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Room With A View (video clip)
(LA)HORDE
any attempt will end in crushed bodies and shattered bones
Jan Martens
Bless This Mess
Katerina Andreou
Quando Quebra Queima
Martha Kiss Perrone
Sacré printemps !
Aïcha M’Barek , Hafiz Dhaou
Clowns
Hofesh Shechter
Echad Mi Yodea
Ohad Naharin
Noces
Angelin Preljocaj
La mirada del avestruz
Tino Fernandez
Rouge
Mickaël Le Mer
The Green Table
Kurt Jooss
Lazarus
Oona Doherty
Témoin
Saïdo Lehlouh
Extension
Amala Dianor , Junior Bosila
DUB
Amala Dianor
Queen Blood
Ousmane Sy
Eden
Maguy Marin
Welcome to paradise
Joëlle Bouvier , Régis Obadia
Plexus
Aurélien Bory , Kaori Ito
Éloge du puissant royaume
Heddy Maalem Heddy Maalem
She Dreamt of Being Washed Away To The Coast
Lukas Karvelis
P=mg
Jann Gallois
Compact
Jann Gallois
Plexus
The way I intended to portray Kaori Ito mostly implied portraying her body. I’m not interested in an anatomical study, but in the memory of a body substantially shaped by dance ; I care about the innermost marks her art has carved in her living body.
Plexus comes from the late period Latin and means « intertwining ». Later on, the ordinary sense of the term used in the context of anatomy meant « the network of nerves or blood vessels ». The very definition of the word refers to the muscles’ inner mechanics : the impulses from the nervous system and the flow of oxygenated blood, as well as the external mechanics of dance : intertwinings of movements, driftings, bodies and body parts. The way I intended to portray Kaori Ito mostly implied portraying her body. I’m not interested in an anatomical study, but in the memory of a body substantially shaped by dance ; I care about the innermost marks her art has carved in her living body. How has her every cell taken part in this wonderful network of muscle tissue ? How has dance shaped, sculpted, and eventually expanded or crippled her innerspace ? Kaori Ito has worked with many different choreographers, each of them having singular, sometimes opposed, sets of aesthetics. She has been subjected to opposite influences, she has been caught and torn between various artistic choices. These strained have crossed her body. The external entity of dance has entered her. Plexus deals with this dialogue between Kaori’s innerworld and the outside world. Isn’t this dialogue one of the quintessential features of the universal human experience ? Is this dialectic the architect of our innerself ? or is it the hub of our frailties?
With this upcoming project, my wish is to continue with the series of women portraits that began in 2008 with Stephanie Fuster in Questcequetudeviens ?. Yet again, I opted for a dancer as my model : the Japanese Kaori Ito. My aim is to tackle dance as an intimate assessment of the innermost self. Once more I will rely on the work and the artistic career of the dancer ; with Kaori Ito, as it was already the case with Stéphanie Fuster, her path can be explored in the light of its various displacements. Kaori Ito was born in Japan. That’s where she became a dancer, she then pursued her training in New York, and finally arrived in Europe where she has worked with renown choreographers like Angelin Preljocaj, Philippe Decouflé, James Thierrée and Alain Platel. She settled down in Paris, and has since experimented distance from home like a long-lasting, yet chosen path, in order to carry on with her dancing career.