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Cavaliers impurs

Following Consul and Meshie, an unclassifiable performative object that played with the audience's gaze, Latifa Laâbissi and Antonia Baehr have conceived this second duet as a series of heterogeneous sequences, woven together by the thread of impurity,  hybridization and collage. In Cavaliers impurs, two bodies of different shapes and sizes put images and references through the mill of  their physical and vocal intensity. Laâbissi and Baehr blend their respective vocabularies – the expressiveness of the face, the cross-dressing of genders and registers – and interweave their worlds in numbers that dynamize choreographic codes and blur the lines. House of  fiction, design object, ephemeral architecture, the giant cardboard box designed by scenographer Nadia Lauro serves simultaneously as a shelter, a kit accessory, a platform or a podium on which to assemble and  disassemble figures that are in turn vulnerable or combative, bearing witness to a culture in pieces.

Source: programme of the CND

Laâbissi, Latifa

Choreographic works, installations, lecture demonstrations, pluridisciplinary collaborations: mixing genres, reflecting upon and redefining formats, Latifa Laâbissi’s work seeks to bring onstage multiple offstage perspectives; an anthropological landscape in which stories, figures and voices are placed and highlighted. Dance “codes” are disturbed by recalcitrant bodies, alternative stories, montages of materials infiltrated by certain signs of the times.

Formation /deformation
After studying at the Cunningham Studio in New York, Latifa Laâbissi began working with specific themes, including the question of the body as a zone of multiple influences, bisected by subjective and heterogenously cultural strata. Going against the prevailing abstract aesthetic, she extrapolated a movement vocabulary built from the confusion of genres and social postures, from the beginnings of modernity: a disguising of the identifications revealing the violence of conflicts involving the body and returning a twisted, contorted image.
In 2001, she created Phasmes, a work haunted by the ghosts of Dore Hoyer, Valeska Gert and Mary Wigman. She came back to Valeska Gert in the form of a “massaged lecture”, Distraction, with the dance historian Isabelle Launay, then to Mary Wigman in a lengthened version of her Witch Dance, which she called Écran somnambule [Somnambulist screen].

Disfigure
Beginning with her earliest collaborations, Laâbissi’s use of the voice and of the face as a vehicle for minority status and accents became inseparable from her dance movement. Starting in 2000, she began this process on Morceau with Loïc Touzé, Jennifer Lacey and Yves-Noël Genod. Working with postures borrowed from the grotesque, she confirmed her strategy of sliding identities and deploying different registers of representation. Figure is the name for this montage – in which auto-fiction, derision, statements, contemporary materials and visions and ghosts of dance mix and interact. In 2002, I love like animals continued in the development of relationships between the voice and the body, seeking to further disturb our reading of choreographic representation.

Disrupt
Digging subterranean links between the history of performance and collective imagination, the figure is Laâbissi’s tool for exposing certain symptoms of colonial denial/repression, and for turning against itself the mechanisms of alienation it produces. Created in 2006, Self Portrait Camouflage is indeed a critical examination of the images of otherness – somewhere between showing the body, a burlesque show and the direct confrontation of political symbols. Histoire par celui qui la raconte (2008) extends her deconstruction of the narrative and her use of the grotesque in a wide spectrum of references. In her latest work, Loredreamsong (2010), she continues this exploration in the form of a duo in which fragments of speeches, subversive rumors, states of rage and irony crash into each other, derailing subjective, political and narrative reference points. It is the unabashed reappropriation of an ambiguous imagination, manipulated by two ghosts as if it were explosive material.

Displace
For Latifa Lâabissi the artistic action implies a displacement of traditional modes of production and perception: transmission, the sharing of knowledge, materials and the porosity of formats are inseparable from the creative process. In 2005, she led the Habiter project, which examines different, everyday spaces using video. The opening-out of her working practice into other fields of research brought her to begin working at different venues, in different contexts – universities, art schools and the French national choreographic centers. During her guest residency at the Musée de la danse [Dancing Museum] in March of 2010, she organised Grimace du réel [Grimace of the real] – a pluridisciplinary manifestation putting into perspective the historical, textual and cinematographical sources used in the creation of the work. Sources, materials – documentary films, fictions and ethnographical, sociological and philosophical works continue to feed into her work and into her modalities in intervention, dissemination and experimentation with artistic forms.

Gilles Amalvi (Traduction Sara Sugihara)

Baehr, Antonia

Next to choreographic elements, Antonia Baehr is interested in rules and the laws which a society (and in particular the space in a theatre) assigns to bodies, to make them recognizable and comprehensible. She is a performer, a filmmaker and a visual artist, and as a choreographer she researches the fiction of everyday-life performance and the fiction of theatre, working at the edges of that which defines us as human beings—placing us via a voluptuous see-saw in critical positions. She is interested in the relations between humans and animals but also in elements in representational space. In her work she interacts with, among others, Neo Hülcker, Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz, Andrea Neumann, Latifa Laâbissi, and with others who are interested in the changing of roles: from project to project, each artist is alternately the host or the guest. Lately she has been developping collaborative duets. Baehr is also the producer for the horse whisperer and dancer Werner Hirsch, the musician and choreographer Henri Fleur, the ex-husband of Ida Wilde and composer/performer Henry Wilde.

Source: programme of the CND

Centre national de la danse, Réalisation

Since 2001, the National Center for Dance (CND) has been making recordings of its shows and educational programming and has created resources from these filmed performances (interviews, danced conferences, meetings with artists, demonstrations, major lessons, symposia specialized, thematic arrangements, etc.).

Cavaliers impurs

Artistic direction / Conception : Antonia Baehr & Latifa Laâbissi

Interpretation : Antonia Baehr & Latifa Laâbissi

Set design : Conception et réalisation installation visuelle Nadia Lauro - Réalisation installation visuelle Marie Maresca, Charlotte Wallet

Original music : Carola Caggiano

Lights : Eduardo Abdala

Sound : Carola Caggiano

Other collaborations : Accompagnement vocal Dalila Khatir - Figures Antonia Baehr, Latifa Laâbissi & Nadia Lauro

Production / Coproduction of the choreographic work : Fanny Virelizier, Damien Krempf (Figure Project) & Alexandra Wellensiek (make up productions)

Production / Coproduction of the video work : Enregistré au CND le 14 novembre 2024

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