Sehnsucht [remontage 2015]
2015 - Director : Zeriahen, Karim
Choreographer(s) : Waehner, Karin (Germany)
Present in collection(s): Centre national de la danse , Danse en amateur et répertoire
Video producer : Centre national de la danse
Integral video available at CND de Pantin
Sehnsucht [remontage 2015]
2015 - Director : Zeriahen, Karim
Choreographer(s) : Waehner, Karin (Germany)
Present in collection(s): Centre national de la danse , Danse en amateur et répertoire
Video producer : Centre national de la danse
Integral video available at CND de Pantin
Sehnsucht [remontage 2015]
Choreography by Karin Waehner
A choreographic extract remodelled by the research group of the Centre Chorégraphique Mouvement et Danse (Abbeville-st-Lucien), as part of the “Danse en amateur et repertoire” programme (2014) (a programme created to assist and promote amateur dancing).
The group
In an exceptional setting, in Picardie, Marie Devillers, a dance teacher, leads a choreographic research group consisting of a dozen women aged eighteen to thirty-two who have long been her students. Marie Devillers’ teaching and choreographies are inspired by her considerable experience as a student and interpreter with the proponents of the French school of German filiation (Dupuy, Waehner, etc.). Close-knit and seasoned in this approach, this group has already defended her revival of Doris Humphrey’s Soaring (1920) for the “Danse en amateur et repertoire” meeting in 2013.
The choreographer
Karin Waehner (1926-1999) studied under Mary Wigman, the founder of expressionist dance in prewar Germany (having spent some time in the USA, she was also close to Graham, Limón and Horst). But it was in France that she developed her career, with the heirs of this branch of choreographic modernity (Dupuy, Andrews, Robinson). Her teaching had a marked influence on French contemporary dance that was all set to flourish at that time. She defends “the permanent life that we feel is always ready to gush forth, even when a rigorous form appears to maintain and contain the effervescence.” Her work Sehnsucht (1981) testifies to a prosperous moment of creativity, in the wake of the Paris-Berlin great exhibition at the Centre Pompidou.
The artist
Trio de femmes is a piece in Karin Waehner’s work Sehnsucht (1981). Three mothers, with very different characters, confront a context of war and misery, against a background of poems in song by Brecht and Eisler. Marie Devillers, the group’s director, has herself interpreted this piece. Christine Caradec, who remodelled the extract, has produced a Labanotation of it. These two memory logics, one an embodiment, the other a document, bolster one another for this revival. No doubt that the de-multiplication into several trios presents an additional compositional problem in the organisation of the circulations. However, the focus is above all on the search for the quality of an intimate movement and a state of body, specific to expressive dance.
Waehner, Karin
Waehner was born in 1926 in Gleiwitz in Germany (now Gliwice, Poland). In 1950 she moved to Buenos Aires, where she taught modern dance until 1953, when she met the mime Marcel Marceau. He inspired her to leave for Paris and to study mime with Etienne Decroux. In Paris she also opened a dance school and choreographed. She appeared with Jerome Andrews as Les Compagnons de la Danse, co-founded the experimental Theatre d'Essai de la Danse in 1955 and started her own touring Ballets Contemporains Karin Waehner in 1959.
She choreographed some 40 pieces and wrote a treatise, Outillage choregraphique, analysing the components of creating movement. But it was as a teacher that she had her most lasting impact. Angelin Preljocaj, France's most prominent contemporary-dance choreographer, whose own company has played several successful seasons in London, trained with her at the Schola Cantorum in Paris where she initiated contemporary-dance teaching. "I had already studied ballet and she opened my eyes to contemporary dance - to its passion for creation, improvisation and new forms," he says. "Coming from the Wigman expressionist tradition, her movement had a generosity, a way of going to extremes. Expressionism signifies something emerging from the inside and there was in her style a maximum of amplitude and sincerity." Karin Waehner also possessed those qualities as a person and selflessly battled for her pupils.
Karin Waehner, dancer, choreographer and teacher: born Gleiwitz, Germany 12 March 1926; died 17 February 1999.
