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Kyle Abraham – Dear Lord, Make Me Beautiful

December 3rd – 14th, 2024 Park Avenue Armory, New York
Duration: unknown

The Big Thing in NYC

© Giocarlo Valentine

MacArthur Fellow Kyle Abraham is one of the most sought after choreographers and dancers of our time, creating a unique and expressive style of dance that explores issues of identity, history, and geography. In addition to performing and developing new works for his company A.I.M by Kyle Abraham, the bold creator has been commissioned by a variety of dance companies including New York City Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Paul Taylor American Modern Dance, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, The Royal Ballet, and The National Ballet of Cuba. He has also choreographed for many of the leading dancers of our time, including Misty Copeland, Calvin Royal III, and Wendy Whelan. He unleashes his signature style—a unique blend of modern dance techniques ranging from ballet to hip hop—in the world premiere of a new evening-length work.

Featuring a large ensemble of dancers with whom he has collaborated from across the country, plus Abraham himself, this Armory commission includes an innovative visual design created by Cao Yuxi (JAMES) and an Armory-commissioned score composed and performed live by the critically acclaimed new music ensemble yMusic to explore the growing sensitivities of life and transition, and nature and humanity, in our chaotic world. The underlying choreography employs layers of counterpoint to find intimacy and evoke ideas of empathy and constant change, fueling an evocative new dance work that migrates through the fragility of time and an ever-changing ecology.

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Xie Xin / Imre & Marne van Opstal – Broken Bob

October 18th/25th, November 9th/16th/21st, December 22nd, 2024 Staatstheater Darmstadt, Darmstadt
70 minutes

A Double Bill Creation for Hessisches Staatsballett

© Andreas Etter

After the successful productions Timeless by Xie Xin and I’m afraid to forget your smile by Imre & Marne van Opstal, which was nominated for the DER FAUST 2023 theater prize, the Hessisches Staatsballett combines the dance positions of these currently groundbreaking choreographers for the first time in a double evening in Broken Bob. The marble is created in the earth like the ashes after the fire. In a long transformation, under heat and pressure, its fine lines paint themselves into the stone; tell of the past like the black from the ravages of the flames. Traces decorate and they stick. Hidden deep in the layers of being and buried in the overlay of inner impressions, a broken sense of beauty appears.

Powerful and sublime. Rice paper, gunpowder and six bodies are the ingredients of Xie Xin’s new creation Broken Sense of Beauty. In the piece, the Chinese choreographer deals with a personal tragedy. When dance comes into play, it’s about movement. About movements and their structure. Does this exist outside of the movement that produces it? When structure comes into play, it’s about systems. About systems and their meaning. Does this lie outside of the system that generates it? When meaning comes into play, it’s about people. About people and about Bob. In their new creation I am Bob, Imre & Marne van Opstal explore the effects of patterns in dance. In close connection with music and text, the Dutch siblings create a large choreographic network of identity.

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France DACH region

Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui – Ihsane

November 13th – 19th, 2024 Grand Théâtre de Genève, Geneva
January 18th – 19th, 2025 Staatenhaus, Cologne
January 24th, 2025 Festspielhaus St. Pölten, St. Pölten
March 30th – April 6th, 2025 Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris
Duration: 90 minutes

Part II of Cherkaoui’s Diptych for His Parents

© GREGORY BATARDON

In Arabic, the word Ihsane represents an ideal of goodness, kindness and benevolence. In Islam, it refers to a form of communion with the universe. With Ihsane, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui continues a diptych begun within his Eastman company with Vlaemsch (chez moi), in 2022. While Vlaemsch was dedicated to his mother and his Flemish roots, Ihsane explores his relationship with his father, who left Morocco for Flanders, emigrating but always retaining – despite leaving – an unconditional love for his home country. Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui was still a teenager when his father died. Thirty years later, he searched for him in vain in a Tangier cemetery too full of graves. He continues to search for him through this creation bringing together dancers from the Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève and Eastman. 

But in Belgium, Ihsane is also associated with a racist and homophobic crime that took place in Liège in 2012: a young homosexual man of 32, of Moroccan origin, beaten to death outside a nightclub. As someone who himself identifies as an artist, a queer and an Arab, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui identifies with and pays tribute to him through this production which revisits his family story. Ihsane is a journey towards the quest for inner peace, and the attempt to transcend conflict, abandonment and forgetting. Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui dances the questions that obsess him: what do we have left when our place slips away and fades? How can multiple identities coexist in the same body?

