Skip to main content
Back to search
  • Add to playlist

Coupé décalé [2e partie] - James Carlès

CN D - Centre national de la danse 2014 - Director : Centre national de la danse, Réalisation

Choreographer(s) : Carlès, James (France)

Present in collection(s): Centre national de la danse , CN D - Spectacles et performances

Video producer : Centre national de la danse

Integral video available at CND de Pantin

en fr

Coupé décalé [2e partie] - James Carlès

CN D - Centre national de la danse 2014 - Director : Centre national de la danse, Réalisation

Choreographer(s) : Carlès, James (France)

Present in collection(s): Centre national de la danse , CN D - Spectacles et performances

Video producer : Centre national de la danse

Integral video available at CND de Pantin

en fr

Coupé décalé

About coupé-décalé...
The project Coupé-décalé is a piece of choreography in two acts.

In the first part, entitled I Am Not a Sub-culture, Rather A Gallery of Self-Portraits with A History Walking in Circles, Robyn Orlin creates a solo with and for James Carlès, a choreographer and dancer and the initiator of this project based on coupé-décalé.

The second part, On va gâter le coin ! is dedicated to a stage performance of coupé-décalé performed by James Carlès and his five dancers. 

[The term coupé-décalé comes from a form of traditional dance from the Ivory Coast, the Akoupé, from the Attié ethnic group. Combining Congolese rumba, hip hop, Caribbean music and French folk songs, coupé-décalé appeared at the start of the 2000s in Paris in Ivorian communities.]

Programme extract 

“Since the origins of the project I had wanted an artistic collaboration with a very experienced choreographer/director and one interested in ideas of otherness. I only came up with this project through dialogue, discussion and shared views. I really wanted to take as big a step back as possible from this societal issues that I know well and in which I feel very involved. It was only natural that Robyn Orlin was contacted and equally so that she agreed to throw herself into this project.

Act 1: Making the invisible visible...

For Act 1, after numerous discussions and workshops, Robyn Orlin chose to draw inspiration from my personal history (familial and cultural) to 'construct' the solo. The images are real, but the stories and characters are fictitious. The solo examines otherness in Europe (France), intercultural relations and issues of territorial legitimacy. What do we really know about 'Afro-Europeans'? (Afro-French?) How do we read them and their expressions? Do we find connections in our common (hi)stories, etc? These are just some of the questions that led us, with a great deal of humour and love, to this first act... The act is built around the SAPE (Society of Ambianceurs and Elegant Persons), and the character of the SAPEUR, as this is one of the fundamental points of coupé-décalé.

Act 2: 'Textepublic'/'Textecaché' (public text/hidden text) and polysemy...
In act 2, I wanted to put some real coupé-décalé dancers on stage, using their own codes of movement, dress, language etc. My travels and research into the social dances of African descendants caused me to discover the eminently political meaning of all these dances. They are born, develop and flourish in well-defined social and (geo-)political contexts. Our reading of their movements shows us the extent to which these dances are real traces or markers of our societal history (dissent/assent).

When I first encountered coupé-décalé, I didn't understand it. In fact, I was rather hostile towards it. It wasn't until several years later, after a discussion with young pre-teens from a school in Nantes, that I realised that something real was happening. I carried out some 'research trips' to French cities such as Marseille and Paris, followed by some time in the Ivory Coast. I discovered the 'dual language' of coupé-décalé performers. What is said in public or shown to most people is not at all the same as what is shown to the initiated. This process reminded me of the resistance dances observed in slave-owning or colonial societies.

On the other hand, I also noticed that the semantic field of coupé-décalé dancers is – entirely voluntarily – contradictory. Indeed, a single movement or gesture can have several different meanings.

It was this reality that inspired me to compose the quintet. The video images are real. Charles Rostand and I filmed them ourselves in Abidjan. Theywere then 'recreated' abstractly and applied to choreographic scenes. These images evoke the urban world, the maquis (a type of restaurant), the 'glo glo' (shanty town), women and the numerous projections made onto them, colonial history, and many other hidden readings to be discovered in coupé-décalé which the video image metaphorically evokes.

Acts 1 and 2 constitute the two sides of the same one card.

Fouka-fouka!'

James Carlès

Updating: September 2014 

Carlès, James

James Carles is a choreographer, researcher and lecturer. He received initial training in dance and music of Africa and its Diaspora and then trained with the great names of modern dance in New York and London mainly. Since 1992, he hired an artistic and analytical approach that explores the “places junctions” between the dances, rhythms and philosophies of Africa and its Diaspora with technical and western thoughts frames. To date, his company’s directory contains more than fifty pieces of his own creation and authors like Katherine Dunham, Pearl Primus, Talley Beatty, Asadata Dafora, Geraldine Armstrong, Rick Odums, Wayne Barbaste, Carolyn Carlson, Robyn Orlin, etc.


Dancer soloist and outstanding performer, James Carles was performer and artistic collaborator for not only numerous “all music” ranging from Baroque to contemporary music, through jazz; but also choreographers such as Carolyn Carlson, Robyn Orlin, Rui Horta, Myriam Naisy, etc.

