WilliamForsythe – A Quiet Evening of Dance [TEASER] - YouTube. 0:00 / 1:06.
Théâtre et Danse / Danse De William Forsythe. Notre avis William Forsythe est un immense chorégraphe, de ceux qui, au fil des ans, ont imposé leur style et leur approche en gros déconstruire les codes classiques dans le vaste monde de la danse contemporaine. Que sa dernière création, en deux actes et confrontant l'art du ballet à l'énergie des danses urbaines, passe par la MC2 est un véritable événement en soi. On vous en reparlera plus longuement en temps voulu. MC2 4 rue Paul Claudel 38000 Grenoble 14 décembre et 15 décembre à 20hde 5€ à 32€
AQuiet Evening of Dance donne à voir la rigueur incomparable de l’œuvre de l’un des plus grands chorégraphes de sa génération tout en parvenant à créer une conversation inédite
CultureThis was published 3 years agoThe acclaimed choreographer explores the interplay of music and movement in this year's Melbourne is only after my interview with Bill Forsythe, as I walk back from Sadler's Wells Theatre in London to catch the Tube home, that I realise I have spent at least a quarter of my allotted time with the world's leading ballet choreographer talking about animals. About the bears he avoids by dabbing on cologne before he goes hiking in the woods, about stags that can put a hoof through your skull, about the beavers, the herons, hares the size of dogs that live around his home in the mountains of Vermont. About the barn owl that was waiting on the gate when he and his wife were coming home from dinner, about the coyotes! "When they do a kill and they are all yowling away at night, it's an amazing sound, their singing," he says. Forsythe is very attuned to sound. He says you can learn a good deal about timing – about time, in fact – listening to birdcalls. The roll of the seasons teaches other lessons. "The number of cycles of flowers that come through from the spring to the fall in Vermont is extraordinary and magnificent. It's a composition, really."Choreographer William Forsythe ''You see how music interacts with motion.''CreditDominik MentzosWilliam Forsythe – as he seems to be known by absolutely nobody, but is the name under which he became famous – is a spring-heeled 68. He talks about these wild things in a soft rush of words. Minutes before, he spoke with the same fervour about counterpoint – of which more later – and the long and surprising history of ballet. Do I know a book called Apollo's Angels, by the dance historian Jennifer Homans? Well, it's great, especially the part about the rapid evolution of classical ballet in the 17th century. "You feel like you're reading about your family," he says. "You really do. It's just fantastic."Bill Forsythe's own history is quite fantastic, in fact. He started dancing in clubs, only beginning to study dance formally at 17; he went to the Joffrey Ballet in his native New York and then to Stuttgart. He was only 35 when he took the helm at the Frankfurt Ballet and made innovative, spectacular works such as Artefact and Impressing the Czar on the troupe of exceptionally precise, valiant dancers that gathered around Johnson and Christopher Roman in Catalogue, part of William Forsythe's A Quiet Evening of Bill CooperCritics spoke of William Forsythe as the new George Balanchine, although he thought his work was very different from "Balanchine's way of organising". Anyway, he added, "you can't imitate Balanchine". Meanwhile, his work surged towards the further shores of contemporary practice. In 2004, he left Frankfurt Ballet to form the leaner, boundary-busting Forsythe crunch came 10 years later. In 2015, Forsythe disbanded the company that bore his name, saying they were all burned out. After all those decades in Germany, he went back to the US. Just as remarkably, he went back to making work that was unequivocally ballet, including having dancers en pointe."I don't feel there is any break in the work I have made," he told the Financial Times earlier this year. "But I am back on board with ballet and how I can help valorise this deep, deep knowledge that ballet people have. It's a big historical thing. I am very interested in what will keep it relevant."The break