Source : The Independant
Zeriahen, Karim
From live stage images to life in images, the director and video artist Karim Zeriahen seems to have found the shortest way. Since the beginning of the 90s, when he worked in close relationship with choreographer Philippe Decouflé, he learned how to put the art of stage in motion, contemporary dance most of the time. Karim Zeriahen then starts a fruitful collaboration with Montpellier based choreographer Mathilde Monnier. Stop, Videlilah, day of night, short films adapted from her stage creations. Each time, Karim Zeriahen's camera takes over the place with movement, the body language is not frozen but magnified. Choreographer Herman Diephuis also joins this gallery of dancing portraits. Documentaries on figures such like Albert Maysles or Hubert de Givenchy and from Joe Dalessandro to Paul Morrissey, he sets a signature, a camera always in action with confidence.
Today the director goes further with a new project and tracks the subtle movements of the body language beyond the physical appearance. A collection of living portraits as unique pièces reminding us of the master portraitists of renaissance. These living natures consists in filming the subject in a certain amount of time, almost still, with signs of respiration, eye blinks, as if it were posing for a painting. They are then displayed on a flat screen with a memory card. With this collection starting, Karim Zeriahen, with his documentary and artist vision, interrogates himself about the virtual world filled with images. By taking a pause, and his models with him, he questions the way we look at things, the way we look at life.
Source: Philippe Noisette
En savoir plus: www.karimzeriahen.com
Sehnsucht [remontage 2015]
Choreography : Karin Waehner
Interpretation : Peggy Bertin, Marianne Clerget, Sophie Debas, Amélie Delattre, Hélène Devriendt, Adèle Fontaine, Cyliane Gosselin, Manon Marazano, Louise Marazano, Violaine Prudhomme, Élise Ridelroques, Leïla Télesfort
Text : Paroles des chansons Bertolt Brecht
Original music : Hanns Eisler
Other collaborations : Extrait chorégraphique remonté par le groupe de recherche du centre chorégraphique Mouvement et Danse (Abbeville-st-Lucien), dans le cadre de Danse en amateur et répertoire (2014) - Transmission Christine Caradec (notation Laban)
Duration : 13 minutes
Danse en amateur et répertoire
Amateur Dance and Repertory is a companion program to amateur practice beyond the dance class and the technical learning phase. Intended for groups of amateur dancers, it opens a space of sharing for those who wish to deepen a practice and a knowledge of the dance in relation to its history.
Laurent Barré
Head of Research and Choreographic Directories
Anne-Christine Waibel
Research Assistant and Choreographic Directories
+33 (0)1 41 83 43 96
danse-amateur-repertoire@cnd.fr
Source: CN D
More information: https://www.cnd.fr/en/page/323-danse-en-amateur-et-repertoire-grant-programme
[1930-1960]: Neoclassicism in Europe and the United States, entirely in tune with the times
The Ballets Russes paved the way for what would become known as: neo-classical. Back then, the term “modern ballet” was frequently used to define this renewal of aesthetics: a savvy blend of tradition and innovation, which each choreographer defined in their own way.
James Carlès
Bagouet Collection
The committed artist
In all the arts and here especially in dance, the artist sometimes creates to defend a cause, to denounce a fact, to disturb, to shock. Here is a panorama of some "committed" choreographic creations.
The Dance Biennial Défilé
The American origins of modern dance: [1930-1950] from the expressive to the abstract
CHRISTIAN & FRANÇOIS BEN AÏM – VITAL MOMENTUM
Indian dances
Discover Indian dance through choreographic creations which unveil it, evoke it, revisit it or transform it!
[1970-2018] Neoclassical developments: They spread worldwide, as well as having multiple repertoires and dialogues with contemporary dance.
In the 1970s, artists’ drive towards a new classic had been ongoing for more than a half century and several generations had already formed since the Russian Ballets. As the years went by, everyone defended or defends classical dance as innovative, unique, connected to the other arts and the preoccupations of its time.
Black Dance
Why do I dance ?
The Dance Biennale
Female / male
A walk between different conceptions and receptions of genres in different styles and eras of dance.
Contemporary techniques
This Parcours questions the idea that contemporary dance has multiples techniques. Different shows car reveal or give an idea about the different modes of contemporary dancer’s formations.
Les Rencontres chorégraphiques internationales de Seine-Saint-Denis
Vlovajobpru company
40 years of dance and music
The “Nouvelle Danse Française” of the 1980s
In France, at the beginning of the 1980s, a generation of young people took possession of the dancing body to sketch out their unique take on the world.