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Blue Lady : montage d'extraits

Blue Lady : montage d'extraits

Blue Lady

On October 11th 1983, Carolyn Carlson premièred “Blue Lady” at La Fenice in Venice. The piece made a huge impact, and would be performed all over the world during the ten years that followed. “Blue Lady” marked the blossoming of a major choreographer and performer who had reached an artistic maturity and remarkable plenitude of movement. The choreographer's Californian childhood inspired this piece: it infuses the dance with tenderness, gaiety and nostalgia for moments from her past. Carolyn Carlson sets up a dialogue between her interior world and the stage where her slender silhouette turns tirelessly, lightly, while her feet lightly brush the floor or linger as if they would sink into it. The perception of human horizons weaves the framework of “Blue Lady”, a fascinating gallery of female portraits which embraces the span of one life.


Source : CCN Roubaix Nord-pas-de-Calais


More information : carolyn-carlson.com

Carlson, Carolyn

California-born Carolyn Carlson defines herself first and foremost as a nomad. From San Francisco Bay to the University of Utah, from the Alwin Nikolais company in New York to Anne Béranger’s in France, from Paris Opera Ballet to Teatrodanza La Fenice in Venice, from the Théâtre de la Ville de Paris to Helsinki, from Ballet Cullberg to La Cartoucherie in Paris, from the Venice Biennale to Roubaix, Carlson is a tireless traveller, always seeking to develop and share her poetic universe.

She arrived in France in 1971 the beneficiary of Alwin Nikolais’s ideas about movement, composition and teaching. The following year, with Rituel pour un rêve mort, she wrote a poetic manifesto that defined an approach to her work that she has adhered to ever since: dance that is strongly oriented towards philosophy and spirituality. Carlson prefers the term ‘visual poetry’ to ‘choreography’ to describe her work. She creates works that express her poetic thoughts and a form of complete art within which movement occupies a special place. 

For four decades, Carlson has had significant influence and success in many European countries. She played a key role in the birth of French and Italian contemporary dance through the GRTOP (theatre research group) at Paris Opera Ballet and Teatrodanza at La Fenice.

She has created over 100 pieces, a large number of which are landmarks in the history of dance, including Density 21.5, The Year of the Horse, Blue Lady, Steppe, Maa, Signes, Writings on Water and Inanna. In 2006, her work was rewarded with the first ever Golden Lion given to a choreographer by the Venice Biennale.

Nowadays, Carolyn Carlson is director of two organisations: the Atelier de Paris-Carolyn Carlson, an international centre for masterclasses, residencies and creating new works, which she founded in 1999 and the National Choreographic Centre Roubaix Nord-Pas de Calais until December 2013, which produces and tours shows all over the world.


More information: en.carolyn-carlson.com

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