with his European career is not quite as cataclysmic as it sounds. The artistic partnerships endure; some of the dancers presenting A Quiet Night of Dance, the program that has brought him to Sadler's Wells, have worked with him for 25 years. And he continues to work all over the world. When this run finishes he is off to Antwerp, then to Boston, then to Moscow. And although he lived in Germany, he and his wife Dana Caspersen – once a dancer in his company, now an expert on conflict resolution – have been retreating to Vermont for years. Life goes on much as normal, in fact. "Someone asked 'where do you live most?'," he says. "And I said 'Seat 21 B on Lufthansa'."Jill Johnson and Christopher Roman work from the waist up, touching parts of their bodies that are usually forgotten in Bill CooperMeanwhile, A Quiet Night of Dance moves to Melbourne next week as part of this year's Melbourne Festival. Divided into two very distinct halves, it is indeed quiet some of the dance episodes in the first half, which consists of three prelude pieces culminating in a reworking of the 1996 work Duo, are silent apart from the dancers' set to the muted tweeting of birds, shows a pair of dancers Parvaneh Scharafali and Ander Zabala in an escalating exchange of movements. In Catalogue, a second pair Jill Johnson and Christopher Roman work almost entirely from the waist up as they touch parts of their bodies that are usually forgotten – their ears, for example – without accompaniment. Then comes Epilogue, in which five dancers overturn these individuated experiments to shadow, engage or simply watch each other to the well-spaced piano figures of Morton Feldman and more sounds of Yasit and Parvaneh Scharafali in Seventeen Twenty Bill CooperThis is very much a cerebral investigation, but there is humour, too it is surprising how funny the familiar business of ballet can be. And there is the remarkable hip-hop dancer Rauf "Rubberlegz" Yasit, who scampers on to the stage apparently trying to untangle himself from a skein of his own second half of the program, called Seventeen/Twenty One is a series of short but ravishing duets and trios set to a blast of horn and harpsichord from 18th-century French harpsichord composer Jean-Philippe Rameau, which rises like a shimmering efflorescence of the moves we have seen Roman and Rauf Yasit in A Quiet Evening of Bill CooperI want you to get it. I want you to go I love this'.William ForsytheForsythe's intentions here are gently didactic. He sees the pairs and groups in the first half as ballet masters; in the second, we see what comes of their work. "So after all that demonstration – this prelude where we are preparing you to watch, showing you how to watch – you've been gussied up, a wig has been placed on your head and powder dusted on your face and you're sent off to the ballet, where we put these things in the context of music and watch how they come into another kind of focus the same material, but radically recontextualised," he says."And suddenly you're going 'oh, I get it!'. And I want you to get it. I want you to go 'I love this' but also to know why you love it. Because you see how music interacts with motion, how it underlines things and changes the quality of action of what you see."Rauf Yasit brings a hip-hop vibe to A Quiet Evening of Bill CooperPart of this derives from his engagement with Homans, who has inspired Forsythe to strip back centuries of wallpaper from ballet's classical edifice, looking for origins and identifying passing fashions. In the time of ballet patron Louis XIV, dance was often unaccompanied. Or it might be mapped on to different scores, depending on the whim of the orchestra or dancers, something Forsythe sometimes does himself."There was a lot of improvisation, things weren't glued down," he says. "There was music or there wasn't music ballet was drifting away from music and having its own independent life, you know. So there were all these different periods where it was being pulled one way or the other and we sort of give you all of those in one go."As far as he is concerned, ballet still isn't glued down. The great 19th-century works were contemporary in their own time. "We're