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Insaisies
Dominique Bagouet
F. et Stein
Dominique Bagouet
Via
Régine Chopinot
Déserts d’amour
Dominique Bagouet
10 minutes d’écoute musicale
Michel Kelemenis
Nouvelle galerie
Michel Kelemenis
Le Crawl de Lucien, première représentation
Dominique Bagouet
Rosas danst Rosas
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
Le Défilé
Régine Chopinot
Le saut de l’ange
Dominique Bagouet
Opal Loop
Trisha Brown
Watermotor
Trisha Brown
Assaï
Dominique Bagouet
Mama, Monday, Sunday or Always
Mathilde Monnier , Jean-François Duroure
Le Printemps
Catherine Diverrès
Plaisir d’offrir
Michel Kelemenis
KOK
Régine Chopinot
Sinfonia Eroica
Michèle Anne De Mey
Red room
Bill T. Jones
D-Man in the waters
Bill T. Jones
Pour Antigone
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Façade, un divertissement
Régine Chopinot
Necesito, pièce pour Grenade
Dominique Bagouet
Zoulous, pingouins et autres indiens
Dominique Bagouet
Chinoiserie
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Nuit
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Still-Here
Bill T. Jones
Caminos Andaluces
Cristina Hoyos
Fruits
Catherine Diverrès
Assaï
Dominique Bagouet
Arrêtez, arrêtons, arrête
CN D – Centre national de la danse
1997 MK 13
Michel Kelemenis
Les lieux de là
Mathilde Monnier
Ma mère – La fiancée aux yeux de bois
Karine Saporta
herses (une lente introduction)
Boris Charmatz
Pour Antigone, quatre portraits
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Aatt enen tionon
Boris Charmatz
Aatt enen tionon
Boris Charmatz
À bras le corps
Boris Charmatz , Dimitri Chamblas
Les Disparates
Boris Charmatz , Dimitri Chamblas
Furies
Joëlle Bouvier
Triton
Philippe Decouflé
Fase
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
Paradis
Dominique Hervieu , José Montalvo
Hibiki
Ushio Amagatsu
Daddy, I’ve seen this piece six times before and I still don’t know why they’re hurting eachother
Robyn Orlin
RainForest
Merce Cunningham
Petite mort
Jiří Kylián
Sechs Tänze
Jiří Kylián
Voltes
Catherine Diverrès
Faits et gestes, voir ci-après [transmission 2016]
CN D – Centre national de la danse
El Trilogy
Trisha Brown
Young people, old voices
Raimund Hoghe
Two thousand and three
Gilles Jobin
Douar [teaser]
Kader Attou
La place du singe
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Swan Lake
Raimund Hoghe
Swan Lake
Raimund Hoghe
Swan Lake – Mort du cygne
Raimund Hoghe
Park de 1998 à aujourd’hui [extrait 1]
Claudia Triozzi
Park de 1998 à aujourd’hui [extrait 2]
Claudia Triozzi
The Family Tree
Claudia Triozzi
Quintette cercle
Boris Charmatz
Hell
Pieter C. Scholten , Emio Greco
Double Deux
Gilles Jobin
Ha! Ha!
Maguy Marin
2008 vallée
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Régi
Raimund Hoghe , Boris Charmatz
b.c, janvier 1545, fontainebleau.
Christian Rizzo
Tempo 76
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Une danse blanche avec Eliane
Sylvie Giron , Dominique Bagouet
We must eat our suckers with the wrapper on… Variation #1
Robyn Orlin
Good Boy
Alain Buffard
Les inconsolés
Alain Buffard
O.C.C.C.
