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Ways to Strength and Beauty
Maison de la danse
Roof Piece
Trisha Brown
Roof and Fire Piece
Trisha Brown
Prélude à la mer
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
Horace Benedict
Dimitri Chamblas
Là commence le ciel
Julie Desprairies
Là commence le ciel
Julie Desprairies
CÉDEZ LE PASSAGE – ÉPISODE 1 : Un homme qui dort – Hela Fattoumi et Eric Lamoureux
Éric Lamoureux , Héla Fattoumi
CÉDEZ LE PASSAGE – ÉPISODE 2 – Corps Contraints -Nacera Belaza et Dalila Belaza
Nacera Belaza , Dalila Belaza
L’homme de la rue
Thomas Demay
État des lieux
Thomas Demay , Julia Moncla , Paul Changarnier
Placement libre
Thomas Demay , Julia Moncla
Prélude à la mer
The Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, to Claude Debussy’s music, inspired by Stéphane Mallarmé’s text, is a sublime musical poem about the ephemeral, absence, and extinction. Filmed on the site of the Aral Sea, a vanishing sea.
The Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, to Claude Debussy’s music, inspired by Stéphane Mallarmé’s text, is a sublime musical poem about the ephemeral, absence, and extinction. A faun wonders whether the nymphs that have fled his amorous advances were not, after all, mere phantasms: was I in love with a dream?…If only one could make these nymphs last, make the ephemeral persist, seize hold of what is bound to vanish… Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s choreography, brought to life by two “dream” performers, Marc Lorimer and Cynthia Loemij, confronts itself with the harshness of the scene of a catastrophe: the site of a vanishing sea, the Aral Sea. An androgynous “faun” (made possible by switching between a man and a woman) becomes caught up in the impossible quest to hold on to what is bound to vanish. He/she traces the movements of his/her insatiability, wandering in the tracks left by what used to be a sea : a salty steppe, landscapes with cracked soil, sandstorms, a cemetery of the wrecks of ships, lighthouses in the middle of the desert, ghost villages covered in sand by the wind. When he finally finds today’s shore, in the film’s final shot, the image of the sea in turn disappears, gradually dissolving in white.
Source : Charleroi danses
More information : www.charleroi-danses.be