talking about social products. Ballet is a language like any other, spoken as it needs to be spoken in any given epoch."To that end, Forsythe has worked consistently with hip-hop dancers; they may not have the same skills as ballet dancers, but they bring others with them."Rauf Yasit is a very skilled composer of abstract breakdance," he says. "We spent a couple of months teaching him all the fundamentals of Catalogue but also of ballet. He's actually been able to acquire quite a bit."Both these varieties of dance, he says, are based on elements that can be recombined and reconfigured. "In the particular kind of work that Rauf does, there is a great deal of complicated enfolding or weaving – threading, it's called. And it turns out that we have also threading in Duo."Counterpoint – a dialogue between choreography and music, or between performers, that maintains the individuality of each element – is central to hip-hop; it is also Forsythe's analytical focus. "You start to see how these things overlap, that one practice can lead easily towards another. They are definitely allies."Younger dancers have a particular musical sensibility, he says, having grown up to a constant soundtrack. "Everyone has a device, everyone has earphones or a headset, so certainly that generation is submerged in music," he says. "That means musical sophistication is more widely spread."Ballet students used to be geared to the piano music they heard all day in the rehearsal room and the great ballet scores."This generation, someone living in Budapest hears the same music as someone living in LA in that age group. It means that people are sharing their sensibilities, which is a very lovely thing right now, and very nice for the choreographers."Forsythe's work has always been resolutely abstract. Talking about dance, he speaks of choreography as "organisation" and dancers as "a medium to work with"; the works themselves are never built around stories or themes, because the striving of mind and body is theme enough."Human beings love to narrate," he says. "I'm not good at explicit narrative … I don't feel any desire to tell a story that could be better written in a book."He has always read a lot of literary fiction, he says. Stories belong elsewhere in his choreography is a narrative in itself movement is played out over a given time. He illustrates this idea by knotting his hands and pulling up his fingers very rapidly in turn; it took him 15 years to master this movement, he says with a grin, but you couldn't watch it for 15 minutes without falling asleep."Why? Because no more information is coming out. It doesn't matter how much effort I've made. But if I go like this" – he sticks out one finger mid-twiddle and holds it aloft – "you snap to attention. Your brain goes 'Oh … anomaly or trend?' That is the beginning of narrative."And thus begins my own education. Forsythe is convinced we can all "get it", that we can learn to see the patterns and disruptions in dance in the same way we can hear key changes in a song. "Everyone is perfectly capable of understanding a narrative in a piece of music – oh yeah, it starts here and changes there, you can get that – and ballet has the exact same properties," he says. "It's just that people listen to music more than they watch ballet. You just need to practise."Not that most people watching A Quiet Night of Dance would realise they were being taught anything; by the end of it, everyone around me was grinning with joy. Besides, it's about then that we start talking about voles and moles, beavers and bears, getting lost in the hills of Vermont. Forsythe glows with renewed interest here we are, bounding into new Quiet Evening of Dance is at the State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne, October 17-20, as part of Melbourne Festival. The Age is a festival media Viewed in CultureLoading HomeAgenda A Quiet Evening of Dance Théâtre & Danse; A Quiet Evening of Dance. déc 22, 2020. William Forsythe. Dans A Quiet Evening of Dance, William Forsythe réalise une brillantissime traversée de l’histoire de la danse académique, en remontant jusqu’à son origine : le ballet de cour sous le règne de Louis XIV. En première partie, le chorégraphe