Régine Chopinot
Miroku
Saburo Teshigawara
Chez Rosette
Kettly Noël
Bolero Variations
Raimund Hoghe
Gustavia
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Madame Plaza
Bouchra Ouizguen
Ciao Bella
Herman Diephuis
Manta
Éric Lamoureux , Héla Fattoumi
Sans Titre
Raimund Hoghe
El cielo de tu boca
Andrés Marin
Gnosis
Akram Khan
Si je meurs laissez le balcon ouvert
Maison de la danse
Symfonia Piesni Załosnych
Kader Attou
Hora
Ohad Naharin
Soapera
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Soapera
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Roaratorio
Merce Cunningham
Roaratorio [extrait 32 minutes]
Merce Cunningham
Pâquerette
Cecilia Bengolea , François Chaignaud
Sylphides
Cecilia Bengolea , François Chaignaud
Improvisation
Boris Charmatz
Pudique Acide-Recréation
Mathilde Monnier , Jean-François Duroure
Extasis
Mathilde Monnier , Jean-François Duroure
Extasis
CN D – Centre national de la danse
Extasis
Mathilde Monnier , Jean-François Duroure
Sacre
David Wampach
Pléiades
Alban Richard
Project 5
Ohad Naharin
Big mouth
Niv Sheinfeld , Oren Laor
Covariance
Niv Sheinfeld , Oren Laor
Brilliant Corners
Maison de la danse , Montpellier Danse
Score
Yuval Pick
Metropolis – GAGA
Ohad Naharin
Yo Gee Ti
Mourad Merzouki
Käfig Brasil
Mourad Merzouki
Boxe Boxe
Mourad Merzouki
HIYA
Brahim Bouchelaghem
twin paradox
CN D – Centre national de la danse
TUÉTANO [extrait]
Andrés Marin
I’m going to toss my arms, if you catch them they’re yours
Trisha Brown
I’m going to toss my arms, if you catch them they’re yours
Trisha Brown
Думи мої – Dumy Moyi
François Chaignaud
May B (2016)
Maguy Marin
Objets Re-Trouvés [teaser]
Mathilde Monnier
enfant
Boris Charmatz
Flag
Maison de la danse
Flat/grand délit
Yann Lheureux
Resin
Alonzo King
BiT
Maguy Marin
And so you see… our honourable blue sky and ever enduring sun… can only be consumed slice by slice…
Robyn Orlin
Du Désir d’horizons
Salia Sanou
Yātrā
Andrés Marin , Kader Attou
Savušun
Sorour Darabi
Alexandre
Pol Pi
d’après une histoire vraie
Christian Rizzo
Performance pour 27 chaussures
Olivier Saillard
Fruits
“Fruits”, a work for ten dancers, draws its inspiration from a poem by Friedrich Hölderlin and from which she created her title – “Les fruits sont mûrs” (The fruits are ripe) –, chosen to conjure up carnal sensuality and the cycle of death.
A work for ten dancers created during the Montpellier-Danse Festival in 1996, “Fruits” draws its inspiration from a poem by Friedrich Hölderlin and from which she created her title – “Les fruits sont mûrs” (The fruits are ripe) –, which conjures up for the choreographer “a carnal and sensual aspect as well as the presence of the cycle of death”: “Sensuality exists in life”, she states. “But a fruit can be rotten. If we talk about flesh, then we talk about decomposition”. [1]
« Les fruits sont mûrs, baignés de feu, cuisants,
Et goûtés sur la terre ; une Loi veut
Que tout se glisse comme des serpents au cœur des choses,
Prophétique, rêvant sur
Les collines du ciel. Et il y a beaucoup
(Comme aux épaules, une
Charge de bois bûché)
A maintenir. Mais perfides
Sont les sentiers. Oui, hors du droit chemin,
Comme des coursiers, s’emportent les Eléments
Captifs et les antiques
Lois de la Terre. Et sans cesse un désir vers ce qui
N’est point
Lié s’élance. Il y a beaucoup à maintenir. Il faut être fidèle.
Mais nous ne regarderons point devant nous, ni
Derrière, nous laissant bercer comme
Dans une tremblante barque de la mer. »
“The fruits are ripe, dipped in fire,
Cooked and sampled on earth. And there’s a law,
That things crawl off in the manner of snakes,
Prophetically, dreaming on the hills of heaven. And there is much that needs to be retained,
Like a load of wood on the shoulders. But the pathways are dangerous. The captured elements and ancient laws of earth
Run astray like horses. There is a constant yearning
For all that is unconfined. But much needs to be retained. And loyalty is required.
Yet we mustn’t look forwards or backwards.
We should let ourselves be cradled
As if on a boat rocking on a lake. » [2]
“Fruits”, imagined when she returned to France from ex-Yugoslavia, was created with the complicity of the stage designer Daniel Jeanneteau – a clearly identified associate of Claude Régy – who had just returned from a trip to Beirut. Both of them were inhabited by images of the destroyed landscapes that they had seen. It was Daniel who suggested Hölderlin’s poem to C. Diverrès: “I was stunned when I saw this poem. I thought that it was definitely a matrix for creating something”. [3] She specifies moreover how she perceived it: “The text evokes the fleeting aspect of things and how to prolong passing moments. As such, the creation would speak about time. But the poem, just like the work, also evokes the violence of the elements in nature and the recurrent violence in human beings”. [4]
Drawing its inspiration from a war with no name, the subject of “Fruits” is the rage to destroy expressed by movements that are often violent. The central focus of the stage design is a monumental metallic grill cover (eight metres by fifteen) which totally covers the stage house lengthwise and heightwise. Made of worn steel, it conjures up a grill cover riddled with bullet holes and is inhabited quite unusually by a hen. Erected right in the middle of the stage during the first hour of the performance, it instigates a challenge that is both scenic and political: “how will the dance manage to shine through this heaviness?”, “how will the dance manage to crack this invisible and pernicious wall?”. Along with “Tauride” (1992) and “Ces poussières” (1993), “Fruits” is one of Catherine Diverrès’ creations that reflects current events the most. Interviews provide the choreographer with a floor for expressing her intellectual and political commitment through dance.
