ARTICULATE OPEN CLASSROOMS
On 17 and 18 October, as part of ARTICULATE I CARE, artist-researchers of the Conservatoire present their research to students, by elaborating on the scope of their project, introducing their methods, research processes, or (preliminary) conclusions, performing an artistic result or by supervising a workshop.
OPEN CLASSROOMS - DANCE
14:00 - 16:00 |
hyperwithin Should we start disappearing now, so we don’t disappear forever? If performance is the height of human visibility, could withdrawing and becoming less visible create change? In this workshop, we explore the idea of embracing invisibility or standing "outside" as a radical act of resistance. We focus on the paradox of "disappearing" as a strategy to prevent a greater disappearance, especially in the context of human-centered performance and ecology. By morphing into a faceless crowd and following a rigorous pattern, we will attempt to achieve freedom from representation through self-loss. |
14:00 - 16:00 |
Space Boom! Spaces This workshop explores the creative potential of musical disturbances within choreographic processes. Participants will engage in improvisation, using various aural and musical tasks to generate and transform movement. Different forms of musical change and interference will be employed to open new creative possibilities. In the context of care, we will discuss how noise contributes to shared discourse, personal agency, and resilience. The discussion will also address how incorporating noise into dance creates a feedback loop between artistic practice, research, methods, and experience. MIGUELÁNGEL CLERC PARADA’s research examines noise as a creative and critical tool in artistic environments. |
14:00 - 16:00 |
HARD TIMES GOOD TIMES HARD TIMES GOOD TIMES is an ongoing collaborative research project in dance and performance. SOPHIA DANAE VORVILA explores how daily discomfort can interact with dance, sublimation, and creation. By collaborating with artists from various fields (cinema, visual arts, performance, music), she develops a synthesis of each artist’s solo of discomfort and fragmented topography. |
14:00 - 16:00 |
THE MANY-HEADED BODY THE MANY-HEADED BODY is an exploration of how touch can facilitate collective action. A group of performers have their eyes closed, remaining in constant contact, breathing together, and attempting to form a collective, more-than-human body to explore its movement potential. Inspired by the many-headed slime, a unicellular organism that can make decisions and remember without a central nervous system or brain, the movement doesn't belong to any individual performer. It has its own internal dramaturgy, emerging from the point of contact between bodies, rather than anyone's individual will |
image: The Many-headed body (c) Martin Atanasov