Ein weiterer fantastischer Artikel von Nicholas Minns:

‘Resolution is a festival of emerging artists, but for an explanation of the perilous stages of emergence there is no better guide than Simone Mousset and Elisabeth Schilling’s hilarious Impressing the Grand Duke. Having experienced the travails of ascending from ‘the deep and mysterious choreographic forest’ to ‘the deep inverted choreographic mountain’ they know how it’s done. Impressing the Grand Duke is told as a fable about an artist called Nymphadora who dances and dreams all day long in an obscure corner of the world. One day she receives a visit from the Grand Duke who recognizes her as an up-and-coming artiste, an original talent and future star and sends her on a mission to conquer the choreographic world. Nymphadora is played by both Schilling as Nympha, the stubborn, egocentric creative, and by Mousset as Dora, her harridan muse and business manager. Add the fairytale costumes by Mélanie Planchard and there are no limits to which these two consummate clowns will descend to deliver a satirical farce of the highest order. Despite Dora’s low opinion about their prospects (“Nympha, we are not getting anywhere in our art. You are always dancing the same dance….We have to emerge.”) the two manage to get through the various choreographic contests by squabbling or riffing verbally on their inability to choreograph. For Dora the goals are clear: international stardom, real visibility, real props and costumes, and sponsorship. For Nympha real costumes are trumped by the prospect of a visit from the Grand Duke.

They finally emerge (completely) to recorded congratulations against a Hollywood soundtrack so you can almost see the credits rolling up the screen as you reach for your Kleenex. Only one thing worries Nympha, who with devastating timing between the batting of her false eyelashes and the pouting of her red lips asks Dora, “And now?”

The choreography is ascribed to both Mousset and Schilling; not only are they natural counterparts to each other on stage but through their creative alchemy they anchor the theatricality of the work in a musical form. For last year’s Resolution Mousset and Schilling worked together on Their Past to the symphonic music of Yuri Khanon but for Impressing the Grand Duke music provides only the initial impetus. Schilling begins the work dancing with capricious delight to Claude Debussy’s Étude 10 pour les sonorités opposés, on pointe, and even when Mousset comes thundering down the aisle on to the stage she never disregards the music’s rhythmic structure. But when the Étude finishes, the work continues as a tightly coherent physical score with spoken and recorded texts, and the Hollywood finale. In Impressing the Grand Duke, Mousset and Schilling have added a delightful sense of humour to their musicality and ability to paint with dance, which makes them a creative duo to watch. All the more so now they have emerged.’

Link:

httpss://writingaboutdance.com/author/nickminns/

Simone Mousset und Elisabeth’s gemeinsame Produktion ‘Impressing the Grand Duke’ wurde von Rachel Elderkin als Highlight des Resolution Festivals in London gewählt.

‘Impressing the Grand Duke (★★★★) by Simone and Elisabeth offers something a little different. In contrast to the fluffy, pastel tulle costumes and the self-absorption of their characters, this is a refreshingly objective and tightly crafted work.

Racing through an array of choreographic devices Simone and Elisabeth attack the creative process and the challenge of establishing oneself as an artist with humour, flair and bold self-assessment. They make wry observations on the term ’emerging’ and the piece as a whole is stylish, fun and finely judged dance theatre.’

Link:

https://www.thestage.co.uk/reviews/2017/resolution-review-place-london/?utm_content=bufferd3325&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

 

 

 

Am 27. und 28. Januar wird Elisabeth zum ersten Mal, als Work im Process – Arbeit, die Soloarbeit ‘The Mirror / Der Spiegel’ der Mamia Company in Helsinki, Finland zeigen.

‘Dorian Gray and Snow White’s stepmother made a baby called Milania de Vine. Meet her tonight & tomorrow at 7pm at Asematila, Helsinki in Finland. She can’t wait to have your eyes on her…’

Preview of a solo called ‘The Mirror / Der Spiegel’ by Mamia Company
Directed by Nina Mamia, Kasperi Nordman
Performed alongside a solo called ‘Jean Dark’ danced by Gesa Piper

More info: https://www.facebook.com/events/658701247667296/

Photo by Kasperi Nordman

Am 13. Januar wird Elisabeth Schilling mit Simone Mousset ihr gemeinsames Stück ‘Impressing the Grand Duke’ bei The Place zeigen.