A programme talks about a “dance that tastes of ashes” [5] and, not without reason: in fact, the performance takes place “on the dust of charred ground, a dark expanse that carries us back in time and incites awakening” confirms Irène Filiberti [6]. Daniel Jeanneteau drew his inspiration from a photo of disaster-stricken Beirut to create “extremely poor, extremely blackened ground”, a substance that the choreographer wished to see mixed with litter “with ochre objects that look like the bark of trees” [7]. He states as such:
“To distrust complacency, images
Ground covered in sludge, Joan at the stake, liquid gold
Finally, the mushy vermiculite granita, dance with that.
Treacherous, uncomfortable ground. The litter, the pigeon droppings, abandon, death”. [8]
The creation, which lasts for two hours, is performed by ten dancers of various nationalities (German, Austrian, Brazilian, American, French, Italian), including only two – Fabrice Dasse, who joined the Company in 1992, and Cécile Loyer, in 1994, – who had already taken part in the work of the choreographer, who had established herself in Rennes two years before. It is worth mentioning that it is also the only work in which Catherine Diverrès does not perform. Noticing that the bodies of this rejuvenated team, younger than those she had previously worked with, showed no signs of suffering, she used their lightness to offset the graveness of the work.
During the Montpellier-Danse Festival, “Fruits” was given “a barrage of fierce criticism” as the critic Dominique Frétard said. Unfairly so, in her opinion. To those who rebuke it for its graveness, its violence, its length, the critic retorts: “”Fruits” burns. It is a major aesthetic accomplishment. Archaic, violent, close to sacrifice, to sacrificial offering, inhabited by somnambulistic creatures, who perform the worst as if asleep, Catherine Diverrès’ dance could only metamorphose itself by giving time to the movement, by stretching it out. (…) These two hours are mandatory to enable the, often violent, movement to become disconnected from the bodies, to become diluted in the space. As such, the violence becomes the very form of the work. It is everywhere, imperceptible, camouflaged. The body is present yet elsewhere, occasionally totally motionless. “Fruits” is toxically sophisticated. (…) In “Fruits”, it is her own violence that the choreographer has wrenched from her body. For the first time, she does not dance. She observes her dancers, all new dancers, who have come from around the world, elegant, shred her soul apart on stage”. [9]
A publication from the National Choreographic Centre of Rennes, put together along with the Société des auteurs et compositeurs dramatiques (French Society of Dramatic Authors and Composers – SACD), completes this creation. The creative process steps are described within and richly illustrated with snapshots taken by the Israeli photographer Lee Yanor.
Claire Delcroix
[1] C. Diverrès quoted in Delphine Goater, “Diverrès l’insoumise”, Les Saisons de la danse, June 1996, n° 281.
[2] F. Hölderlin, Poèmes isolés, in « Hölderlin Œuvres », Bibliothèque de la Pléiade, published by Gallimard, translated by Jean Tardieu, Philippe Jaccottet and Gustave Roud ; In English, Poems of Friedrich Hölderlin, translated by James Mitchell (San Francisco: Ithuriel’s Spear, 2004).
[3] C. Diverrès, “L’espace, les forces”, in “Fruits”, published by Lansman, p. 65.
[4] C. Diverrès quoted in D. Goater, ibid.
[5] La Comédie of Caen programme, January 1997, n° 330.
[6] Théâtre de la Ville handbill, 26-30 November 1996.
[7] C. Diverrès, “L’espace, les forces”, in “Fruits”, published by Lansman, p. 65.
[8] D. Jeanneteau, interview notes, June 1996. Quoted in “Fruits”, published by Lansman, p. 51.
[9] D. Frétard, “Montpellier-danse célèbre les seventies et tient à l’écart la création actuelle”, Le Monde, 2 July 1996.
Updating: June 2014