The New Zealand Herald

Compelling commentary on human condition not to be missed

- Dione Joseph

The New Zealand Dance Company (NZDC) opened its premiere season with a double-bill programme of two strikingly different works. The Absurdity of Humanity is a fitting title drawing upon the choreograp­hic artistry of Australia and New Zealand’s finest practition­ers and presents a sensitive exploratio­n of our humanity and mortality.

The programme begins with Lina Limosani’s Whispers from Pandora’s Box. A seemingly innocent white box deliberate­ly makes its way across a bare stage towards a man on a chair. The box is opened and it isn’t clear whether all the evils of the world spill out or the content of the box brings forth our deepest and darkest urges — but it doesn’t matter. Like the man on stage, we are caught in the grip of a game with no winners. There is white face paint, a smear of red across the lips, black triangles under the eyes — we become voyeurs of a cheerfully grotesque promenade where the life of a human matters little more than that of a chicken.

Ross McCormack’s Matter also begins with a solitary dancer on stage but he is anchored into a landscape that includes five tall pou. The work is constantly shifting and offers a cultural ecology of changing dynamics and responses as the world quivers on the axis of these five poles. Longer than the first work, Matter is meditative and, at times, the fastidious­ness can be wearying; however, the longer narrative also invites further contemplat­ion.

The company of dancers is extraordin­ary. There is a remarkable precision in their movement and timing is impeccable.

The Absurdity of Humanity is a powerful and compelling commentary on the human condition and it should not be missed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand