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No reality now, la danse et son double
Vincent Dupont , Charles Ayats
ART.13 [Reportage]
Phia Ménard
ART.13
Phia Ménard
Contes Immoraux Partie 1 : Maison Mère
Phia Ménard
Voice Noise
Jan Martens
any attempt will end in crushed bodies and shattered bones
Jan Martens
Elisabeth gets her way
Jan Martens
The dog days are over
Jan Martens
Man Made
Jan Martens
Period piece
Jan Martens
Hu(r)mano
Marco Da Silva Ferreira
BROTHER
Marco Da Silva Ferreira
førm Inførms
Marco Da Silva Ferreira
Fantasie minor
Marco Da Silva Ferreira
CARCASS
Marco Da Silva Ferreira
Folia
Lia Rodrigues
Ma
Lia Rodrigues
Contre ceux qui ont le goût difficile
Lia Rodrigues
Incarnat
Lia Rodrigues
Pororoca
Lia Rodrigues
Cellule
Nach
Nulle part est un endroit
Nach
Elles disent
Nach
Tumulus
François Chaignaud , Geoffroy Jourdain
Radio Vinci Park Reloaded
François Chaignaud
Symphonia harmoniæ cælestium revelationum (version 11/69)
François Chaignaud
Думи мої – Dumy Moyi
François Chaignaud
Hippopotomonstro – sesquippedaliophobie*
Fabien Plasson
Fiasco
Fabien Plasson , Juliette Belanger
Toi moi, Tituba…
Dorothée Munyaneza
The dog days are over
In THE DOG DAYS ARE OVER, the dancer is defined as a pure performer, striving after perfection. Subjected to a complex, mathematical, vigorous and exhausting choreography executed in forced uniformity, the eight dancers ultimately slip up. And then their masks fall.
The American photographer Philippe Halsman once said: “When you ask a person to jump, his attention is mostly directed toward the act of jumping and the mask falls so that the real person appears.” Jan Martens takes this stand as a starting point for THE DOG DAYS ARE OVER and exposes through the jump the person behind the dancer. Thanks to its radical choreographic form, THE DOG DAYS ARE OVER reveals the audience’s perception of dancers, choreographers, spectators and the current cultural policy. Where does the thin line between art and entertainment lie? Who are we as an audience when we contemplate the suffering of dancers from the theatre like a bullfight in an arena? What do we want to get as audience? Do we want to experience an intensity that we do not feel in our everyday life? Do we want to experience beauty that is perhaps not visible in our everyday life? Is contemporary dance striptease for the elite? THE DOG DAYS ARE OVER makes the viewer shift in his position: from being merely subjected to the experience to actively reflecting on it.