Dance Victoria 2017-2018 Season | ODC/Dance program insert

Page 1

SEASON SPONSOR

LEAD SPONSORS

ODC/Dance February 2 + 3, 2018 • 7:30 pm • Royal Theatre Running time: Approximately 1 hour 40 minutes (including two 20-minute intermissions)

About the Works What we carry What we keep (30 minutes) Choreography: Brenda Way Lighting Design: Alexander V. Nichols Costume Design: Natalie Barshow Dancers: The Company Why do we hold on and how do we let go — of our stuff, our habits, our opinions, our relationships? What defines us in the end? – Brenda Way, Choreographer

ODC/Dance in What we carry What we keep. Photo © Andrew Weeks

A particular familiar object has been around for twenty-five years. How many centuries will it be before it disappears? This just isn’t normal. Objects should at least take their share of the responsibilities. That is all I have against the inanimate world. – Jean Baudrillard, Cool Memories In tragic-comic fashion, French philosopher Jean Baudrillard exposes our uncanny relationship with the objects with which we surround ourselves. Acting as containers, objects hold a part of our history. As markers, they help map our lives in recognizable and meaningful patterns. Baudrillard’s lament also discloses how the durability of objects reflects the vulnerability of the human body, pointing to the possibility that our need to accumulate things may have to do with a futile attempt to deny mortality. These reflections are embedded in Brenda Way’s What we carry What we keep, a piece inspired by the New York Times review of The Keeper, an exhibition at the New Museum dedicated to the act of preserving objects, memorabilia, and

images, and to the passions that inspire this understanding. Prompted by the question “What is it with the relationship between people and things anyway — this human drive to have more and more?”, Way sent out a questionnaire to research what people around her keep and collect. Their responses triggered phrases and movement vocabulary that formed the architecture of the dance. In it, bodies give shape to memories or become objects to amass, arrange, or be freed from. A vessel for the emotions, habits and relationships we hold onto, the body inevitably serves as the archive of psychosomatic hoarding. – Marie Tollon, ODC Writer in Residence

– Intermission (20 minutes) –


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Dance Victoria 2017-2018 Season | ODC/Dance program insert by Dance Victoria - Issuu