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Theatre-going

Empreintes” featuring two new creations by Jess & Morgs and Marcos Morau, reads as a choreographic response to Walter Benjamin’s reflections on the work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction. As its title suggests, the evening revolves around the idea of imprints as explored through dance: an art form so fluid and ephemeral that it resists permanence and fixed form. Deeply shaped by the Palais Garnier, the venue of their première and a space to whose symbolic aura both works remain intimately bound, the double bill centres on the relationship between technology and art while also opening onto key aesthetic questions about the boundaries between audience and performer, reality and fiction, and originality and replication.

Performance

Paris Opera Ballet: “Arena” by Morgann Runacre-Temple and Jessica Wright / “Étude” by Marcos Morau

Place

Palais Garnier, Paris, France, March 11, 2026

Words

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti

Paris Opera Ballet in “Arena” by Morgann Runacre-Temple and Jessica Wright. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

The dance-film duo Morgann Runacre-Temple and Jessica Wright opened the evening in electrifying fashion with “Arena.” As the curtain rises, we are confronted with a stripped-down stage, divested of its wings, where D. M. Wood’s lighting and Sami Fendall’s set immediately establish an atmosphere of elegance and compositional rigour, together with a carefully calibrated balance of colour, form, and volume. The stage picture is stark: a space delimited by a black panel, above which hangs a vast white screen that, when turned towards the audience, becomes a surface for projected moving images.

Each performer is marked by a number on the costume, suggesting an atmosphere of selection, exposure, and control, as though the piece were unfolding somewhere between an audition, a survival game, and a dystopian ritual. Sixteen artists dance in fluid yet forceful patterns that both quote and undo the classical vocabulary, gathering momentum as the work unfolds. When they rest against the back wall and the camera moves in close, allowing us to see the sweat and fatigue usually concealed by the depth of the stage, hyperrealism emerges as a key component of the work’s artistic language. The cameras themselves become performers: operated by dancer Nine Seropian and artist Lola Famery, they invade the stage, capturing, pursuing, and magnifying movement. Loup Marcault-Derouard, in the role of the soloist “N°81,” stands at the point where the dramatic lines converge, serving as a crucial point of contact between the ballet’s world and the audience. His gaze, projected and enlarged on screen, eloquent and unsettlingly direct, while his dancing remains deeply expressive and magnetic.

Paris Opera Ballet in “Arena” by Morgann Runacre-Temple and Jessica Wright. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

Paris Opera Ballet in “Arena” by Morgann Runacre-Temple and Jessica Wright. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

An alarm is triggered; a red light signals danger. A sense of imminent threat runs through the work. The dancers are bound together by a kind of visceral bond, evoking at times the internal violence of a competitive society, but also the solidarity that can emerge under pressure, expressed in the ensemble’s collective, almost organism-like movements, both in large groups and in duets. As they remain recognisably performers rather than fictional characters, reality and theatrical fiction blur. The cameras turn towards groups, bodies, faces, and details, following the performers into spaces we would not normally see, bringing invisible, routine moments to the fore and allowing us to watch them quench their thirst backstage or glance at their phones. The audience is left uncertain where to look in this perpetual music video in the making, newly aware of the power that screens continue to exert over our habits of attention, while Mikael Karlsson’s outstanding synth-driven score, danceable and techno-inflected, heightens the sense of disorientation. At one point, Thomas Stroppel’s voice promises over the music, “You will be happy,” a phrase that only deepens the work’s ambiguity.

One of the work’s most powerful moments comes when we see, on screen, Marcault-Derouard running through the empty Palais Garnier, seemingly terrified by the camera pursuing him. In this striking sequence, interior and exterior perspectives, spatial invention, and metatheatre converge in a way that feels painfully relatable in an age of constant surveillance and invasive image-making. When he returns to the stage, apparently driven back with no escape, he is subjected to the harsh light of his colleagues’ smartphones. His fear, discomfort, and disorientation become palpable. The piece culminates in an explosion of images, a fitting ending for a work that invites us to reflect on the possibilities and limits of vision itself. The camera becomes an instrument of knowledge as much as of representation: it opens up new territories, interacts with the dancers in the moment of performance, and multiplies the act of spectatorship, drawing audience and performers alike into a constantly shifting economy of looking.