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AQuiet Evening of Dance : Prologue (2018) Catalogue (Seconde Édition 2016–2018) Épilogue (2018) Dialogue (DUO2015–2018) Seventeen/Twenty One (2018) Chorégraphie William Forsythe Musique Morton Feldman, Jean-Philippe Rameau
Sortir Publié le 01/07/19 mis à jour le 07/12/20 Partager Photo Bill Cooper Le maître américain retrouve des complices de Francfort. Et repousse encore un peu plus les codes du classique, avec la fraîcheur des premiers jours. Une douce soirée de danse… » En baptisant ainsi la première pièce créée avec ses complices d’autrefois depuis l’arrêt de sa célèbre compagnie de Francfort, en 2015, le facétieux William Forsythe fait une belle promesse à son public. Et la tient. Car ce programme divisé en deux actes passe comme un charme. Tout commence par un gazouillis d’oiseaux. Soudain une femme et un homme entrent et furètent. Vêtus de noir, avec des gants leur enrobant les bras jusqu’aux épaules, ils sont assortis mais chacun est à son affaire. Les mains dessinent l’espace et mènent la danse. Ce Prologue, un nouvel opus, annonce le Catalogue suivant, ancienne pièce accomplie avec aisance par deux autres piliers de la Forsythe Company, Jill Johnson et Christopher Roman. Un jeu de mains là encore, virtuose, où chacun balise son propre corps — tête, épaules, buste, ventre… — à l’infini. Puis ils virevoltent, posent leurs bras en couronne, redressent le buste autant de traces des codes du classique dont Forsythe a poussé le langage à l’extrême. Avant de retomber dans une grammaire plus prosaïque fesses bombées vers l’arrière qui fait rire la salle. Johnson et Roman s’écoutent, se devinent, ne démontrent rien. Ils sont libres et presque enfantins. Dans l’Epilogue, nouvelle pièce créée sur les notes de piano de Morton Feldman, Forsythe fait entrer un intrus », le breakdancer Rauf Yasit alias Rubberlegz jambes élastiques » dont les figures serpentines ne déparent en rien l’équilibre du groupe. Le maître américain semble ici aborder le XXIe avec une fraîcheur renouvelée. Dans Dialogue, reprise du Duo2015 offert au spectacle d’adieu de l’étoile Sylvie ­Guillem, les deux interprètes d’origine, Brigel Gjoka et Riley Watts, dansent eux aussi en correspondance. Cha­cun repren­d ou décortique le geste de l’autre, l’attend au tournant. Place, pour la fin, à une musique ­explosive une ritournelle baroque et dansante en diable, extraite d’Hippolyte et Aricie, de Jean-Philippe Rameau. Les sept danseurs en relèvent le défi tous ensemble. Ils clignent de l’œil ­plutôt du pied pointé ! à la belle danse » de cour du roi Louis XIV. On les retrouve alors avec la même écoute, la même gestuelle précise et géométrique. La musique leur va si bien elle se cale sur leur danse et non l’inverse. Ils sont davantage exaltés encore. ­Réjouissant. 1h20 Du 2 au 5 juillet, Montpellier danse 34, tél. 08 00 60 07 40 ; du 4 au 10 novembre, Festival d’automne, à Paris, tél. 01 53 45 17 17 ballet William Forsythe Partager Contribuer Sur le même thème Postez votre avis Pour soutenir le travail de toute une rédaction, abonnez-vous Pourquoi voyez-vous ce message ? Vous avez choisi de ne pas accepter le dépôt de "cookies" sur votre navigateur, qui permettent notamment d'afficher de la publicité personnalisée. Nous respectons votre choix, et nous y veillerons. Chaque jour, la rédaction et l'ensemble des métiers de Télérama se mobilisent pour vous proposer sur notre site une offre critique complète, un suivi de l'actualité culturelle, des enquêtes, des entretiens, des reportages, des vidéos, des services, des évènements... Qualité, fiabilité et indépendance en sont les maîtres mots. Pour ce faire, le soutien et la fidélité de nos abonnés est essentiel. Nous vous invitons à rejoindre à votre tour cette communauté en vous abonnant à Télérama. Merci, et à bientôt. S’abonner
