys & Girls
Kim Itoh
Las Horas
Tania Perez-Salas
Coréografia Para Ouvir
Henrique Rodovalho
Pendant que j’y pense
Denise Namura , Michael Bugdahn
Unischtbarst
Anna Huber
Zoopsie Comedi
Dominique Boivin
Zoopsie Comedi
Dominique Boivin
Cancion de los niños muertos
Leyson Ponce
Del Quivir
Maria Angeles Galbaldon
Suerte
Véronique Ros de la Grange
Prudence ou les émotions subtiles
Josette Baïz
Silent Collisions
Frédéric Flamand
Almanach Bruitax
Karl Biscuit , Marcia Barcellos
Automnales
Christine Gerard
Baukastenspiel – Oskar Schlemmer’s Bauhaus Dances
Oskar Schlemmer , Debra McCall
Stâbetanz – Oskar Schlemmer’s Bauhaus Dances
Oskar Schlemmer , Debra McCall
Danza de las Tijeras
Romulo Huamani Janampa
Lykion Ton Hellinidon
Lefteris Drandakis
Improvisations. Solo.
Jerome Andrews
Rites
Jacqueline Robinson
Roméo et Juliette
Birgit Cullberg
La Maison de Bernarda
Mats Ek
Liturgies
Alwin Nikolaïs
The Fagor Experience of the Biennale de la danse 2021
Bokeh Production
[Biennale de la danse 2021] HKC Company at the Fagor Factories
Amala Dianor , Anne Rehbinder , Antoine Colnot
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Rehearsals of “Removing Reset” at the CNSMD of Lyon with Noé Soulier
Noé Soulier
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Irvin Anneix – “Cher futur moi” | Interview
Irvin Anneix
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Qudus Onikeku – “RE:Incarnation” | Rehearsals of the Défilé Final
Qudus Onikeku
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Christophe Haleb – “Entropic Now” | Behind the Scenes
Christophe Haleb
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Christophe Haleb – “Entropic Now” | Interview
Christophe Haleb
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Noé Soulier – “Removing Reset” | Interview
Noé Soulier
[Biennale de la danse 2021] Yuval Pick – “Vocabulary of Need” | Interview
Yuval Pick
Piume
Giorgo Rossi
A fuego lento
Catherine Berbessou
Ziriguidum et Batalha urbana
Sonia Destri
Péplum
Nasser Martin-Gousset
Primo toccare
Matteo Levaggi
Vanguardia jonda
Andrés Marin
The Continuum : Beyond the Killing Fields
Ong Keng Sen
The continuum : Beyond the Killing Fields
Ong Keng Sen
Les jolies choses
Catherine Gaudet
Grand Jeté
Silvia Gribaudi
Radio Vinci Park Reloaded
François Chaignaud
ART.13 [Reportage]
Phia Ménard
S62°58 W60°39
Gabriela Carrizo , Frank Chartier
ART.13
Phia Ménard
Le breaking, un art pour tous
Bruce Chiefare
ART.13
Article 13
Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each state.
Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948
The notion of frontiers struck me whilst listening to the stories of those who have braved them. The young, isolated migrants that my partner and I welcomed into our home particularly moved me with their stories. We heard how they had no alternative but to embark on an uncertain journey towards an equally uncertain future. The facts are there for all to see: the difference is dramatic and immorally unjust. Your skin colour, your religion and your passport make a huge difference when it comes to en-tering Europe.
It has to be said, Schengen Europe is a castle protected by walls and moats, and we choose to remain deaf to the screams of those drowning in its waters. Every now and again we lower the drawbridge, as we have done with total solidarity for the Ukrainian migrants, rushing to help the victims of Putin’s Rus-sian invasion. This sudden show of benevolent solidarity makes us question why it is so absent when it comes to migrant war-victims from Africa and the Middle East, who for years have been turned back and locked away, victims of police violence and deadly migrant pushbacks by coastal guards. This un-welcome attitude to coloured migrants is a choice and also a protective reflex, and both of these vio-lent reactions are proof of many people’s self-interested selective empathy. Those of us who have watched Raoul Peck’s film “Exterminer toutes ces brutes” (“Exterminate all these brutes”) or who are brave enough to look back at history, understand that global inequality derives from the disturbing legacy of colonisation. The West’s accumulation of wealth is based on the slave trade, the stolen land, the exploitation of resources and the spilt blood of the first indigenous peoples. It can’t be denied: frontiers and borders are a matter of money and nationalism. Unfortunately, this story continues to-day…
As I write these words I feel very white, privileged and guilty. I was born in the right place at the right time. I’m not standing in front of barbed wire, trying to find a way through, I’m not on a tiny raft trying to cross the sea. I can’t speak for those who are trying to flee, escape, cross borders, those who will never give up when someone says no, or because someone hurts them, or because they are faced with a wall. I believe the victims’ stories and I listen to them when they talk of those physical, despica-ble frontiers!
This angle of focus is the starting point for ART.13, whose title comes from an article in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This article strikes me as the one that acknowledges the fact that humani-ty lives on a sphere, on a planet named Earth, whose only clear frontier is infinite space! This is also the one article which defines the difference between left-wing thought and right-wing thought, as Gilles Deleuze explains in his “Abécédaire” (alphabet book). These are the words that spin in my mind with fascination: “deconstruct”, “transform”, “live”. Our way of considering humanity by dissociating the concepts “nature” and “culture” seems
questionable to me. It is yet another frontier, an ontological one this time, making me contemplate our fear and uneasiness just “To Be”, to evolve, the possible and the impossible, how long things last and how long things take.
ART.13 is an act of theatre which tells the tale of an arrogant world on the point of collapse, refusing to fall silent. The starting point is a bucolic scene set in a domestic garden, where, on a perfectly mown lawn, the statue of a man sits high above the ground, raised on its stand (its “socle”). A symbol of Cul-ture. Nature breaks into this scene when an animal digs itself out of a hole with an axe. Should the statue be knocked off its stand, or should the stand be destroyed? Is this an attempt at revolution or is it the dawn of a new way of functioning? Destroy or Deconstruct could be the subheading of the piece. Maybe there are other ways of transforming ourselves. Ways described by Joseph Beuys, Davi Kopenawa, Charles Stepanoff, Val Plumwood and many others. Ways which engage our capacity for dreaming of other worlds, of something different, something better. Ways which would allow me to no longer be defined as a white, blond, European woman, and to break through spaces with frontiers, since they would no longer exist. To no longer dread hardships and ordeals, because it would be an-other world: an “other” world.
ART.13 is a fairytale, calling forth new paths forward, as yet to be imagined….
Phia Ménard, 25th Janvier 2023