Forgotten Space
2013
Choreographer(s) : Ball, Wren (United Kingdom) Harrop, Angharad (United Kingdom)
Present in collection(s): Centre de Vidéo Danse de Bourgogne
Video producer : Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Forgotten Space
2013
Choreographer(s) : Ball, Wren (United Kingdom) Harrop, Angharad (United Kingdom)
Present in collection(s): Centre de Vidéo Danse de Bourgogne
Video producer : Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Forgotten Space
Réalisation, chorégraphie & interprétation : Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Direction, choreography & performance: Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Ball, Wren
"Im an explorer of movement, taking in inspiration from the environment around me. In my short films I use Freerunning Breaking and Contact Improvisation as tools for my investigation. I have been performing professionally for the last 6 years and look forward to future collaborations.Im an explorer of movement, taking in inspiration from the environment around me. In my short films I use Freerunning Breaking and Contact Improvisation as tools for my investigation."
Wren Ball
Harrop, Angharad
Forgotten Space
Choreography : Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Interpretation : Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Video conception : Réalisation Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop
Le duo en danse
In memory of Wilfride Piollet
Dance is a shared art form. Most often we dance with someone, for someone, or with something, as part of a couple or a group. The celebrated pas de deux of classical ballet is emblematic of the traditional duo, but diverse other forms of partnership exist, including those between an object and a dancer (from Charlie Chaplin's cane to Jan Fabre's dance with olive oil), and the landscape in a work of site-specific performance, among others. As for screendance, it is by nature an intimate partnership betweeen image making and dance. This selection proposes to examine the role of the "duo" in contemporary screendance through a choice of international short films.
Forgotten Space (United-Kingdom, 2013) - direction & choreography: Wren Ball & Angharad Harrop. A film that demonstrates a partnership between two dancers, but also between the landscape and architecture, exploring the notion of absence/presence. --> film
Staff (Spain, 2013) - direction: Damian Munoz, Virginia Garcia & Pol Turrents / choreography: Damian Munoz & Virginia Garcia. The directors of this film write: "the need to be recognized for our acts makes us rely on someone as a witness. The witness becomes our weakness, from which comes the strength to defend and protect it... it is impossible to live without knowing others because it is impossible to live without knowing that we are essential to someone". --> film
Globe Trot (USA, 2013) - direction: Mitchell Rose / choreography: Bebe Miller. 54 international screendance artists contributed two seconds of dance, choreographed by Bebe Miller and performed by non-dancers, to this collective film, a dance duo with the world. --> film
Showtime at Ouagadougou (France, 2009) - direction & choreography by company Phillipe Ménard. Philippe Ménard and partner Burkinabe dancer Boukson Sere investigate a contruction site in Ouagadougou, Burkina Fasso and invite us to question the notion of "showtime". The film investigates the shiny veneer that hides another reality, that of a society attempting to construt itself and exist on the "world stage" --> film
Snöplog (United-Kingdom, 2013) - direction: Chien-Ming & Katy Pendlebury. In this film, two hands work together. The director's choice to feature one hand from each performer, instead of both, is significant in the resulting vulnerability that makes their collaboration essential, each an equal partner in this tabletop duo for hands that navigates and constructs shifting forms. --> film
Sequential (USA, 2013) - direction: Amanda Kapp / choreography & dance: Cynthia Ahlers & Olivia Beckley. Emphasizing the passage of time and the changing of the seasons, this film features two dancers, one visibly older than the other, to explore questions of lineage, which, from a choreographic point of view, alternates movement motifs executed in sequence, simultaneously, alone, and as a duo. --> film
To My Dear Cinematographer (USA, 2012) - direction: Zaoli Zhong. In Screendance, the relationship between dance on screen and that of the camera is essential. This film creates a tangible link to their pas de deux via a long panel of cloth that connects camera person and dancer in their ongoing interaction. --> film
Espaços Anônimos (Brazil, 2012) - direction: Tatiana Guimaraes. Inspired by Marc Augé's concept of the "non-place", this film establishes a series of partnerships in collaboration with two pairs of dancers moving in a cycle of foreground/background, as well as with colors, the ground, etc. --> film
Dance and music
The relationship between music and choreographic works varies throught dance history.
Why do I dance ?
Käfig, portrait of a company
Artistic Collaborations
Panorama of different artistic collaborations, from « couples » of choreographers to creations involving musicians or plasticians
Mexican Video Dance
Outdoor dances
Stage theater and studio are not the only places of work or performance of a choreographic piece. Sometimes dancers and choreographers dance outside.
The contemporary Belgian dance
This Parcours presents different Belgian choreographers who have marked history and participated in the creation of a "Belgian" style.
Scenic space
A dance performance takes place in a defined spatial area ... or not. This course helps to understand the occupation of the stage space in dance.