Artist associated with Astrada- Jazz In Marciac 2012-2014, research associate in the laboratory of the University LLA Créatis Jean Jaures Toulouse, James Carles is particularly invests in heritage projects for diversity and diffusion of choreographic culture. He is also founder and artistic director of the festival “Dances and Black Continents”.

Centre national de la danse, Réalisation

Since 2001, the National Center for Dance (CND) has been making recordings of its shows and educational programming and has created resources from these filmed performances (interviews, danced conferences, meetings with artists, demonstrations, major lessons, symposia specialized, thematic arrangements, etc.).

On va gâter le coin !

Choreography : James CARLÈS

Interpretation : Brissy AKEZIZI, Clément ASSÉMIAN, Gahé BAMA, Franck SERIKPA, Stéphane MBELLA Vidéo : Charles ROSTAN

Original music : James CARLÈS, 
Charles ROSTAN

Video conception : Charles ROSTAN

Lights : Arnaud SCHULZ

Our videos suggestions
02:42

Têtes à têtes

Villa-Lobos, Maria Clara (Belgium)

  • Add to playlist
07:42

Coupé décalé [1ère partie] - Robyn Orlin

Orlin, Robyn (France)

  • Add to playlist
08:55

Final/ment/seule

Proust, Cécile (France)

  • Add to playlist
07:23

l'Espace d'un Instant

Dubois, Kitsou (France)

  • Add to playlist
05:45

4D

Cherkaoui, Sidi Larbi (Belgium)

  • Add to playlist
03:03

Daral Shaga

  • Add to playlist
03:41

Men's Dance

Maillot, Jean-Christophe (Monaco)

  • Add to playlist
44:32

Des mots sur des gestes

Bagouet, Dominique (France)

  • Add to playlist
02:59

Les damnés de la terre

Bendongué, Fred (France)

  • Add to playlist
03:07

Oeil pour Oeil

Maillot, Jean-Christophe (Monaco)

  • Add to playlist
09:04

Uncles and Angels

Xaba, Nelisiwe (South Africa)

  • Add to playlist
12:57

Deep Night

Sabbagha, PJ (South Africa)

  • Add to playlist
09:16

Plissé Soleil [remontage 2014]

Théfaine, Flora (France)

  • Add to playlist
15:43

Nibetobo

Babingui, Chris (Nibetobo)

  • Add to playlist
01:01:33

Somewhere, out there, life was screaming

Languet, Éric (Reunion)

  • Add to playlist
38:20

The dancer/camera pas de deux

  • Add to playlist
28:47

Close-ups and movement continuity in dances for the camera

  • Add to playlist
40:05

Expanded Choreography: reading animated GIFs as choreography

  • Add to playlist
43:30

Analysis of ground types in Screendance

  • Add to playlist
Our themas suggestions

Bagouet Collection

Exposition virtuelle

fr/en/

DANCE AND DIGITAL ARTS

Exposition virtuelle

fr/en/

Black Dance

James Carlès, dancer and choreographer and specialist of Afro-American dance, evokes the origin of current-day urban dances. From Africa to the United States via Europe, he emphasizes their hybrid style and puts their social and political dimension into perspective. A myriad of videos, photos, illustrations and additional resources complement this interview.

Webdoc

fr/en/

Why do I dance ?

Social dances, anti-establishment, protest dances, rhythms or identities, rituals or pleasures... There are a myriad of reasons for dancing and a myriad of points of view. A webdoc to discover, enhanced with extracts from performances and accounts from amateurs... all the right reasons for dancing!

Webdoc

fr/en/

Artistic Collaborations

Panorama of different artistic collaborations, from « couples » of choreographers to creations involving musicians or plasticians

Parcours

fr/en/

Meeting with literature

Collaboration between a choreographer and a writer can lead to the emergence of a large number of combinations. If sometimes the choreographer creates his dance around the work of an author, the writer can also choose dance as the subject of his text.

Parcours

fr/en/

Exposition virtuelle

fr/en/

Arts of motion

Generally associated with circus arts, here is a Journey that will take you on a stroll through different artists from this world.

Parcours

fr/en/

Charles Picq, dance director

Exposition virtuelle

fr/en/

When reality breaks in

How does choreographic works are testimonies of the world? Does the contemporary artist is the product of an era, of its environment, of a culture?

Parcours

fr/en/

Do you mean Folklores?

Presentation of how choreographers are revisiting Folklore in contemporary creations.

Parcours

fr/en/

Outdoor dances

Stage theater and studio are not the only places of work or performance of a choreographic piece. Sometimes dancers and choreographers dance outside.

Parcours

fr/en/es/de/pl/pt-pt/

Dance at the crossroad of the arts

Some shows are the meeting place of different trades. Here is a preview of some shows where the arts intersect on the stage of a choreographic piece.

Parcours

fr/en/es/de/pl/pt-pt/

The contemporary Belgian dance

This Parcours presents different Belgian choreographers who have marked history and participated in the creation of a "Belgian" style.

Parcours

fr/en/es/de/pl/pt-pt/

Strange works

 Unconventional contemporary dance shows which reinvent the rapport to the stage.  

Parcours

fr/en/
By accessing the website, you acknowledge and accept the use of cookies to assist you in your browsing.
You can block these cookies by modifying the security parameters of your browser or by clicking onthis link.
I accept Learn more