Feminine Mystique
Dresses, domestic chores, grief. A community of women more feral than feminine. Five performers wear a changing selection of 40 dresses that serve as both costume and prop.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Haneul Jung oscillates between the definition of the Korean word, man-il meaning “ten thousand days” and “what if.”[1] “Man-il,” the first of four solo works presented at the confluence of two rivers is where “두물머리 Dumulmeori (where two rivers meet)” begins. Situated in the phenomenal, what better place for a conversation between Australian choreographers Michelle Heaven and Alisdair Macindoe and Korean artists Chosul Kim and Jung. Billed as four artists, two countries, one show, conceived and curated by Brendan O'Connell, on the opening night in Sylvia Staehli Theatre at Dancehouse, time compresses and extends, and as it does, there is much to ponder. Presented as part of Melbourne Fringe, at Jung’s “crossroads” wavering between “lengthening and recoiling,” between the possibilities of “a shelter and an escape,[2] space is teased out to contract like an accordion.
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Dresses, domestic chores, grief. A community of women more feral than feminine. Five performers wear a changing selection of 40 dresses that serve as both costume and prop.
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