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Guest performance Teaterhuset Avantgarden,
Trondheim April 2000
A Journey In Discomfort
This performance becomes an unsettling experience as it maneuvers
through grotesque, spastic and disturbing forms of expression.
Yet it is precisely because the audience is imprisoned in
the 'disgusting' that the performance is so strong.
Øyvind Jorgensen takes us into a disturbing world of
crippled human creatures, grotesque in body language and confused
in the soul. Spastic creations who creak at the joints. Creatures
who try to fly, but melt instead. Who balance on the edge
of this performance's many precipices - in a twisted landscape.
This production is a manifestation of these dancers' in-depth
study of a physical and mental high-wire act, and an extraordinary
tribute to the body's possibilities. The body is presented
as pure matter, detached from the spirit and soul. The experience
can be best likened to witnessing a dance of death where the
citizens of the cemetery have wakened to some kind of existence.
The music builds, creating a sucking, trancelike mood - a
gasping for breath. This ugliness is contrasted by the production's
thorough, simple aesthetic in light, set and costume. The
light design creates a range of moods, and goes from milk-white,
cold -enhanced by almost naked, white bodies and colourless
faces - to a warm sun-drenched atmosphere. The characters
live in relation to each other, yet are apparently without
without dialogue and communication, without empathy and emotion.
However, moments of communication sweep across the stage with
the warm golden light. The dancers take us on a journey into
the inner world of discomfort. With its inadvertent, introspective
form of expression, this performance forces a feeling upon
us of being witness to something we would rather not see,
would rather not display: our own and society's hidden -and
unpleasant - sides. It is by insisting on a looming nausea
that the performance grows so strong. While we wait for some
resolution, some liberating 'normalcy', they hold us tightly
in nausea. "Manøvrering i kupert landskap"
has a great capacity for touching its audience. This is not
the case with every dance performance one sees.
Idun Hagen Adresseavisen May 20000
Guest performance Carte Blanche, Oct. 99
"Impressive mastery of the body in a pure performance
where restriction and resistance in movement combine to create
stasis. The weekends guest performance from Oslo offers
us noted Norwegian dancers who possess great integrity of
movement. Manøvering I Kupert Landskap shows us the
body and terrain in a way anyone despite their physicality
could recognise themselves in. However, recognition
is not the only prerequisite for communication (...) the performance
is thoroughly developed and manoeuvres with artistic confidence
on the basis of solid dance skills and sober scenography,
showered with poignant musical moments ... the twitching legs
jerking as if commanded by electrical impulses, the
swaying pirouettes accompanied by sounds of hissing and buzzing
create a surreal and futuristic performance that is well worth
visiting ..."
Marit Strømmen, Bergens Tidene, October 1999
Black Box Theatre premiere, September 1999
"Øyvind Jørgensen is an exceptional dancer
and choreographer. He made a big impression with Songs Of
The Last Hour (1997), where he was celebrated as a Butoh expert
with a highly personal mode of expression. This is further
developed in Manøvering I Kupert Landskap, performed
with Ellen Johannesen and Reidar Sjøset. These two
dancers have grasped much of Jørgensens movement
vocabulary, adding fine nuance to his choreography.
(. . .) this darkness, the twisted and anything but
polished - is what Jørgensen seeks in his choreography
and his narrative on co-existence and civilisation. The spastic
spasms, the bodys contortions and controversial way
of moving, simultaneously imply insanity, extreme finesse,
and comedy."
Inger-Margrethe Lunde, Dagsavisen, September 1999
Øyvind Jørgensen is a choreographer who has
mastered many different modern dance genres from pure
abstract movement, to cabaret. Those of us who have followed
Jørgensens work form the 80s, have followed
an artist who has never been afraid to take chances or follow
new directions regardless of criticism. A simple functional
set by Harald Fenn is maximised by light designer Petter Steen
and costume designer Franz Schimdt, who show a genuine sensitivity
to the choreographers intentions. (...) This performance
is one of the most communicative I have seen in a long time.
The body language is intense and gripping sometimes
beautiful and sometimes ugly and grotesque. (...) This time
Jørgensens connection to the aesthetics and stylistic
elements of Butoh are even more obvious, and it is good to
see a choreographer who is so consistent in his choices.
Lise Nordal, Morgenbladet, September 1999
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