Mehr Informationen unter: httpss://www.theplace.org.uk/whats-on/helen-cox-john-ross-dance-simone-and-elisabeth

‘the artists make fun of the “emerging artist” – label and present us programmers with a critical view at the way we (would like!) to look at the “up-and-coming talents”. The audience and above all we, the professionals in the auditorium, were laughing heartily.’

Extract from a review by Ainhoa Achutegui, director of the Centre Culturel de Rencontre Abbaye de Neumünster Luxembourg.

Diese Woche beginnt Elisabeth damit, mit der Choreographin Simone Mousset, eine neue Kreation namens BAL zu erarbeiten. BAL ist eine absurde Familiensaga, die sich mit der Identität und Herkunftsfragen auseinandersetzt. Eine Preview des Stückes wird am 11. Januar im Theater in Mersch gezeigt werden.

Diese Woche wird Elisabeth in der Premiere des Stückes ‘pan – osscillate’ tanzen, welches am Dienstag den 06.12.2016 im WUK in Wien gezeigt wird. Das Stück ist eine Produktion der Gruppe Schaitl / Costa.

pan—oscillate ist eine Movement- und Soundperformance, die von den Qualitäten der Soundbegriffe „panning“ und „oscillating“ inspiriert ist. Diese soundspezifischen Eigenschaften werden einerseits in Bewegungspartituren für drei PerformerInnen, andererseits in eine Livekomposition für einen Soundperformer übersetzt. In pan—oscillate werden Ventilatoren als Soundquellen und als kinetische Elemente untersucht sowie auch als performative Objekte eingesetzt. httpss://collaboration.jasminschaitl.com/

 

Mehr Information und Tickets:

httpss://www.wuk.at/event/id/18567

Hier einige Kritiken aus dem ‘Luxembourger Wort’ und ‘Le Quotidien’ zu Anu Sistonen’s Moods, welches im November in Luxembourg gezeigt wurde.

httpss://www.wort.lu/en/culture/dance-moods-a-journey-through-the-gamut-of-human-emotions-583e87fb5061e01abe83cf93

httpss://www.lequotidien.lu/culture/anu-sistonen-luxembourgeoise-de-coeur-fait-ses-adieux-a-la-creation/

 

Hier eine Kritik zu dem, im November zur Premiere gebrachten, Stück ‘A Dancing Archive’ von Artémise Ploegearts.

httpss://dansmagazine.nl/review/herinneringen-uit-het-verleden-defini%C3%ABren-a-dancing-archive

Am kommenden Dienstag (29.11.) und Mittwoch (30.11.) wird Elisabeth in Anu Sistonen’s ‘Mood(s)’ im Grand Théâtre in Luxembourg auftreten.

Tickets und mehr Informationen unter: httpss://www.theatres.lu/SAISON+2016_2017/Danse/_17+ANU+SISTONEN/_17+ANU+SISTONEN-p-20002116.html

Am 19. November wird Elisabeth das Stück ‘A dancing Archive’ von Artémise Ploegearts in Amsterdam zur Premiere bringen. Das Stück wird im Oostblok Theater gezeigt werden.

Mehr Informationen auf: httpss://oostblok.nl/evenement/double-bill-a-dance-archive-zoom/

 

A DANCING ARCHIVE | Artémise Ploegaerts
A Dancing Archive looks at dancer Elisabeth Schilling’s personal background, experience and dance memories. She was born near Trier in Germany and first trained as a ballet dancer. She is now living and working throughout Europe as a professional contemporary dancer. Elisabeth has the particularity of working on embodying, disembodying, and re-embodying choreographic works and dance practices. She is full of traces that allow her to subjectively create movement material reflecting on a complex combination of discipline (or ‘authorial violence’ as André Lepecki writes) and personal choice-making and (re)interpretation. She constantly moves between shaping and being shaped. Through the use of video documentation and live performance, audiences are invited to dive into the merging of past and present. It is whilst improvising or re-performing movement material based on different memories from her experience as a dancer that her body multiplies on stage. Those different media have allowed us to witness changes and sameness in order to try and apprehend the complexity, implicity and subtlety of power.

Concept and choreography: Artémise Ploegaerts | Artistic collaborator, film and visuals: Louis Hothothot | Performance and movement research: Elisabeth Schilling | Light: Petyr Veenstra |  Sound: extracts from The four seasons Antonio Vivaldi, Le Corsaire Adolphe Adam | Support: Amsterdams Fonds voor de Kunst, Oostblok, SPAM!, TUFA