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Highlights: Tanznacht Berlin 2012 (Berlin)

Since 2000 Tanznacht Berlin is paying tribute to dance made in Berlin by presenting the artists and their work. The 7th edition continues this biennial tradition, but one single night is not enough: from 22 till 26 August TANZNACHT BERLIN 2012 presents new works and current trends of nearly 75 Berlin based artists.

The festival reaches its peak on the 25 August with an especially full programme of 12 hours of dance. From noon till midnight we present up to 20 different dance performances, premières, installations and one-to-one-performances. Put your own individual programme together and follow us through the festival. Use breaks to attend one of the sommer.talks, take a seat in The Waiting Room or simply relax on the extensive premises of the Uferstudios before visiting the next performance.

This year’s edition of TANZNACHT BERLIN 2012, presented by Tanzfabrik Berlin with its partners Uferstudios, ada Studio & Bühne für zeitgenössischen Tanz, Inter-University Center for Dance Berlin, mapping dance berlin and Tanz im August, focuses on Berlin, its artists and its inhabitants.

With X-Choreografen the festival goes ‘local’ at the Kurfürstendamm, looks back at Berlin’s past in Oral Dance Histories, works with children from Wedding in Ufer/Outside and We are the Monsters, unites hip-hop and contemporary dance in The Battle and poses questions about our relationship to Berlin in Metabolic Metropolis. (source: Tanznacht Website)

Grind
Jefta van Dinther, David Kiers, Minna Tiikkainen
24 August 2012, 21:00 h
25 August 2012, 22:30 h
Podewil, Klosterstraße 68, 10179 Berlin

Imagine a place that defies your senses. Imagine rhythms that affect your vision. Imagine a room where the dimensions of the space appear resilient. Imagine the pressure of sound transforming a body into vibrations. Imagine light that makes you perceive darkness. Grind offers this place to you – where the components of bodies, light and sound create connections that affect, confuse and move. Inspired by synesthesia, the performance seeks to challenge our grip on reality by suspending our senses and short-circuiting perception.


Oral Dance Histories
Peter Pleyer, Andrea Keiz, Arianne Hoffmann
Installation
25. August 2012, 13:00 – 23:00 h, Seminarraum 2

Oral Dance Histories – Auszug aus dem Gespräch mit Nele Hertling from Arianne Hoffmann on Vimeo.

In order to capture the history of contemporary dance in Berlin, Pe- ter Pleyer, Andrea Keiz and Arianne Hoffmann have adopted the tradition of oral transmission. Through personal interviews the protagonists, guides and innovators of Berlin’s dance scene express themselves in collaborative embroidery – including Irene Sieben, Ka Rustler, Felix Ruckert, Diego Agulló, Dmitry Paranyushkin, Nele Herting, Wibke Janssen and Kirsten Seeligmüller. Their anecdotes and views on the history of dance in Berlin are collected by the exhibition initiators in an exhibition of needlework, accompanied by edited sound recordings and selected photographs.

Concept: Peter Pleyer, Andrea Keiz & Arianne Hoffmann


Fountain
Jeremy Wade

25. August 2012, 16:00 + 19:00 h, Uferstudio 6

Fountain is a solo by Jeremy Wade that has been evolving since early experiments in 2010. The work proposes a generative sphere of uncertainty. Wade circumvents traditional audience-performer dynamics and facilitates a generous group experience that evolves into a sensual engine. Wade assumes the role of preacher, shaman, and fool, by offering himself as a medium to receive and transform the energy of the theater space taking the audience on an emotional and alchemical journey. Wade’s choreographic technique is a unique encounter of aesthetic, sociological, and neurological dimensions. He derives movement from intense attention to the multiplicity of impulses in the body that are drawn from neurological processes, social constructions of norm, and aesthetic decisions. The stage becomes an engine where the intersubjective actions/ reactions are propelled into space enveloping the audience for maximal sensation and association.


Der grüne Stuhl
Public in Private/Clément Layes
Premiere
25. August 2012, 20:30 h
26. August 2012, 19:00 h
Uferstudio 3

Clement_Layes_Der_gruene_Stuhl_(c)_Public_in_Private_NAH_DRAN

Der grüne Stuhl – by which we generally understand a piece of furniture to sit on and of a certain colour. Its purpose and possibili- ties seem largely known. In his work the French choreographer Clément Layes continually places this fundamental knowledge about the world of things in question. In the crossfire of artistry, philosophy and dance, a simple chair raises fundamental questions of life, places certainties in question and invalidates physical laws. With Der grüne Stuhl, Clément Layes exactly encircles that hidden gap between the simple word and the seat itself.

(source: Tanznacht Website)

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Caden Manson is a director, media artist, and teacher. He is co-founder of the media ensemble bigartgroup.com and network, blog, and publisher, contemporaryperformance.com. He has co-created, directed, video- and set designed 18 Big Art Group productions. Manson has shown video installations in Austria, Germany, NYC, and Portland; performed PAIN KILLER in Berlin, Singapore and Vietnam; Taught in Berlin, Rome, Paris, Montreal, NYC, and Bern; the ensemble has been co-produced by the Vienna Festival, Festival d’Automne a Paris, Hebbel Am Ufer, Rome’s La Vie de Festival, PS122, and Wexner Center for The Arts. Caden is a 2001 Foundation For Contemporary Art Fellow, is a 2002 Pew Fellow and a 2011 MacDowell Fellow. Writing has been published in PAJ, Theater Magazine, and Theater der Zeit. Caden is currently an associate professor and graduate directing option coordinator of The John Wells Directing Program at Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Drama.

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