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Le Festin
Claude Brumachon
Folie
Claude Brumachon
Silence
Claude Brumachon
Icare
Claude Brumachon
Folie-rehearsal
Claude Brumachon
D’Indicibles Violences
Claude Brumachon
Phobos
Claude Brumachon
Ellipse
Claude Brumachon
Embrasés
Claude Brumachon
Les Coquelicots Sauvages
Claude Brumachon
Texane
Claude Brumachon
Histoire d’Argan-Teaser
Claude Brumachon
Histoire d’Argan le Visionnaire
Claude Brumachon
Ashbury St.
Claude Brumachon
Phobos
Claude Brumachon
Folie
Claude Brumachon
Texane
Claude Brumachon
Absalon the Insurgent
Claude Brumachon
Le Festin
Claude Brumachon
Folie
Claude Brumachon
Le Témoin
Claude Brumachon
Phobos
Claude Brumachon
La Fulgurance du Vivant-teaser
Claude Brumachon
La Fulgurance du Vivant
Claude Brumachon
Phobos – Transmission
Claude Brumachon
Witness
Claude Brumachon
The Manor
Claude Brumachon
Fragments of Olympus
Claude Brumachon
Fragments d’Olympe
Claude Brumachon
The Manor
Claude Brumachon
Following the logic of Things
Claude Brumachon
Legendary
Claude Brumachon
Legendary
Claude Brumachon
La Suite Logique des Choses
Claude Brumachon
Legendary
Claude Brumachon
Teaser-Mutant
Claude Brumachon
Le Festin
Se déroulant par phases rapides en des tableaux successifs qui s’enchevêtrent, Le Festin interroge les mécanismes de notre société de consommation « qui engloutit tout » et ce quotidien « fatal » et « répétitif » auquel les hommes se soumettent.
Around a large table, the “spectator guests” are invited to take their seats right up beside the dance. “A dance topside and underside, made and remade, written and rewritten” in the words of Claude Brumachon, who has sought in this show to “plunge the public into the heart of the matter”, to experiment with it a proximity bordering on promiscuity. “Be with the skin, under the skin and feel the respiration, the breathing, the breath! Feel (…) the quality of movement that flows, with in your ears the sound wave of the echo of the fleeing gesture.”
Unfurling in rapid phases in a succession of entangled tableaux, Le Festin questions the mechanisms of our consumer society “that devours everything” and that “fatal” and “repetitive” daily life to which people submit. In this dinner where the menu is alive, Claude Brumachon delivers up to the public the dancers “in the state of things” “goods ready to be consumed”.
“The table is served and cleared. My dish: my dancer. Guests whose only meal is the raw energy of an artist in action. The action of the gift of self, the offering of one’s life, of one’s body, in a multitude of instants dissected and mixed.”