This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Body was Made

It's not often I feel left a little cold by beautiful male dancers moving in a space. But the first twenty minutes of Angelin Preljocaj's “MC 14/22 (Ceci est mon corps)” feels like a series of empty gesturesand takes a while to develop, presenting as it does a ritual cleansing to one side of the stage and to the other, dancers on trolleys, packaged and contorted like meat in containers. They seem to be merely posturing, and it's a little trite- bodies are ultimately meat: yes, we know. That's well-worn territory in dance.The whispering, too, is distracting. However, by the third scene, both the pace—and dancing—picks up and starts to flow beautifully.

Performance

Scottish Ballet: “MC 14/22 (Ceci est mon corps)” / “Emergence”

Place

Edinburgh Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, Scotland, August 18-20, 2016

Words

Lorna Irvine

Scottish Ballet perform Crystal Pite’s “Emergence” at Edinburgh International Festival. Photograph by Andy Ross

subscribe to the latest in dance


“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”

Your weekly source for world-class dance reviews, interviews, articles, and more.

Already a paid subscriber? Login

Based on The Last Supper, twelve men from Scottish Ballet representing Jesus' apostles, including Constant Vigier, Jamiel Laurence and Javier Andreu, bring full force and a paradoxical grotesque beauty to the piece. The sadism implicit in the punches and slaps to chests, and heads forced sideways, could be a comment on masculinity's downside, where brutality is favoured over tenderness. Or it is simply a statement about holy war, with all of the horror that implies.

In a tough series of tableaux, the men are either supine or strong; some, prostrate and limp are picked up and carried. Battle lines are clearly drawn in these movements, culminating in a singer being winded mid-song, and a truly extraordinary scene where one man is bound in gaffer tape as he solos, body part by body part, reducing his routine to bunny hops, then merely a pitiful wiggle of his toes. It's cruel, yet darkly humorous, eliciting uneasy chuckles from the audience. At times it is reminiscent of the allegorical films of Peter Greenaway, or during the more carnal scenes, the sexual and religious ecstasy implicit in performance artist Ron Athey's work. As the piece progresses, the soundscape by Tedd Zamal gets increasingly pulverising, the men are frozen intermittently in a painterly manner suggestive of religious frescos, and it all falls into place.

If Preljocaj provides the steak, Crystal Pite's “Emergence” could be the sorbet, refreshing although there is nothing too cute or sweet here. In quick, scurrying movements which make the ensemble seem like animated stop-frame motion characters, the dancers emerge from a mysterious black hole, looking like woodland creatures—albeit ones which are dark, eerie and seemingly veering towards the Gothic. Jay Gower Taylor's scenery is truly stunning, suggestive of an inferno or some swirling chaotic autumn from a nightmare.

At one stage, the female dancers (there is beautiful solo work in particular from Constance Devernay and Araminta Wraith here) advance towards the men like a gorgeous leggy army, or chess pieces sprung to life. The feeling of battles is swiftly undermined though, as the group gets swallowed up in one mass, and bodies tumble over and around each other, integrated like a human jigsaw. Pite plays with androgyny too, however. Sophie Martin dances topless with some male dancers, but there is never a sexual threat implicit in the work, as the men are similarly half-dressed, and the shaping is all big strides and wide limbs.

Creeping and starting to tiptoe, there is an almost childlike glee in the dancers' gait, like a game. The whole feels at times otherwordly, yet there are also hints of urban sass in the swinging hips and shoulders. Pite has spoken of the way bees build networks, and the way nature feeds into and informs her work. Towards the end, you could swear the dancers 'open' like pods, as they lie splayed on the floor and spread open arms. The footwork, endlessly scuttling across the floor in choppy restless little steps is certainly suggestive of the way insects manoeuvre, and the composition is always shifting. Owen Belton's gorgeous electro sound is a modernist treat after the more jarring first piece.

A glorious double bill (after a somewhat tentative start) which is another reminder of Scottish Ballet's superb and challenging ensemble work.

Lorna Irvine


Based in Glasgow, Lorna was delightfully corrupted by the work of Michael Clark in her early teens, and has never looked back. Passionate about dance, music, and theatre she writes regularly for the List, Across the Arts and Exeunt. She also wrote on dance, drama and whatever particular obsession she had that week for the Shimmy, the Skinny and TLG and has contributed to Mslexia, TYCI and the Vile Blog.

comments

Featured

Lucia Field, Family Ties
TALKING POINTES | Claudia Lawson

Lucia Field, Family Ties

Today I have the immense privilege of speaking with Lucia Field. Lucia grew up with her family in Sydney, but with her dad, Anthony, as the original Blue Wiggle. It's not the childhood you might imagine. As the Wiggles became global superstars, Lucia didn't see her dad for nearly nine months a year. Instead, Lucia grew up alongside her mom, her brother, and her sister, dancing and dreaming of becoming a ballerina. And it was not just a dream. Lucia's star was already on the rise. And by 13, she was accepted into the Australian Ballet School. In this exceptionally...

Continue Reading
A Collective Act of Storytelling
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

A Collective Act of Storytelling

The story began with an impulse to go back and give something back—to the performing arts traditions of India. Acclaimed British dancer and choreographer of Bangladeshi descent, Akram Khan, long known for dancing between worlds—contemporary dance and classical Kathak, decided to return to his roots.

Continue Reading
Looking Back to See Forward
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

Looking Back to See Forward

I step off the elevator onto the 5th floor of the Whitney Museum and I am awed by the spectacle, vastness, and ground shifting power of the “Edges of Ailey” exhibition. This tribute to Alvin Ailey and his universe—past, present, and future—not only lifts up its larger-than-life subject but it also, like a great ocean wave, raises up and carries forward everything in its wake.

Continue Reading
Good Subscription Agency