For his new creation, the choreographer Boris Charmatz fills the Cour d'honneur du Palais des papes with a horde of 26 children aged from 6 to 12. Inspired by the nocturnal vision, in the Cour d'honneur, of a crane building up the stage and tiers, Boris Charmatz's piece is in the very line of régi, one of his previous shows where choreographing machines were seizing the dancers' inert bodies. Yet the balance of power is more disturbing and intricate in enfant, and its univocity demands nothing but being revived. Nine dancers catch the children's delicate bodies, raise them up in the air and make them fly, hug them and make them glide, with such determination that the children are left with no choice but speaking their words and ask: what keeps on dancing in childhood in spite of everything? and what does childhood inspire through dancing? The place may be a Cour d'honneur, but it is also a playground - a matter of gravity, in every sense of the word. In the foreword of his work L'Inhumain, the French philosopher Jean-François Lyotard wrote: "Devoid of speech, incapable of correct posture, hesitant about the objects of his interest, unable to decide what is good for him, insensitive to common reason, the child is eminently human because his distress announces and promises every possibility. His original view on humanity, which condemns him to be a hostage of the adults, shows the latter how much they lack humanity, and also encourages them to become more human." Fond of reversals, Boris Charmatz expects the children to revive the spectator's childhood through feelings that some of them are longing to blot out forever. Each gesture could be subversive, a powerful magnet drawing to the unknown; a genuine although faltering relearning of freedom, which could lead to an ephemeral republic of children. JLP
Distribution
choregrapher Boris Charmatz machines Artefact / Alexandre Diaz, Frédéric Vannieuwenhuyse lignt Yves Godin sound Olivier Renouf bagpipe Erwan Keravec costumes Laure Fonvieille choregrapher assistant for the children Julien Jeanne
with Eleanor Bauer, Nuno Bizarro, Matthieu Burner, Olga Dukhovnaya, Julien Gallée-Ferré, Lénio Kaklea, Maud Le Pladec, Thierry Micouin, Mani A. Mungai and the children Perle Béchu-Quaiser, Eliott Bourseau, Théotim Bourseau, Léon Cassin, Lisa Cazoulat, Rémi Cazoulat, Abel Charmatz, Marguerite Chassé, Tikal Contant-Ricard, Noé Couderc, Zaccharie Dor, Elio Fouilleul, Mathieu Guidoni, Cédric Lamotte-Lenoir, Sasha Goasduff-Langlois, Salomé Lebreton, Emma Lecoq-Vinagre, Youenn Louédec, Joseph Michard, Louane Mogis, Lou-Andréa Paulet, Emma Perreau, Raphaëlle Piechaczyk, Adèle Richard, Mathilde Richard, Hypolite Tanguy
Production
production Musée de la danse / Centre chorégraphique national de Rennes et de Bretagne coproduction Festival d'Avignon, Théâtre de la Ville-Paris, Festival
d'Automne à Paris, Internationales Sommerfestival Hamburg et Siemens Stiftung dans le cadre de Schauplätze, Théâtre national de Bretagne (Rennes), La Bâtie-Festival de Genève, Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Bruxelles) avec le soutien du Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication-DRAC Bretagne, de la Ville de Rennes, du Conseil régional de Bretagne, du Conseil général d'Ille-et-Vilaine, de Rennes Métropole et d'Arkéa Banque entreprises et institutionnels en collaboration avec la Ligue de l'enseignement d'Ille-et-Vilaine
Par son soutien, l'Adami aide le Festival d'Avignon à s'engager sur des coproductions.