As ever, the choreographer has assembled a unique artistic team, reflecting the effervescence and artistic vitality of this region of the world to which Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui is linked through his ancestors. Tunisian musician and viola d’amore virtuoso, Jasser Haj Youssef, will compose the music and perform it onstage with Moroccan singer Mohammed el Arabi Serghini and Lebanese singer Fadia Tomb El-Hage. Stage design will be from visual artist Amine Amharech, who creates sensory and sensitive spaces into which Moroccan influences are often melded, while costumes are by fashion designer Amine Bendriouich, who elevates traditional forms of Berber clothing beyond norms and gender.

With Ihsane, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui watches the world change in a never-ending cycle of destruction and rebirth. He is wary of cultures when they imprison and separate individuals. He prefers geography in the making, ever-changing landscapes, and the shared space where we coexist. In this space, he reveals the invisible threads that connect us to each other.

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Mediterranea Benelux DACH region

Wim Vandekeybus – VOID

October 23rd – 31st, 2024 KVS, Brussels
November 8th – 9th, 2024 Pumpenhaus, Münster
December 18th, 2024 CCHA, Hasselt
January 16th, 2025 Teatro Bonci, Cesena
January 18th, 2025 Teatro Storchi, Modena
January 31st, 2025 Cultuurcentrum De Schakel, Waregem
Feburary 27th, 2025 Cultuurcentrum Brugge, Brugge
March 15th, 2025 Posthof, Linz
60 minutes

The Unstoppable Ultima Vez

© Danny Willems

In this new creation, Vandekeybus embraces the void – even more so – he seeks it out. He starts anew, goes back to square one, taking the simple emptiness as a starting point to arrive at a new form of awareness. He not only seeks to feel existence, life, in a different way, but also aims to add a new way of valuing the performance. By looking differently, within complete simplicity.

“Enlarging by emptying” sounds contradictory but works in a simple way: an empty room seems bigger than a full one. True essence demands throwing off all ballast. An emptiness filled with elusive dignity. Bodies attracting each other like minerals and magnets. Movement as expression of the deepest inner state… An emptiness that offers countless possibilities to be filled…

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@home

Christos Papadopoulos – Ties Unseen

September 26th – 28th, 2024 LIVE STREAMS

Part of NDT 1 Program “Architecture of the Invisible” with revisit of Jiří Kylián’s Vanishing Twin (2008) and Clowns by Hofesh Shechter (2016).

A Minimalist NDT

© Nederlands Dans Theater

Christos Papadopoulos’ new work explores our subtle, everyday social connections, revealing the beauty within the most profound connections that often go unnoticed. Drawing from the unadorned fabric of the human experience, the choreographer illustrates the simplicity of shared moments: the unspoken understanding between friends, silent nods of solidarity among strangers, and the quiet resilience threaded through collective struggles.

A new voice for NDT, the Greek-born choreographer favours a minimalist and precise language of movement. Through small gestures that belie an intense physicality, Papadopoulos has created an ode to the power of invisible forces and transports the audience to a mysterious space in which there is neither beginning nor end.

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Archive

Christos Papadopoulos – Ties Unseen

September 26th – October 2nd, 2024 Amare, The Hague
October 4th, 2024 Chassé Theater, Breda
October 8th – 10th, 2024 Internationaal Theater Amsterdam, Amsterdam

October 12th, 2024 Theater Rotterdam, Rotterdam
October 23rd – 26th, 2024 Théâtre de la Ville, Paris
November 6th – 9th, 2024 Megaron, Athens
November 28th – December 1st, 2024 Amare, The Hague
35 minutes

Part of NDT 1 double-bill or triple-bille program.

A Minimalist NDT

© Nederlands Dans Theater

Christos Papadopoulos’ new work explores our subtle, everyday social connections, revealing the beauty within the most profound connections that often go unnoticed. Drawing from the unadorned fabric of the human experience, the choreographer illustrates the simplicity of shared moments: the unspoken understanding between friends, silent nods of solidarity among strangers, and the quiet resilience threaded through collective struggles.

A new voice for NDT, the Greek-born choreographer favours a minimalist and precise language of movement. Through small gestures that belie an intense physicality, Papadopoulos has created an ode to the power of invisible forces and transports the audience to a mysterious space in which there is neither beginning nor end.

