Boris Charmatz / Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
Partita 2 – Sei solo
Partita 2 – Sei solo
Choreography, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker
Dance, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Boris Charmatz
Music, Partita No. 2, Johann Sebastian Bach
Violin, Amandine Beyer
Creation with Amandine Beyer, George Alexander Van Dam
Scenography, Michel François
Costumes, Anne-Catherine Kunz
Artistic Assistant and Direction for the rehearsals, Femke Gyselinck
Production Rosas // Coproduction La Monnaie / De Munt (Bruxelles) ; Festival d’Avignon ; Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg ; Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Bruxelles) ; ImPulsTanz (Vienne) ; La Bâtie – Festival de Genève ; Berliner Festspiele ; Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian (Lisbonne) ; Künstlerhaus Mousonturm (Munich) ; Théâtre de la Ville-Paris ; Festival d’Automne à Paris // Corealisation Théâtre de la Ville-Paris ; Festival d’Automne à Paris // With the support of Musée de la danse – Centre chorégraphique national de
Rennes et de Bretagne // With the support of Adami // Premiered the 3 of May 2013 at Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Bruxelles)
Partnership with France Inter
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s work has centered on the connections between dance and music for the past thirty years. For this piece, she joined with Boris Charmatz to create
a choreography based on Bach’s Partita nb 2. The piece interrogates their current position as dancers as they explore the expressive strata, rigorous structure and deep melancholy
of Bach’s masterpiece
See also
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Radouan Mriziga / Rosas, A7LA5 Il Cimento dell’Armonia e dell’Inventione
In collaboration with the choreographer and dancer Radouan Mriziga, the challenge taken up by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker is to make Vivaldi's Four Seasons heard, using the tools of dance to hone the way we listen to this baroque masterpiece. Under the auspices of abstraction, the resulting alliance reconnects with the imaginary ecological world that is conjured up by this famous concerto.
Rabih Mroué, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker A little bit of the moon
As part of a special invitation by the Festival d'Automne, choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and director Rabih Mroué shared, over the course of ten months, their thoughts, concerns, doubts, and questions regarding politics, art and life. After numerous exchanges by videoconference, the two artists now come together on the site of the former industrial complex, the new home of the Fiminco Foundation. Together, for the duration of a performance, they will be drawing up the plans for a new world for all.
In the same place
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Radouan Mriziga / Rosas, A7LA5 Il Cimento dell’Armonia e dell’Inventione
In collaboration with the choreographer and dancer Radouan Mriziga, the challenge taken up by Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker is to make Vivaldi's Four Seasons heard, using the tools of dance to hone the way we listen to this baroque masterpiece. Under the auspices of abstraction, the resulting alliance reconnects with the imaginary ecological world that is conjured up by this famous concerto.
Rabih Mroué Who’s Afraid of Representation?
We find ourselves in the company of major figures of European Body Art (Joseph Beuys, Orlan, Marina Abramović, to name a few) via their accounts of exhibitions and public scarifications dating back to the 1970s. In parallel with this runs the true story of a killing spree carried out by a Lebanese office at his workplace, and the fluctuating motivations for his acts.
Lola Arias Los días afuera
At the crossroads between musical and documentary, Lola Arias brings us a choral composition in which six female former inmates talk about their lives during and after incarceration. Their six intertwining destinies raise questions about the various forms of violence present in contemporary society, whilst exploring the margins of fiction and reality at the same time.
Robert Wilson PESSOA – Since I've been me
The hero of this new work by Robert Wilson is Fernando Pessoa. And a paradoxical hero at that. The Portuguese poet spent his life 'multiplying himself', inventing heteronyms, or fictitious authors, to whom he attributed works he himself wrote. He even went as far as to invent relationships, either amicable ones or from master to disciple, between his different avatars.
Jan Martens 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.