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Enfant

Created for the Cour d'honneur du Palais des Papes, Enfant is a work of choreography for nine dancers of adult size and twenty-six child dancers. Reusing the machines from Régi (2005) and working with various choreographic materials from the previous piece, Levée des conflits (2009), Enfant represents dance in its essential form: letting-go and letting-be in the circulation of bodies of very different sizes. This performance also experiments with the choreographic force: that is, of being arranged according to multiple scenarios. In this work, Boris Charmatz reveals a space particular to the danced gesture: how does the gesture impose its presence within the volume that contains it, and how does it, at the same time, create a space of its own? In the extract shown here, the adult bodies, with extreme precision, move around, shake, and manipulate the bodies of children. The children embody the awareness of inertia, of letting-go, of the weight, through their absolute obedience to the physical commands executed by the adult bodies. As the performance progresses, the relationship is reversed, and it is the children's bodies that cooperate to act upon the adult bodies which are rendered inert.


Source : Boris Charmatz


More information :

http://www.borischarmatz.org/

Charmatz, Boris

Born on January 3rd 1973, in Chambéry, France

Dancer, choreographer, and director of  Terrain, Boris Charmatz subjects dance to formal constraints which  redraw the field of possibilities. The stage is a notepad where to draft  concentrated, organic concepts in order to observe the chemical  reactions, intensities, and tensions engendered by their encounter.

During 2009 - 2018 he is the director of Musée de la danse / Centre chorégraphique national de Rennes et de Bretagne.
He is the author of a series of landmark shows, from Aatt enen tionon (1996) to 10000 gestes  (2017), in addition to his activity as a performer and improviser (in  collaboration with Médéric Collignon, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, and  Tino Sehgal).
As an associate artist of the 2011 edition of the Avignon Theatre Festival, Boris Charmatz created enfant.  Performed at the Cour d’Honneur at the Palais des Papes, the piece  involved 26 children and 9 adult dancers. It was restaged at the  Volksbühne in 2018 with a group of Berlin children. Invited to the MoMA  in 2013, Boris Charmatz staged Musée de la danse: Three Collective Gestures,  a three-part program performed at the museum over the course of three  weeks. Following an invitation in 2012, Boris Charmatz was once again  hosted by Tate Modern in London in 2015, where he presented If Tate Modern was Musée de la danse? The show included alternate versions of the choreographic projects À bras-le-corps; Levée des conflits; manger; Roman Photo; expo zéro; and 20 Dancers for the XX Century. That same year, Boris Charmatz opened the dance season at the National Opera in Paris with 20 Dancers for the XX Century,  and invited 20 dancers from the Ballet to perform twentieth-century  solo parts in public spaces at the Palais Garnier. In May 2015 he  premieres Fous de danse, an invitation to live dance in all its  forms from noon until midnight. Further editions of this choreographic  assembly bringing together professional dancers and amateurs, take place  in Rennes in 2016 and 2018; Brest, Berlin and Paris (Festival  d’Automne) follow in 2017.
During 2017-2018 Boris Charmatz is associate artiste of Volksbühne Berlin where he presents danse de nuit  (2016), 10000 gestes (2017), A Dancer’s Day  (2017) and enfant (2018).

End of 2018 Boris Charmatz leaves Musée de la danse / Centre  chorégraphique national de Rennes et de Bretagne and for the occasion  creates La Ruée at Théâtre National de Bretagne, a collective performance inspired by the book Histoire mondiale de la France,  written under the direction of Patrick Boucheron.
In January 2019 he launches Terrain, association established in the  Region Hauts-de-France and in partnership with the phénix, scène  nationale of Valenciennes, Opéra de Lille and Maison de la Culture  d’Amiens. Boris Charmatz is also associate artist of Charleroi danse  (Belgium) for three years (2018-2021).
In the summer of 2019 Zürcher Theater Spektakel gives Boris Charmatz carte blanche to take over the festival site on the lake. terrain | Boris Charmatz : Un essai à ciel ouvert. Ein Tanzgrund für Zürich   becomes the first test of his project Terrain : a green choreographic  site without roof and walls, an architecture of bodies during three  weeks, every day and under the open sky, including public warm-ups,  workshops for children, amateur and professional dancers, performances  and a symposium.
In 2020, the Festival d’Automne à Paris proposes the Portrait Boris Charmatz with works from his repertoire and new projects : La Ruée  (2018), (sans titre)  (2000) by Tino Sehgal, La Fabrique (2020), Aatt enen tionon (1996), 20 danseurs pour le XXe siècle et plus encore  (2012, 2020), boléro 2 (1996) & étrangler le temps (2009) and 10000 gestes (2017). In this framework he creates La Ronde   for the closing event of Grand Palais, collective performance of 12  hours and subject of a film and a documentary for France Télévisions.
In June 21, he orchestrates the groupe performance Happening Tempête for the opening of Grand Palais Éphémère. In July, he opens the Manchester International Festival with Sea Change,  a dance piece with 150 amateurs and professional dancers. In November  he creates and interprets the entirely whistled solo SOMNOLE.
In September 2022, Boris Charmatz will be the new director of  Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch, to launch, with Terrain, a new  project between France and Germany. Since August 2022, Boris Charmatz is  the new director of Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch, to launch, with  Terrain, a new project between France and Germany. In September 2023, he  creates with Tanztheater Wuppertal Ensemble his new piece Liberté Cathédrale.

