Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Dancers, Kentridge inspire

- CHELSEA GEACH

THE dancers of Cape Town City Ballet may still be separated from the theatre, but in a stunning innovation of the socially-distanced era, they have made a sculpture gallery their new stage.

The ballet company teamed up with the Norval Foundation to create a dance film combining the artistry of its dancers with the sculptures of internatio­nally-renowned artist William Kentridge.

The 11-minute film, directed by Kirsten Isenberg and Nathalie Vijver, navigates through the picturesqu­e Norval Foundation gallery, cutting between different dancers interactin­g with Kentridge’s Why Should I Hesitate sculpture exhibition.

Debbie Turner, chief executive of CTCB, said the challenge Covid-19 presented to performers had pushed them to explore new digital ways of connecting with their audiences.

“This time it’s not a question of survival for Cape Town City Ballet – one of the longest standing ballet companies in the world – but one of growth and developmen­t,” she said.

“We’ll continue to explore new ways to engage with our audience, until the time we can come together again to experience the magic of a live performanc­e.”

Elana Brundyn, chief executive of the Norval Foundation, said that it was more important now than ever for different creative discipline­s to unite and support each other to transition according to the times, and keep artistic expression thriving. The film’s dynamic interplay between dance and visual art is an exciting example of such a collaborat­ion.

“Museums worldwide are looking at how dance – which until now has been performed almost exclusivel­y in theatres – can be experience­d in a more interactiv­e and experiment­al museum context,” Brundyn said.

“The museum setting allows dance artists to engage with and interpret the artworks in a way that transforms both artwork and dancer, in a synthesis that generates new and exhilarati­ng meanings and possibilit­ies.”

Peter Johnson composed an original score for the film, which drives the pace through periods of grace and calm, to drama and intensity.

The movement in the film was designed by participan­ts of CTCB’s Choreolab programme, introduced last year to develop choreograp­hy talent within the company.

For ballet dancer and Choreolab participan­t Gabriella Ghiaroni, the project was a challenge to combine her love for two different art forms.

“I’m a lover of all forms of art – I love going to museums and exhibition­s, so I was already well accustomed to William Kentridge,” she said. Ghiaroni took the theme of opposed harmony and translated it into choreograp­hy using contrastin­g movements.

Another section of her choreograp­hy is performed by principal ballerina Mariette Opperman, interactin­g with Kentridge’s giant whimsical Ampersand sculpture. “I like the weird and slightly strange and sometimes unexplaina­ble, so I was drawn to the absurdity of this mammoth sculpture with no definitive meaning behind it,” Ghiaroni said.

“This gave me a lot of freedom to come up with my own meaning behind the work I was going to create.

The film is available to watch for R50 at artsfundi.com, and the Norval Foundation reopens on Wednesday.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A SCREENGRAB of Mikayla Isaacs in an innovative 11-minute film involving Cape Town City Ballet dancers. The local company teamed with the Norval Foundation. |
SUPPLIED A SCREENGRAB of Mikayla Isaacs in an innovative 11-minute film involving Cape Town City Ballet dancers. The local company teamed with the Norval Foundation. |
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