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Stepping on the Right Path

We are in a shambles.” This is the headline statement for Catherine Young’s touring work “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto” which will make its way through Ireland at a time when it is perhaps needed most. Aside from the impending gloom of international wars and environmental catastrophe, for the past week Ireland has been at a standstill from ongoing fuel protests. Reactionary politics are creeping into the zeitgeist with camps forming both firmly for and against the protesting farmers and drivers, with politicians joining the convoy in hopes of extra votes. You are either thinking black or white, right or wrong. 

Catherine Young’s “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto.” Photograph by Patricio Cassinoni

And yet, when I talk to Young a sense of meditative reason pervades the air, even while the petrol stations are starting to run dry. She is a choreographer who looks to the distant past in order to make sense of the now. We discuss her multi-cultural dance training, our human need for ecological connection, and finding common ground. This conversation has been edited for clarity.

 

Your dance training was a little unorthodox compared to the path most others in Western Europe might take, tell us a bit about it.

As a kid I was learning in the Carl Orff method of music and dance and improvisation, the grounding in emphasis on music and creativity has fed through my work. I think being a choreographer was nearly inevitable. I was also doing ballet classes which frustrated me because we were never dancing, just repeating exercises. But as I got into my teens, since my mother couldn’t drive, there was nowhere around me in Dublin around me to keep up my training. It wasn’t until I moved to San Francisco that I actually started dancing again.

As I was doing my dance degree, I was waiting to go to a ballet class when I started to hear this amazing sound of drumming, and I looked through the window to see this full gymnasium hall of about sixty dancers and twelve drummers. I had never seen anything like it. It was an Afro-Haitian dance class, and so I signed up for it. It changed my whole trajectory and I never looked back. Most of my teachers in San Francisco were African American so we were being taught dance and its history through that lens. Valerie Watson was my teacher, and she’s very steeped in the Yoruba tradition, so dance for her was more than entertainment. Other teachers would teach us about the African American struggle in America and how dance played a role in that. Dance was political. It was a tool for survival, for building community, for making change, so dance became a really empowering thing. 

I still go a lot to West Africa to train and you see how dance functions in society. It’s not an art on the periphery, it’s integral to how the area works. I guess I’m channeling all of that now in this show, drawing inspiration from those cultures that haven’t lost the centrality of that. 

 

Your work tends to be quite involved in social issues. Was that intentional following your training?

It wasn’t really a deliberate choice to make socially engaged work, it was organic. When I came back to Ireland in 2005, coming from multicultural San Francisco, I wanted that mixture and I missed that. While I was on a residency in Kerry, I was looking for that vibrancy and colour and that’s how I came into working with asylum seekers and refugees. I knew those beautiful cultures were here and I wanted to engage with it and connect with it. Through that I met Ahmed Lulu who taught us Palestinian dabke and we got to take the show to Palestine. 

Studying all of these different dance cultures made me eventually come back to my own. I never grew up doing Irish dance but then you’re standing there in Rafah being asked by the locals to show some of your own only to realise I didn't have any. Over lockdown I started learning Sean-nós, and part of this show is that journey coming back to Irish culture.

Catherine Young’s “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto.” Photograph by Patricio Cassinoni

Catherine Young’s “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto.” Photograph by Patricio Cassinoni

Tell us a bit more about these influences that led you to creating “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto.”

When I was making work in Palestine, I was really struck by their relationship with the land. The people talk about olive trees like they’re their children, that when those trees are destroyed it feels like losing a child. That’s kind of been severed here, we buy our food in a supermarket and don't associate it with how it came up through the earth. I also read a beautiful book called Braiding Sweetgrass by a Native American biologist Robyn Wall Kimmerer where she discussed the notion of the ecological relationship, that when you don't have one you can commodify it, destroy it, and abuse it. There was also influence from the Irish writer Manchán Magan, and through him finding “Songlines” by Lynne Kelly which is about Australian Aboriginal practices. 

 

How does the manifesto element look in the work?

We begin with the chaos and mess of where we are now. I chose the title “Ciseach” because it means a screw-up or a mess in Irish, but it also means a wattled pathway over solid ground. So a ciseach is sort of the cause and the solution, it is the mess and the pathway out. Structurally we came up with six manifesto points. 

We start with the “Song of Amergin,” which is said to be the oldest poem in the Irish language, written by one of the Milesian druids that came to Ireland around 700BC. When he landed in Kerry he was said to have uttered this song which is all about inter-being, “I am the wind and sea,” it's a beautiful poem. It then just crashes into this party. We start with the opulence and bling, there’s a gold floor and dancers in club gear—it's a huge opening with all these people just having a great time. There's not a care in the world, a bit like the eighties or Celtic Tiger. The party then crashes because it's no longer sustainable. 

Catherine Young’s “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto.” Photograph by Patricio Cassinoni

Catherine Young’s “Ciseach | An Embodied Manifesto.” Photograph by Patricio Cassinoni

Sounds familiar!

Yeah, it’s kind of how we’re living now! Ultimately the dancers decide to restart with six manifesto points through the six parts of this show. 

 

A little like you’re now building a ciseach for people to navigate the natural world again.

Yeah. It feels quite tough especially for performers with AI right now. The performers and the musicians feel so alive in this work, the whole work feels so natural and vibrant. Even down to the set which has these branches from Shawbrook, a beautiful dance residency in the forest in Longford. A couple of trees had fallen from a storm so they were cut up and covered in these gold tops and are now used in the show. Everything is real.

 

“Cisearch | An Embodied Manifesto” tours across Ireland (Longford, Donegal, Limerick, Kerry, Cork, Dublin, Clare) from 18th April - 9th May. 

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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