When we were kids, we believed in magic movements – I don’t know where we got that from but we got it; I myself remember using one to see off a troublesome priest. As adults we haven’t lost the belief, though we stay discrete about it and sometimes, thanks to academic psychology, even think such movements mere brain flubbery.
Aurélien Dougé’s wonderful solo dance performance, Aux Lointains, that is to say, Dougé’s body and will in the low hum of an organ continuo and the shifting dark and light over the about 100 square meters of stage, shows that we kids were right to believe and adults are, too.
Magic movements do exist, there are people skilled in them and they work just fine in the real world, stimulating pleasure, understanding and Imagination – things we can’t really get enough of.
Aux Lointains (“In the distance” or “Remembrance”), is intended as a choreography of remembrances and its 45 minutes or so of precise and deliberate movement reveals to the spectator how to find a body’s place not just in past-time, but, strikingly, in space. “Reveals” because it uses movement magic and “find”, because the movement proves (as it must) that space is a thing as well as a property, like gravity or light. So, as with light or gravity, a body has to negotiate it, find its place within it.
For this spectator, the movement magic goes something like this:
Dougé establishes “space” by nonchalantly appearing suddenly in the stage area, from left, as I recall, from behind the seating. He then moves a hand, then both, then both hands along with his feet, then his legs and arms. Seemingly simultaneously, he shows all this mobile body in light of his torso and head. This movement defines the form and shape of Dougé as a body and, at the same time, through the defining movement, points the form of himself as a will. As he defines his body and will, he is also moving into the stage, which I am perceiving from his body and will. It is making room for him. I see that it defines and shapes itself around Dougé, in and over his wake.
At some point along the 45 minutes of Dougé’s performance, I am convinced that space is not occupied but fit into; that a body finds a place, a body does not take it. Remembrance, but also identity and culture and so much else, is exactly this: making into, finding and fitting into a thing that appears so vast as to be void. And with this sense of things, I recall the experience of elegance and poise, feel here and alive, remember the Zen notion of presence.
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I saw "Aux Lointains" by Aurélien Dougé, cie Inkörper, at Atelier de Paris CDCN, 29 November 2024. The performance was produced for the Atelier de Paris CDCN and part of Swiss Dance Week 2024, sponsored by the Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris. Creation, set and performance by Aurélien Dougé with assistance on choreography by Cindy Van Acker and assistance in lighting by Luc Gendroz and live sound by Rudy Decelière.
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