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The Rite of Spring
Jean-Claude Gallotta
I’m going to toss my arms, if you catch them they’re yours
Trisha Brown
Opal Loop
Trisha Brown
Watermotor
Trisha Brown
Mirror and Music
Saburo Teshigawara
La jeune fille et la mort
Thomas Lebrun
El Djoudour, the roots
Abou Lagraa
Deca Dance
Ohad Naharin
O Senseï – Stance II
Catherine Diverrès
La Familia de los Reyes
Chaillot-Théâtre National de la Danse
Danzaora
Rocío Molina
Rencontres : Carolyn Carlson & Eva Yerbabuena
Eva Yerbabuena , Carolyn Carlson
Inanna
Carolyn Carlson
Bosque Ardora
Rocío Molina
Mirror and Music
“I am trying to express something of the invisible…that has no specific form, it’s more a shape that erases itself, that is constantly appearing and disappearing.”
With Mirror and Music, Japanese choreographer Saburo Teshigawara returns to Chaillot with a work for nine dancers, for which he also did the stage design, lighting, and costumes. “I am trying to express something of the invisible…that has no specific form, it’s more a shape that erases itself, that is constantly appearing and disappearing. I feel close to what is disappearing rather than to what is trying to stabilize.” A dance to see and hear that will carry the spectator beyond the real.
Mirror and music does not exist in reality.
It reflects and multiplies what we see, or what we strongly imagine.
A different dimension from the real world.
Something yet unknown. Never to be known for sure.
But something so sure.
So what does this mean for the body?
Dancers expose their bodies into this new dimension of reality, filled with music and light.