Temal fiche

CION
Danse
prev
Vuyani Dance Theatre - Gregory Maqoma
Affiche - CION
next

CION

show
CION

Cion: Requiem of Ravel’s Bolero

In this piece the message of death and its dire consequences are infused through a lament to be able to confront a universe in which the age-old tropes of greed, power and religion have given rise to loss of life not as a natural phenomenon. Toloki, the professional mourner weaves through this virtual landscape of dissolution giving rise to a catharsis of universal grief that will conquer the sadness, the hard reality continuing to permeate the living confronted by death that is not their own, often so unexpected, brutal and merciless. Cion as in Zion, the African church is set in a graveyard, a church where the body is religion and the voices are personal. Cion: Requiem of Ravel’s Boléro, draws inspiration from creations by two artists: the character Toloki in South African author Zakes Mda’s novels Cion and Ways of Dying and music from French composer Maurice Ravel’s Boléro. It’s a universal story encompassing the past and the present that champions our ability to band together to share the burden of grief. Set in a graveyard with the persistent cries of people in mourning and the acappella music of Isicathamiya in our languages sang by a quartet to the creative arrangement and composition by Nhlanhla Mahlangu that vividly elicits emotions associated with the loss of life performed by nine dancers who are themselves possessed by the spirit and being one with the departed souls and finally lying them to rest for peace and humanity to prevail. Maqoma’s message through this work is that we need to pause for a moment and urgently think about the pain inflicted on others by the actions of others.

distribution

Conceiver, Choreographer : Gregory Maqoma

Musical Director and Composer : Nhlanhla Mahlangu

Costumes : BlackCoffee

Set Design and Technical Director : Oliver Hauser

Original Lighting Design : Mannie Manim

Sound Designer : Ntuthuko Mbuyazi

SEE DATES

compagny

compagny

The Vuyani Dance Theatre (VDT) is a contemporary African dance company founded in 1999 by Creative Executive Director Gregory Maqoma. After years of gracing international and local stages, VDT is positioned as one of the most cutting-edge, thought provoking and successful dance and theatrical organisations to have emerged in Africa. VDT is spot-on regarding its artistic objective of producing work that questions and challenges social values while, simultaneously, exploiting history as a launch pad for (material) research and development.

Various themes of concern to young people are also addressed through collaborative methods and forms that involve music and dance styles that are in keeping with the performers’ own lives. Vuyani Dance Theatre approach embraces - in a dynamic and theatrical way - the many tastes, the different motivations, and the diverse cultures that shape the uniqueness of the South African society. Such is achievable courtesy of a pool of diligent creators and dancers who invariably express themselves with artistic excellence.

The company has performed in Europe, the USA, Africa, Mexico and New Zealand. It has scooped top awards in South Africa for dance and choreography and has received international recognition and continues to do so.

VDT constantly finds co-creators and performers from all over the world. Hitherto, the interaction that includes ideas and empirical artistic participation has led VDT in the direction of efficacy. It can be stated without doubt, at the moment, that all who have been aligned (in turns) with VDT since inception have in one way or another gained from the organization.

CION_2019_023.JPG

Gallery

press

press

The New York Times

“South African dance and music combine at the Joyce Theater, in a work that explores grief, struggle and relief”

Financial Times

“As with the surreal novel by Zakes Mda that provides the first part of the title, time and place eventually kaleidoscope. We end up on the trail of a fugitive slave, then with Africans who died in the Middle Passage. Spiffed up in fedoras and comedy funeral weeds, these wandering ghosts have returned home for a final stomp before everlasting rest. They take after this gripping, poignant piece itself, inclining towards hope against all odds.”

Schedule

No records found.
No records found.

Must see

must see
Affiche - Odyssey

Odyssey

Affiche - What the day owes to the night

What the day owes to the night

Affiche - Sol Invictus

Sol Invictus