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Brexit. Pina Bausch. Cafe Müller.

July 17, 2017 Ben Yeoh

Brexit struggles reminded me of Pina Bausch's Cafe Müller. I saw Cafe Müller when her company came to London in 2008. It echoes in my memory today.

Three men and three women. Two men in suits. Third wears a loose white shirt tucked into trousers and is barefoot. Two of the women, (one Bausch herself, while alive and dancing) wear white dresses, barefeet; the third wears a dress, overcoat, and heels. 

At various moments, one or more dance with eyes closed, rushing across the stage strewn with chairs while the other dancers rush about them moving furniture out of the way. The dancers rely on each other to clear their paths as they dance with their eyes shut.

The movement is often frantic and repetitive, halting with a feeling of exhaustion. There are themes of manipulation and dependence throughout the dance, which are realized through intense repetition as well as trust between dancers that they will keep each other safe on stage in varying states of awareness.

“The Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch...has stood for wildness, wisdom, creative exploration and dedication combined with passion. Never tired of questioning, and continually demanding more freedom, I associate its tradition with unwavering curiosity and courage.”
— Adolphe Binder, Intendant and Artistic Director

Link to full piece on youtube here.  Link to her Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch

Pina Bausch, in my mind, is with Caryl Churchill as one of our greatest theatre creators. Perhaps, Bausch is more internationally known.  She could be credited of starting out a whole movement of "Dance-Theatre" (at least in parallel with the dance language coming from the US via Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham) and certainly, I do not think her work was well understood at its beginning.

Still, her work is awkward and difficult to convey with words.  I wrote in 2008: "  the story seems to be on the edge of your mind. You can’t complete the narrative in any straightforward way, some of the dance, physicality and atmosphere has to complete it for you. And so, the pieces becomes highly personal as the work only makes sense in your head...but yet somehow quite deep and universal as everyone grasps the themes: alienation, love, patterns of history, stress, confinement, rushing through life half-blind, hoping trusting that some persons you can't see will make your journey OK..." and that feels still somewhat glancing at it.

"If you have been exhilarated, stirred and moved by what her dancers do, then you too are an expert. You get it. And it's this ability to speak directly to an audience, to pierce right through whatever critical apparatus they arm themselves with, that is at the heart of her unique genius. She offers big, complicated truths without footnotes; it's high art without homework. And she has changed for ever my sense of what can be achieved inside a theatre. " wrote Helen Hawkins, Culture Editor, Sunday Times in 2008 and perhaps she has it right.

In Arts, Theatre, Dance Tags PinaBausch, Theatre, Dance

Playwrights ask questions. Power of Beyonce. Who is Caryl Churchill?

July 16, 2017 Ben Yeoh
Image: Beyonce/Instagram.  Boticcelli's Venus via Wiki/Uffizzi.

Image: Beyonce/Instagram.  Boticcelli's Venus via Wiki/Uffizzi.

Caryl Churchill is one of our greatest living playwrights. Yet outside of the Arts world, I suspect not many people would appreciate that. It's not a far leap to suggest she is one of our greatest living female artists then, if play writing is considered an art.

“Playwrights don’t give answers, they ask questions”
— Caryl Churchill

I'm unsure if Churchill's relative anonymity speaks to the arguably niche area that theatre currently occupies.  A 4 week run at London's Royal Court (the theatre probably most associated with Churchill) would reach perhaps 2,800 people each week, if lucky. A recent Instagram (about 2 days old) by Beyonce (around 100m followers) has 9.5m likes.    That the image seems to have references to Boticcelli's Venus and is taken by Awol Erizku who worked for a time under David LaChappelle, is of interest to Arts observers like me. It references old and new.

Beyonce is also one of our greatest living artists. Yet the sheer staggering reach of Beyonce leaves me stunned when I try to comprehend it. Beyonce has been making points about Black Lives Matter, perhaps it will be someone like her and Jay-Z, who cross the silos and drive people to find new solutions to complex problems.

(see post here on the Black American experience)  

I believe the technological and societal forces that have pushed us into "like-meeting-like" and rest in our own silos, need constructive forces to collide our silos together.

If LaChappelle can talk about positivity and Beyonce can highlight Black concerns, perhaps we can bend course to a sustainable and better future and away from inequity and extremism.

In Arts Tags Beyonce, Writing, Churchill, Theatre
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