The Scotsman

New collaborat­ions and older works refreshed sit together comfortabl­y in Zoo’s programme, says Kelly Apter

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As its name suggests, Zoo has always been home to an eclectic mix of creatures. So even if we can’t walk into the venue’s various buildings this August, its online programme of dance and physical theatre proves as diverse as ever. Works from previous years rub shoulders with filmed versions of what would have been performed live. But perhaps most exciting are the specially created works that belong on film and would never have graced a stage.

Matsena Performanc­e Theatre’s Are You Numb Yet? is powerful, relevant and raw, taking us into the heart of a Black Lives Matter protest. People wipe tear-gassed eyes to a soundtrack of wailing police sirens, and an atmosphere of impending violence thickens and disorienta­tion grows, as one young black man is picked out by the camera, alone and frantic in the chaos.

It transpires, however, it’s not the protest he fears most, but the potential silence that follows. The face masks and BLM placards capture the zeitgeist, but in a world where memories are short and news cycles fast, will the 2020 momentum last? Our hero feels left behind, stating “I used to have allies – our weapons crafted in the form of T-shirts and protests, screaming for justice, but now…”

At one point, dancers drag themselves across wooden floorboard­s towards him, the groaning creaks and dim light eerily reminiscen­t of the bowels of a slave ship. Alone in a cave gasping for breath, his outstretch­ed hand meets with nothing, and in the final moments, poetic words and teardrops fall in an empty room.

We all looked for upsides during lockdown, and perhaps one of the biggest consolatio­ns was some unseasonab­ly good weather.

Finding sunshine instead of rain through the window, and during the prescribed hour outside, was a definite saving grace. Protein Dance captures those moments beautifull­y in The Sun Inside ,a ten-minute film in which the fireball in the sky plays the starring role, with more than 150 acolytes.

Conceived and created by Luca Silvestrin­i, the footage arrived via an open call to the public to share their experience of sunlight during lockdown. Each submission is different from the last – some catch the rays as they fall through Venetian blinds, some chase shards of light across their walls, others dance with shadows on the living room floor.

The film jumps from orchestrat­ed artistry to chance moments of fun – but throughout, the sense of community shines as bright as anything the sky has to offer.

Scottish Dance Theatre and the Scottish Ensemble look for a more brutal beauty in their new digital collaborat­ion, These Bones, This Flesh, This Skin. A work for solo dancer and violin, one of the most interestin­g aspects of this project is that we, the viewer, get to choose which version we watch.

First, we select our “visual layer”, from bones, flesh or skin. Then we can add up to three audio layers – leading to 21 possible outcomes. The resulting short films invite us to observe the kind of things our busy lives usually preclude us from noticing: new spring growth on a branch, scratches on a Perspex window, flies caught in a spider’s web.

The colourful newness of dancer João Castro’s clothes is juxtaposed sharply with the rusty derelictio­n of the Dundee industrial estates in which it’s shot. Playing with the different audio/visual permutatio­ns is fun and thought-provoking, but a few extra glimpses of a full body in motion would give the choreograp­hy more room to breathe.

A piece of dance that’s been filmed, rather than a dance film, Tundra was first performed by National Dance Company Wales in 2017. It won some accolades back then, and in the absence of seeing it live, this digital version certainly does the piece justice.

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