Charmatz is the author of several books, including Entretenir: à propos d’une danse contemporaine (Centre national de la danse / Les presses du reel, 2003), co-authored with Isabelle Launay; “Je suis une école” (Editions les Prairies Ordinaires, 2009), a work that retraces the adventure with Bocal; and Emails 2009–2010  (Les presses du réel, in partnership with the Musée de danse, 2013),  co-authored with Jérôme Bel. In 2017, MoMa New York as part of its  series Modern Dance, publishes the monography Boris Charmatz,  directed by Janevski and with contributions by Gilles Amalvi, Bojana  Cvejić, Tim Etchells, Adrian Heathfield, Catherine Wood...
His projects initiate various cinematographic realisations, among them Les Disparates  (2000), directed by César Vayssié ; Horace-Bénédict (2001), by Dimitri Chamblas et Aldo Lee ; Une lente introduction (2007) by Boris Charmatz et Aldo Lee ; Levée (2014) by Boris Charmatz et César Vayssié ; Daytime Movements (2016), by Boris Charmatz et Aernout Mik ; TANZGRUND (2021), by César Vayssié ; étrangler le temps (2021) by Boris Charmatz and Aldo Lee.


Source and more information: https://www.borischarmatz.org/

Musée de la danse

Né d’un croisement entre le musée, lieu de conservation, la danse, art du mouvement, et le centre chorégraphique, lieu de production et de résidence, le Musée de la danse est un espace pour penser, pratiquer et élargir les frontières de la danse. S’il est inscrit à Rennes, il est aussi une idée nomade. Dirigée par le chorégraphe Boris Charmatz, cette institution-laboratoire explore les possibilités de croisement entre exposition, geste performatif et articulation d’un discours. Ateliers, débats, spectacles, résidences d’artistes et de chercheurs ; propositions décalées et collections fantasmées naissent directement d’une réflexion sur ce que pourrait être ce musée ludique et hybride.


Le CCN de Rennes et de Bretagne, rebaptisé Musée de la danse par Boris Charmatz, a été dirigé par Gigi Caciuleanu jusqu'en 1993, par Catherine Diverrès et Bernardo Montet jusqu'en 1996, puis par Catherine Diverrès seule jusqu'en 2008. Depuis 2009, Boris Charmatz assure sa direction. A compter de janvier 2019, c'est le collectif FAIR[E] qui prendra le relais. Le collectif est composé de Bouside Aït-Atmane, Iffra Dia, Johanna Faye, Céline Gallet, Linda Hayford, Saïdo Lehlouh, Marion Poupinet et Ousmane Sy. 


Le Musée de la danse / Centre chorégraphique national de Rennes et de Bretagne est une association subventionnée par le ministère de la Culture et de la Communication (DRAC Bretagne), la Ville de Rennes, le Conseil régional de Bretagne et le Conseil départemental d’Ille-et-Vilaine. 

Le Musée de la danse fait partie de l'Association des Centres chorégraphiques nationaux.


En savoir plus : www.museedeladanse.org

enfant

Choreography : Boris Charmatz

Choreography assistance : Julien Jeanne

Interpretation : Eleanor Bauer, Nuno Bizarro, Matthieu Burner, Olga Dukhovnaya, Julien Gallée-Ferré, Lénio Kaklea, Maud Le Pladec, Thierry Micouin, Mani A. Mungai. Enfants (au Festival d'Avignon) : Perle Béchu-Quaiser, Eliott Bourseau, Théotim Bourseau, Léon Cassin, Lisa Cazoulat, Rémi Cazoulat, Abel Charmatz, Marguerite Chassé, Tikal Contant-Ricard, Noé Couderc, Zaccharie Dor, Elio Fouilleul, Mathieu Guidoni, Cédric Lamotte-Lenoir, Sasha Goasduff-Langlois, Salomé Lebreton, Emma Lecoq-Vinagre, Youenn Louédec, Joseph Michard, Louane Mogis, Lou-Andréa Paulet, Emma Perreau, Raphaëlle Piechaczyk, Adèle Richard, Mathilde Richard, Hypolite Tanguy
.

Original music : Erwan Keravec (cornemuse)

Lights : Yves Godin

Costumes : Laure Fonvieille

Sound : Olivier Renouf

Other collaborations : Voix : Dalila Khatir Lutherie logicielle : Luccio Stiz

Production / Coproduction of the choreographic work : Musée de la danse/ CCNRB, Festival d'Avignon, Théâtre de la Ville-Paris, Festival d'Automne à Paris, Internationales Sommerfestival Hamburg et Siemens Stiftung dans le cadre de SCHAUPLÄTZE, Théâtre National de Bretagne (Rennes), La Bâtie-Festival de Genève, Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Bruxelles) 
Avec le soutien exceptionnel du Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, le Conseil régional de Bretagne, la Ville de Rennes et Rennes Métropole.
 Ce projet reçoit le soutien de l'Institut français / Ville de Rennes pour les tournées internationales.


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