Hedda [teaser]
Ingun Bjørnsgaard
Duo d’Eden
Maguy Marin
EEEXEEECUUUUTIOOOOONS !!!
La Ribot
Femmes Bûcherons
Dorte Olesen
In the Upper Room [teaser]
Twyla Tharp
Objets Re-Trouvés [teaser]
Mathilde Monnier
Performing Performing [teaser]
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
Welcome to Paradise
Joëlle Bouvier , Régis Obadia
Le Jardin
Julien Ficely
Two
Russell Maliphant
La Camelle
Sidi Graoui
Une danse blanche avec Eliane
Sylvie Giron , Dominique Bagouet
Broken Man
Stephen Petronio
L’Héroïne ou la gloire Imprudente
Claude Brumachon , Benjamin Lamarche
Black and Tan
Françoise Sullivan
Break
Meredith Monk
Le Spectre
Lionel Hoche
La Mère
Isadora Duncan , Elisabeth Schwartz
Etude Révolutionnaire
Isadora Duncan , Elisabeth Schwartz
Sourire de Fauves, Opus 2
Andrea Sitter , Maïté Fossen
Showroomdummies #3
Gisèle Vienne , Etienne Bideau-Rey
Life Story
Karole Armitage
One Part II
Russell Maliphant
Tragic Love
Stephen Petronio
Fabrications
Merce Cunningham
Syndrôme
Jacopo Godani
Autumn Fields
Viola Farber
Trauma
John Neumeier
Les Biches
Bronislava Nijinska
Petite Suite à Danser
Brian Macdonald , Françoise Adret , Dirk Sanders , Félix Blaska
Reportage sur Merce Cunningham
Merce Cunningham
Chroniques
Max Gérard
Le Florentin d’Angers
CCN – Ballet de Lorraine
Rose – variation
Mathilde Monnier
La Création du monde 1923-2012
Faustin Linyekula , Jean Börlin
Fabrications
Merce Cunningham
Sketches From Chronicle
Martha Graham
The Vile Parody of Address
William Forsythe
Shaker Loops
Andonis Foniadakis
The Vertiginous Thrill of Exactitude
William Forsythe
Corps de Ballet
Noé Soulier
Sounddance
Merce Cunningham
Relâche
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley , Jean Börlin
Untitled Partner #3
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
Transposition #2
Emanuel Gat
Faits et Gestes
Ulysses Dove
COVER
Itamar Serussi
HOK solo pour ensemble
Alban Richard
Rave
Karole Armitage
Duo
William Forsythe
Steptext
William Forsythe
Devoted
Cecilia Bengolea , François Chaignaud
Hedda
Ingun Bjørnsgaard
The Fugue
Twyla Tharp
Nine Sinatra Songs
Twyla Tharp
Opal Loop/Cloud Installation #72503
Trisha Brown
Le Surréalisme au service de la Révolution
Marcos Morau
ELEMENTEN I – Room
Cindy Van Acker
White Feeling
Paulo Ribeiro
Hymnen
Lia Rodrigues , Didier Deschamps
Unknown Pleasures
CCN – Ballet de Lorraine
Relâche
Jean Börlin
Transparent Monster
Saburo Teshigawara
For Four Walls
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
Transposition #1
Emanuel Gat
Gala (création 2015)
Bérangère Goossens
Discofoot
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
Murmuration
Rachid Ouramdane
Record of ancient things
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
Kayak
Etienne Cuppens , Sarah Crépin
Happening birthday
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
RainForest
Merce Cunningham
Flot
Thomas Hauert
Jour de colère
Olivia Grandville
For Four Walls
Petter Jacobsson , Thomas Caley
Flot
Serge Prokofiev’s Waltz Suites op.110 is a somewhat strange piece in the classical orchestral repertory, a compendium of six waltzes excerpted from three independently composed pieces, notably from the ballet Cinderella, from his opera War and Peace, and from music he wrote for the film Lermontov. Each waltz has its own rich melodic inventiveness and dynamic variation; they are harmonically sophisticated and brilliantly orchestrated, but the six waltzes played consecutively tend to sort of blend together in the movement continuum, such that the listener becomes inured to its exuberant abundance. This may explain why the suite is not regularly performed in concerts and why there are so few complete recordings in print. Flot uses the recording as a first, essential musical layer: the dance feeds off it, finding in it a source of movement, energy, dynamic and rhythm, channeling together the spaces and atmospheric expansion it suggests. At the same time, the choreography is free to restructure the music, letting it be shaped by the dance, by the pluridisciplinary performance – manipulating the sound as a dramaturgical component of the piece.
Using a complex network of movements which connect in time and space, the choreographic vocabulary of Thomas Hauert is sometimes seen as a continuation of the tradition of abstract dance. However, his polyphonic “language” actually moves from studio to stage via improvisation. The essence of the work is that it happens without the intervention of a central authority. It is comprised of an integrated dynamic system which includes unpredictable behavior, such that certain dancers may initiate a movement and others react to it, triggering another reaction and movement inside the same structure, or one which moves toward an entirely new area. Drawing from a shared repertory of physical principles developed and integrated throughout the creative process, the dancers invent and perform their own movements onstage, responsible for the creation and development of their group structures. They adapt their individual roles as part of a dynamic constellation whose mechanisms are constantly evolving, seeking order from disorder, shape from that which is amorphous, creating a group from disparate individuals, while at the same time benefiting from the exceptional qualities of perception, attention and concentration developed through their improvisations.
The choreography appears as a microcosm in which individuals are defending their freedom and creativity and demonstrating their will to connect to others. The concepts of free will and responsibility can be felt running through the series of negociations, conflicts, tensions and resolutions we observe in our social systems. During the work we pick up on uncertainty, retrospective justification, the improvisation of the do-it-yourself-er, limited vision, opportunities discovered a second too late, the temptation to choose familiar paths, and an open future — the forces we are all now facing as human beings. Imperfection becomes a marker for true commitment and the quest for virtue, instead of a public sign of failure.