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Firing the Canon

The Thai classical dance form khon to most westerners brings about images of gilded and ornate centuries old dances, but there is a great deal of science to it. Consisting of 59 fundamental poses known as mae bot yai, it is highly codified. Where there is structure however there is room for disassembly. Pichet Klunchun is the man for the job. Running as part of London’s Queer East festival, which highlights LGBTQ+ art from East and Southeast Asia, “No. 60” is a duet born from decades of research and firsthand experience with the form. Dancing with Kornkarn Runsawang, Klunchun explores the architecture of khon, its geometry, and kinetic flow.

Performance

“No. 60” by Pichet Klunchun

Place

London’s Queer East festival, London, may 2026

Words

Eoin Fenton

Kornkarn Runsawang and Pichet Klunchun in “No. 60.” Photograph by Hideto Maezawa

The action takes place under a glittering heaven made out of a heavily sequinned fabric. With help from diagrams, sketches, and photographs of dancers from the past, the work is as much a theoretical lecture as it is a performance. The atmosphere is icy and detached, Zai Tang’s remixing of the gongs and chimes of a piphet ensemble echoes through the dark space. The traditional stuff is hypnotic, curved arms and hyper-flexed fingers gliding across space, Runsawang is especially gifted. Each position is specifically named: weaving a flower garland (no. 4), Naga curls its tail (no. 28), a Chinese man pulls out his intestines (no. 48). The deconstruction is equally compelling, their bodies clash, melding positions together to create new configurations. These emergent pathways from the traditional form are reminiscent of the works of Laban, Forsythe, and McGregor, but within this distinctly Thai dialect creates new realms of possibility in movement. 

Kornkarn Runsawang and Pichet Klunchun in “No. 60.” Photograph by Hideto Maezawa

Kornkarn Runsawang and Pichet Klunchun in “No. 60.” Photograph by Hideto Maezawa

The celestial firmament later descends, it suffocates the dancers like a prison, they alternate between their courtly paces and frenetic shaking. Sirens wail from handheld megaphones and the music intensifies, it's as if the system cannot handle this revolt. And the visual image is very reminiscent of dissidence and revolution, the dancers retreat and advance, they scream inaudible slogans through their microphones while running across the stage. Will it take political mobilisation to change the structures of khon? One’s mind is drawn to the incredibly strict lèse-majesté laws in Thailand, which induce harsh prison sentences on those who criticise the royal family, the same family who are patrons of the royal khon—a major theatre for the art form is on palatial grounds. To challenge a form intrinsically linked to the monarchy may be seen as blasphemous to some.

Klunchun’s research is highly academic and thorough, even just glancing at the website attached to the project feels like skimming through the introductory notes of a PhD viva. But behind the hefty research is something human, a demand for change, an interrogation of the past. To the uninitiated the chaos may seem like a major gear shift from the preceding action, through the noise it is a little difficult to understand exactly what it is that Klunchun is trying to say both metaphorically and literally. But as an experiment, and an abstraction of an ancient form, “No. 60” is an intelligently made, compelling example of what happens when we fight the limits of what we inherit. Klunchun, in this rare performance in London, proves his work is well worth mentioning in the discourse surrounding classical dance forms. 

Eoin Fenton


Eoin (they/he) is a dance maker and writer based in Cork (Rep. of Ireland), and London (UK). They have danced across Ireland and London in venues including The Place, Project Arts Centre Dublin and Galway Cathedral. Eoin graduated with a BA in Choreography from Middlesex University in 2024 and began writing as part of the Resolution Reviews programme. They are a regular contributor to A Young(ish) Perspective. 

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