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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
Voice Noise
In this breakthrough piece for Jan Martens, VOICE NOISE brings together six dancers to shape a soundscape comprising some of the great female performers and composers of our time. In his own pop-inspired and precise way, the choreographer questions a very contemporary story, and in doing so raises the question of how some of these voices were silenced.
“Silence is the woman’s cosmos”. In her essay, The Gender of Sound (1992), the author Anne Carson uses this affirmation by Sophocles as one of its main axes. She seeks to understand how, “by ideologically associating the sound of women with monstrosity, disorder and death”, patriarchal culture has reduced women to silence. Jan Martens, leading choreographer on the new Flemish scene, tackles this state of affairs, inviting to the stage the voices of unknown or forgotten innovative women from the last one hundred years of music history. Put into movement by six performers, the dance thus becomes the vehicle for these life stories, a human voice at the crossroads between a cry, whisper, song and protest. In VOICE NOISE, Jan Martens turns away from large ensembles, and gets back to basics, namely that of movement in sharing. Together with Sue-Yeon Youn, Elisha Mercelina and Mamadou Wagué, he draws upon lifelong accomplices Steven Michel, Courtney May Robertson and Loeka Willems in this restorative odyssey.