Annabel van Baren

Research and Projects

Posts Tagged ‘solo’

The Map of Thoughts – Maria Baroncea

Posted by bellanna on May 4, 2008

Maria Baroncea

Photo: Anna van Kooij

The Map of Thoughts, a solo by Romanian choreographer Maria Baroncea, is like a brain scan from the inside. Maria draws a connection between movements within the brain and the live sounds these movements cause. The solo departs from everyday, sometimes subconscious, movements that are constantly repeated and that can exhaust you. After the performance, a debate was organised with Maria, Matthias Sperling and Henrietta Hale. Unfortunately, the interpersonal, journalistic, emphatic, academic, insightful, and humorous skills of the moderator/interviewer lacked so tremendously, that neither of the three choreographers had any freedom or space to actually say anything vaguely interesting about their creations. The ‘journalist’ appeared on stage with a lengthy set of cards with questions. Thus, predefined questions which she fired off systematically, regardless of which remarks and comments had been sneaked in by eiether three choreographers. I would especially have liked to hear Maria’s decisions and thoughts on her performance – some scenes seemed so cryptic, introvert, and multi-layered that I failed to understand what she was communicating. That is precisely the beauty of The Map of Thoughts: a search for Maria’s persona at that particular time and in that particular space.

Posted in SpringDance 2008 | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Riff – Matthias Sperling

Posted by bellanna on May 3, 2008

Matthias Sperling

Photo: Anna van Kooij

Matthias Sperling’s solo Riff explores the sampling of choreographies, setting himself the task of molding an original work out of material by three other choreographers: William Forsythe, Shobana Jeyasingh and Laila Diallo. With an original soundscore by sampling artist Scanner, Riff is a physically articulate rendering of the question of what makes a choreographic work original. The result is a subtle dialogue between the choreographic voices of the samples and Matthias’ own individual signature. Matthias displayed a highly advanced ability to blend his movements and phrases with those of others at lightning speed. A bare stage featuring only a LCD-banner informed the audience of which choreographer’s work he drew upon in that moment. Soon, the individual names became jumbled and confused: William Forsythe became WiLliAM fORsytHE, which was soon to be amalgamated into a assemblage of others – jeSa shO diAL f o R je SA Sho. I was struck by Matthias’ costume: simple grey t-shirt with black jeans, bare feet. It seemed as though he had just rushed in from another location (bar, office, home), took off his shoes, and started to dance. A staggering feat of bodily control, advanced dance technique, and most of all a through knowledge of all three choreographers’ particular dance language makes Riff a pleasure and a delight.

Posted in SpringDance 2008 | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
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