Shared Difference
performance • installation • digital creation
Opiyo Okach choreographer / projection designer
Opiyo Okach is a dancer, choreographer and artistic director of GaaraProjects. He divides his time & develops work between France and Kenya.
Since 1999 his work has toured in Africa, Brazil, Europe & the US and been presented at a wide range of venues and festivals including Dancespace at St Marks New York, Festival Avignon, Rencontres chorégraphiques de Seine-Saint-Denis, Dance Umbrella, Yerba Buena Centre for the Arts in San Francisco, Theater der Welt, Pact Zollverein in Germany…
He has acted as a catalyst for the development of dance in East Africa and continues to support the emergence of a new generation of dance artists. He recently initiated ‘Performance Lab Nairobi’ - a collaborative platform for contemporary creation process at the GoDown Arts Centre in Nairobi, Kenya. He has received numerous awards including the ‘Rencontres chorégraphiques Africains’ in 1998, the ‘prix du Nouveau Talent Chorégraphiques SACD 2003’ as well as a ‘Prince Claus Award for Culture and Development 2005’.
In I996 Opiyo Okach & Faustin Linyekula form the first contemporary dance company in Kenya, La Compagnie Gàara. With its first creation, ‘Cleansing’, the company wins a prize at the African Choreographic Encounters 1998. ‘Cleansing’ opens the door to the international scene and marks the beginning of support by principle figures of French dance such as Régine Chopinot or Mathilde Monnier. From 1998 the Ballet Atlantique Régine Chopinot supports and partners the group through a series of residencies and choreographic exchange.
In 1999, in collaboration with the Centre Chorégraphique de Montpellier, the Ballet Altlantique supports the company’s new project consisting the solo ‘Dilo’ for which Opiyo Okach becomes known in Europe. Following presentation at the Plateaux de Biennale du Val-de-Marne in 2001 and Hivernales d’Avignon in 2002, the solo, ‘Dilo’ based on improvisation and instant composition work and inspired by the mythology of nomadic ethnic groups in eastern Africa tours internationally to over 17 countries.
Between 2000 & 2002 Opiyo Okach, with the support of a number of international partners, lays the bases for a long time choreographic development project in Nairobi. In 2002 the choreographic creation ‘Abila’ premieres in Nairobi and is presented at Ballet Atlantique and Centre National de la Danse in France, then subsequently tours in Eastern and Southern Africa and the Indian Ocean region as well as in Europe.
In 2003 the society of authors and dramatic composers (SACD) awards Opiyo Okach the prix du Nouveau Talent Chorégraphique 2003. SACD commissions him to create a new solo for Festival d’Avignon 2003. His collaboration with the renown improviser, Julyen Hamilton, gives birth to the solo ‘No Man’s Gone Now’. The work premieres at Centre National de la Danse in January 2004 and has since known international success. 2004 is rich in new transversal collaboration, notably with choreographer such as Thierry Niang, hosted in residency in Nairobi and Emmanuel Grivet.
Opiyo’s recent work, ‘shift…centre’, is an evolutive process in which audiences, local artists and company dancers occupy the same scenographic space. ‘shift…centre…’ premiered in Nairobi in 2005 and has toured in France, Germany, South Africa, Mozambique, Brazil and the UK. He is currently developing the choreographic project ‘Territories in Transgression’ interrogating today’s global polarisation. The first work of the project ‘Border Border Express’ premiered at the Rencontres Chorégraphiques Internationales de Seine-Saint-Denis in May 2009. Other works in development include ‘Body Evidence’ a solo, ‘What flag would it be if your body was a country’ - work for 9 performers, ‘The house that never walked’ - work for 8 performers, ‘The innocent, the guilty, the victim, the perpetrator’ - a multi-disciplinary work integrating digital creation.
Today Opiyo Okach is also artistic director of Gaara Dance Foundation - created in 2002 to consolidate the choreographic activity initiated in Kenya. Its activities include choreographic research, artist residency, choreographic exchange, support for creation and diffusion of work. Regional and pan African exchange such as the Dance Encounters (East African Dance Encounters 2003, Retracing Connections 2004, Encoding identities 2005) initiated in 2003 are part of its mission. Starting 2011 he initiates a new project - Performance Lab Nairobi – an artist, choreographic and audience development process placing the body within a broader contemporary creation context.