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Archive

François Chaignaud – Petites joueuses

November 4th – 16th, 2024 Musée du Louvre, Paris
Non-stop from 7:30pm to 11:30pm

An Immersive Journey to the Medieval Louvre

©2024 Musée du Louvre : Florence Brochoire

With Petites joueuses, the dancer and choreographer François Chaignaud takes us on an immersive and continuous journey through the Louvre Médiéval : mutant and resonating creatures take over its fortifications, and form a disturbing carnival of forms, songs and unreasonable, mischievous or untamed figures.

Little player : this pejorative term, synonym of cowardice and a lack of ambition, has been appropriated by choreographer François Chaignaud in order to subvert its meanings, like a manifesto : to assert, through singularity, insolence and the lightness of bodies, a different way of occupying space, while blurring the semantic field of greatness attached to the consecrated place of Art. Little players performing continuously in the ‘Grand Louvre’, inventing their own rules, thwarting codes, introducing trouble, play, equivocation – deflating the authoritative effects of this huge exhibition machine. Taking the Louvre by the back, this community of performers reveals the archaeological layers of the medieval Louvre; one by one, each visitor discovers its foundations, its moats, its hidden strata, gaining access to a living organism, exhaling, rustling, populated by serious or comical figures. Like a prologue to the exhibition Figure du Fou, which explores the subversive value of the insane in medieval society, Petites joueuses acts as a counterpoint, a singing nave – a hullabaloo of voices, sounds and attitudes, affirming the centrality of the margin.

Text written by Gilles Amalvi for the 2024 edition of the Festival d’Automne

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Archive

Myriam Gourfink – Rêche

September 25th – 28th, 2024 Panthéon, Paris
60 minutes

World Premiere in Panthéon

© Laurent Paillier

At first, the goal is to present a thick, dense, and fibrous substance by choreographing a clustering of bodies. The dancers, spread horizontally, glide on the floor and over each other. Then, to make visible the moment when, after being pressed against each other, they detach, much like their internal bodily masses gradually engage in opposite directions. They start to move apart, to differentiate, moving in opposite directions while still constantly linked. Their dance mostly unfolds on the ground. The group’s tightening and expansions allow its movement: each contraction followed by an expansion into a new space. Together, they shape pneumatic volumes, making them palpable. They unfold with determination and gentleness through the notions of direct space (moving from one point to another by the shortest path), sustained time, and lightness of weight.

Finally, the group develops a more vaporous material: the treatment of space, which was direct in the previous phase, becomes indirect (movement from one point to another is curved and sinuous). A floating quality, conducive to resonance, sets in. The seven dancers are always in contact; the group moves and changes shape, but now, it remains expansive, and the dancers invest both horizontal and vertical space. Together, they float, they wander through the meanders of a labyrinth (each one’s inner bodily space and the group’s space). Inhabited by the light and elastic roundness of sacro-cranial vibrations, their volume encompasses the labyrinth; they move through its passages, savoring the thickness of each moment, the eternity of dilated time.

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Archive

Georgina Philp – Pump into the Future Ball

August 30th – 31st, 2024 Dampfgebläsehaus an der Jahrhunderthalle, Bochum
4h with intermissions

An Homage to the Ballroom Scene

The Revolution of Color Ball, Paris, Georgina Philp © Carolin Windel

Georgina Philp, known in the ballroom world as Legendary Trailblazer Mother Leo St. Laurent, invites you to the Jahrhunderthalle Bochum for an unforgettable evening full of glitz and glamour. At the Pump Into The Future Ball, the Ruhrtriennale will celebrate ballroom and its outstanding performers on the runway. A range of houses and participants will show off their talents in front of an international jury and compete with each other in classical ballroom categories to take home one of the coveted trophies. 

Ballroom culture originated in the USA, where it was invented in New York in the 60s/70s by Black and Latinx trans women. Ballroom was introduced to Germany by Mother Leo with a first ball at the Berlin Voguing Out Festival in 2012. That same year she also founded the first local ballroom house, which was known at the time as the House of Melody

To coincide with the Pump Into The Future Ball, Georgina Philp will also meet international icons of the ballroom scene for a panel talk about ballroom. In addition to the panel talk, there will also be workshops on voguing and runway given by the ballroom community.