Laurène Lévy in “Étude” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

Laurène Lévy in “Étude” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

Marcos Morau’s “Étude” reflects on images and their infinite reproducibility as these are bound up with the process of rehearsal and, more deeply still, with the bending of the body to the demands of art, inviting us to think of performance itself as a process of production. A dancer, Laurène Lévy, appears slightly lost before the curtain in the bare light of the theatre, repeating in slow motion the codified, ritualised gestures of a classical bow. In her ecru tutu and with a huge bouquet in her arms, everything about her appearance is perfectly balletic except for the knee-high socks.

Behind a black veil hanging from above, spectral copies of her gradually emerge, men and women dressed identically in costumes splendidly designed by Silvia Delagneau, as though in a nightmare of endless repetition applied to theatrical form. The iconic curtain of the Palais Garnier, the original dating from 1875 and designed by Jean-Baptiste Lavastre and Auguste Rubé at Charles Garnier’s own request, already contains a captivating visual illusion: it is a wooden structure painted to resemble draped fabric, a technique chosen because real velvet on that scale would have been too heavy and would have dulled the acoustics of the room. Max Glaenzel, the set designer, extends this logic by reproducing the painted curtain twice more, each successive version slightly more faded, so that scenic space itself becomes subject to multiplication.

The score, created expressly by Gustave Rudman in collaboration with Morau, elusive and rhythmically abrasive, accompanies, disperses, and reshapes the rehearsal-like vocabulary of stretching, warming up, and technical exercises performed by all twenty-nine dancers around a circular red-velvet barre, now without tutus and dressed in overalls. Andrea Fàbregas’s bright lighting heightens the plasticity of movement and the sculptural tension of poses held against gravity.

One of the strongest moments comes when, after the barre has disappeared, an enormous reproduction of Garnier’s chandelier is lowered before the astonished ensemble. They seem almost to venerate it, opening and closing around it like the petals of a vast flower, themselves rendered interchangeable within a single ceremonial mechanism. The chandelier lights up like a heartbeat while the dancers yield to excited, tightly coordinated movements touched by theatrical excess. As the music intensifies and the chandelier begins to oscillate, the work reaches a strange fever pitch.

At the end, the stage is flooded with light as the rear of the stage opens onto the gilded, almost adytum-like space so rarely seen: the famous Foyer de la Danse, opening the visual field to a depth of almost fifty metres. In a game of mirrors, part of the rear set reflects both the enormous reproduced chandelier and the real one hanging at the centre of the theatre, creating an infinite mise en abyme. What follows is a strange, dreamlike procession in which the women in tutus form diagonal lines of force directed towards the back of the stage, subverting the traditional Paris Opéra’s défilé. The piece leaves us with unsettling questions: who is watching, and who is performing? Is going to the theatre not itself a kind of performance, a codified collective act?

Paris Opera Ballet in “Étude” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

Paris Opera Ballet in “Étude” by Marcos Morau. Photograph by Yonathan Kellerman | OnP

This is one of the season’s most notable contemporary productions. Throughout the evening, one was struck by the wonderful costumes, all designed and produced by the Palais Garnier ateliers, which conveyed a sense of refined craftsmanship, and by the absolute commitment of the ensemble, whose dancers, among them Nathan Bisson, Ida Viikinkoski, Caroline Osmont, Luciana Sagioro, Koharu Yamamoto, Hugo Vigliotti, Claire Teisseyre, Osiris Onambele Ngono, Alexander Maryianowski and many others, were unfailingly superb. Nonetheless, as dance here so often gives way to gestures, runs, warm up routines and stretches, “Empreintes” seems to call for a reading less as a ballet than as a kind of installation work, reflecting on spectatorship itself while quietly asking what it means to attend the theatre today, in an age of constant media reproduction of bodies and images, how that experience is shaped by social rituals and conventions, and what part the theatre, as a historically charged setting, still plays in this dynamic. 

In a perhaps unintentionally ironic twist, the interval lasted an unusually long thirty minutes. During that time, much the same spectacle as the one on stage unfolded through the corridors, staircases and gilded halls of the Palais Garnier, as spectators moved through the break with deliberate slowness, waiting their turn at the most photogenic spots, posing beside statues, taking selfies by busts and filming themselves in mirrors. By the end, the audience itself seemed to have been absorbed into the work, caught up in the grotesque spectacle of endless participation in the rituals of cultural consumption and their subtle subversion, under a regime of infinite replication and within a self-imposed panoptic order.

Elsa Giovanna Simonetti


Elsa Giovanna Simonetti is a Paris-based philosopher researching ancient thought, divination, and practices of salvation at the École Pratique des Hautes Études. With over a decade of ballet training, she studied History of Dance as part of her Philosophy and Aesthetics degree at the University of Bologna. Alongside her academic work, she writes about dance.

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