David Ritterhaus media artist
David Rittershaus, based in Frankfurt (Main), is working as a media artist in the field of performance, sound, visual art and technology. He studied Applied Theatre Studies at University of Giessen and recently graduated with his Interactive Sound Installation “Lost on the highest peak” supervised by Prof. Heiner Goebbels. Beside his studies he started working as a media artist in 2012 collaborating with composers, theatre directors, performers and choreographers. Beside others his work was presented at Festival a/d Werft in Utrecht, Frankfurt LAB, Naxoshalle Frankfurt, Theater Gessnerallee Zürich, Festspielhaus Hellerau Dresden, Theater Spohiensaele Berlin and Musiktage Donaueschingen. In 2016 he was working for MESO Digital Interiors in Frankfurt and in 2017 he will be involved in the NODE Forum and Choreographic Coding Production Lab in Nairobi. Furthermore he is a researcher of Motion Bank in Mainz since 2017.
Yann Leguay sound designer
Born in 1981 in France, lives in Brussels.
His approach to sound design for installation, performance and film centers on the materiality of sound. Both as visual artist, sound maker and reverse, he has participated in numerous exhibitions and festival in Europe and beyond. He also composes sound tracks for artist's films and participates in choreographic projects (with Ula Sickle, Studio Kabako...).
In several projects, sometimes under the name of Phonotopy, he regularly performs live improvisation in concert places and multimedia festivals. He is directing DRIFT a series on the ArtKillArt label and he edits and archives his own sound work on phonotopy.
Yann Leguayʼs work focuses on everything around sound. Materiality, diversion and tautology are the main ingredients of his work. By modifying the reality of the material (as sounds or real objects) he affects the sensibility of the viewer, changing the perception and relation with materiality. His interest on media and the players that work with it is a clear position on what we are making as utopian, wanting to produce perpetual and solid memory. By deconstructing the elements of this human need, he gives an overview and a distance on the global relation we have with objects and memory.
As installations or performances his work has been shown in numerous places and festivals in Europe and further.
In Parallel, heʼs also involved in choreographic projects (all the sounds creation for Ula Sickle since 2008, collaboration with Kabako in Kinshasa & Tangible Craft in Brussels) and composes noise and sound pieces for artist's films. Heʼs a co-founder of RadioFreeRobots collective, a radiophonic concept using synthesised voices and computer noise as the only source(«Radiodays» at DeApel, Amsterdam, «French May» in Hong Kong...).
He also founded the independent label ʻPhonotopyʼ, proposing a conceptual approach of recording medias and now curating the ʻDRIFTʼ Collection of Artkillartʼs label, inviting eriKm , Arnaud Rivière, Martin Téteault and DJ Sniff to produce an original series of a double LP record using a novel technic of crossing grooves, making randomized reading.
J-C Lanquetin scenographer
Jean Christophe Lanquetin is artist and scenographer, living in Paris. He teaches at the Haute Ecole des Arts du Rhin (Strasbourg), and is co-founder with François Duconseille of the Urban Scénos residency project (urbanscenos.org ). He works extensively with choreographers and artists from the African continent (Boyzie Cekwana, Faustin Linyekula, Andreya Ouamba, Sello Pesa, Fatou Cisse, Steven Cohen, Sammy Baloji, Nastio Mosquito, Unathi Sigenu…), and also for theater (with Catherine Boskowitz, Guy Régis Jr, Leyla Rabih…). His practice, whether collaborative or solo [including video, drawing, photography, installation and text], seeks to unpack the notions of the stage, representation and spectatorship, via context based projects and art based research, particularly in urban space, in various places over the world. He is currently preparing [with Catherine Boskowitz] a collaborative performance, Ordinary fictions, in link with inhabitants in an area of Medellin (Colombia), and then in the Caribean (Port au Prince and Fort de France), and France. His texts are regularly published by Chimurenga (Capetown – South Africa).
www.gaaraprojects.com
copyright © 2018 gaaraprojects
production@gaaraprojects.com