Impermanence
Choreographer Rafael Bonachela Composer Bryce Dessner Music Features Another World by Anohni Lighting Designer Damien Cooper Stage Designer David Fleischer Costume Designer Aleisa Jelbart AUSTRALIAN STRING QUARTET Dale Barltrop Violin I Francesca Hiew Violin II Christopher Cartlidge Viola (Guest)* Michael Dahlenburg Cello *Christopher Cartlidge performs as guest violist with the ASQ for these performances. He appears courtesy of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. DANCERS Juliette Barton, Isabella Crain, Sabine Crompton-Ward, Davide Di Giovanni, Dean Elliott, Riley Fitzgerald, Jacopo Grabar, Liam Green, Luke Hayward, Telea Jensen, Dimitri Kleioris, Rhys Kosakowski, Chloe Leong, Jesse Scales, Emily Seymour, Mia Thompson, Chloe Young. Sydney Dance Company. Festival Theatre. Adelaide Festival Centre. Adelaide Festival. March 10-11 2021
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Impermanence Photo by Pedro Greig
Conceived in Paris after the Notre Dame fire, Rafael Bonachela’s Impermanence explores the phenomenon of change. No sooner had the Sydney Dance Company gone into rehearsal than the country was consumed by the devastating Summer bushfires of 2020. That season of horror had only just passed before the world went into lockdown with the advent of Covid 19, and the Sydney Dance Company along with so many wa driven into lockdown. For Bonachela and composer Bryce Dressner the changes occurring around them became the inspiration for Sydney Dance Company’s current work, Impermanence. Emerging from the ashes of isolation, Impermanence glistens like a glittering jewel in the Sydney Dance Company repertoire. Bonachela’s choreography is superbly complemented by Dressner’s evocative composition, played brilliantly by the august Australian String Quartet. This triumphant work elevates Sydney Dance Company to a new and exhilarating Parnassus of dance.
Impermanence Photo by Pedro Greig |
And so the cycle of change infuses the work with the shifting nature of life’s events. Bonachela’s pattern of dance from the soloist to the duet to the group to the full ensemble may appear repetitive to the non-discerning audience. This is the essence of life’s changes in Nature, in relationships, in the unexpected, in the tapestry of life’s journey. Each dancer, responding to the choreography adds their own character to the dance’s palette. It is vibrant, mesmerizing and carrying us from the agony of isolation and despair to the ecstatic elation at the victory of survival and regeneration. Through it all the Australia String Quartet transports us with the soulful sound of the cello, the urgent rush of the violin, the soothing strain of the viola and the reflective traverse of the violinist’s bow across the strings. Quartet and dancers fuse in an entrancing symphony of music and dance as Damien Cooper’s lighting design bathes the stage in the changing hues of the seasons or the fiery danger of the bushfire. Impermanence is not a mournful eulogy to loss but an affirming acknowledgement of the natural cycle of existence and humanity’s need to adapt to change.
As a final acknowledgement of the beauty and the changing nature of world, the fluidity of the dance and the rhythm of the strings merge with Anonhi’s Another World. In I need another world. Will there be peace? I Need another world. This one’s nearly gone.” the risk of destroying the environment becomes a potent warning and a plea to consider what it is that we value, and what it is that we need to change.
Sydney Dance Company in Impermanence |
Impermanence opens at the Canberra Theatre on June 4 2021. Don’t miss it!