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Sete ou oito peças para um ballet
As in contemporary art in which corrections may be visibly incorporated to the final result, dancers’ movements came in variations, from a “dirty” aesthetics resembling rehearsals to a pristine final result.
Based on eight themes written by American composer Philip Glass and Brazilian instrumental ensemble Uakti, choreographer Rodrigo Pederneiras balanced the formal rigor that had marked his work till then and created an artless choreography. Movement scores appeared as a series of sketches, annotations or studies for a choreography; “7 or 8 Pieces for a Ballet” had its debut in 1994, displaying an apparently unfinished character in a superb flawless form. As in contemporary art in which corrections may be visibly incorporated to the final result, dancers’ movements came in variations, from a “dirty” aesthetics resembling rehearsals to a pristine final result. In this sense, this is a ballet that would rather propose than foretell; it’s as if the creators of Corpo shared with the spectator the different phases of its creative process.
The obsessive, cold, and precise quality of Glass’ themes written especially for this ballet led Pederneiras to orchestrate solos with automaton-like movement repetitions in contrast with ensembles full of organic movements charged with Latin sensuousness inherent to the unique Uakti sound. The set by Fernando Velloso and costumes by Freusa Zechmeister gave the ballet its visual identity, exploring early minimalism. They filled the stage with green, blue, and yellow stripes whereas white dominated Paulo Pederneiras’ lighting.
Source : Grupo Corpo