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En quatre courtes pièces, le chorégraphe William Forsythe éclaire les liens entre le baroque, le ballet classique, le hip-hop et la danse contemporaine. Une tranquille soirée de danse » un titre bien modeste pour l’un des plus grands chorégraphes actuels qui, depuis les années quatre-vingt, ne cesse de bouleverser les codes du classique. L’ancien maître du Ballet de Francfort, revisite dans ce spectacle deux perles de son répertoire, DUO2015 et Catalogue, auxquelles il ajoute deux nouvelles pièces. Conjuguant musiques de Bach, de Rameau ou de Morton Feldman et silences éloquents, William Forsythe puise dans le XVIIIe siècle qu’il voit comme le siècle de l’idéal néoplatonicien et des excès du baroque », tout en enlevant le superflu. Compagnons de longue date ou nouveaux venus issus du breakdance comme Rauf Yasit alias RubberLegz » jambes de caoutchouc », ses interprètes portent avec virtuosité le travail aussi précis qu’épuré du maître américain. William Forsythe A Quiet Evening of Dance, pièce pour 7 danseurs Créé le 4 octobre 2018 au Sadler’s Wells Theatre London Programmation Opéra de Rouen Normandie, en partenariat avec le Rive Gauche. Coproduction Sadler’s Wells Theatre London, Montpellier Danse, Les Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg, The Shed New York, Onassis Cultural Center Athènes, deSingel Anvers, Théâtre du Châtelet, Théâtre de la Ville-Paris, Festival d’Automne à Paris La pièce a été récompensée par le Prix FEDORA-VAN CLEEF & ARPELS pour le Ballet en 2018. Durée1h45, entracte inclusRouen, Théâtre des ArtsVendredi 10 décembre 2021, 20hSamedi 11 décembre 2021, 18hTarif CDe 10 à 32€DistributionFormule famille Samedi 11 déc. – 18h Chorégraphie William Forsythe Co-créateurs Brigel Gjoka, Jill Johnson, Christopher Roman, Parvaneh Scharafali, Riley Watts, Rauf RubberLegz » Yasit, Ander Zabala Musique Morton Feldman, Jean-Philippe Rameau, Johann Sebastian Bach Costumes Dorothée Merg, William Forsythe Lumières Tanja Rühl, William Forsythe Son Niels Lanz Distribution Roderick George, Brigel Gjoka, Jill Johnson, Brit Rodemund, Riley Watts, Rauf RubberLegz » Yasit, Ander Zabala PhotoWilliam Forsythe_A Quiet Evening of Dance_SWT, Seventeen _Twenty One Dancers; Brigel Gjoka, Jill Johnson, Christopher Roman, Parvaneh Scharafali, Riley Watts, Rauf Yasit, Ander Zabala Gomez
AQuiet Evening of Dance signe le grand retour de William Forsythe. Avec une vitalité extraordinaire, William Forsythe n’a jamais cessé́ d’étendre le champ de la danse et de déconstruire les codes classiques pour les réinventer au présent. Pour A Quiet Evening of Dance, il revient aux sources mêmes du ballet, le baroque et la
As summer draws to a close, we find ourselves putting away our beach reads and blockbuster movies, craving denser, meatier entertainment. If you're unsure where to go, we recommend heading to The Shed, where a stellar lineup of visual arts, dance, music and more from top artists around the world is planned for the next few months. Our guide to the Fall program below. "Wheatfield –A Confrontation" by Agnes Denes Agnes Denes "Absolutes and Intermediates" Oct 9 - Jan 19 This comprehensive exhibit includes 150 works from the groundbreaking artist's 50-year career, including photography from her iconic "Wheatfield – A Confrontation" installation, when she farmed two acres of wheat in the then-empty landfill of Battery Park City in 1982. William Forsythe, "A Quiet Evening of Dance" William Forsythe, "A Quiet Evening of Dance" Oct 11 - 25 Choreographer William Forsythe will present new and existing pieces, which will be performed by seven of his closest collaborators. The dancer's breath is the primary music to accompany the dancing, which draws from the styles of classical ballet. "Requiem" at The Shed "Requiem" at The Shed Nov 19 - 24 See Verdi's masterpiece, "Messa da Requiem," performed two different ways. Conductor Teodor Currentzis will lead a live performance of the piece by a 105-seat orchestra and 80-member chorus. While a film set to the music by the late filmmaker Jonas Mekas will be screened in the Level 4 gallery. The Related Life is written and produced by Related Luxury Rentals. Be sure to follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for the latest events, news and announcements in your area, and tag us for a chance to be featured therelatedlife and therelatedlife.
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a quiet evening of dance william forsythe