Choreographed
by Raphael Bonachela – Composed by Bryce Dessner
Stage design
by David Fleischer - Costume Design by Aleisa Jelbart
Lighting
designed by Damien Cooper – Music by the Australian String Quartet
Canberra Theatre,
4th & 5th June 2021.
Performance on 4th June reviewed by Bill Stephens.
It is the
music that drives Raphael Bonachela’s choreographic inspiration. It was during
a conversation with composer Bryce Dessner following the Notre Dame Cathedral
fire in 2019, while both were reflecting on the impermanence of human life, the
planet and human relationships, that the inspiration for “Impermanence” began
to emerge.
Originally a
40 minute work, the first iteration of “Impermanence’, responding to Dessner’s score
composed specifically for the Australian String Quartet to play live on stage
during the performance, was in rehearsal for its first performances on the
stage of the Sydney Opera House. Three days before the opening, the Covid-19
pandemic lock-down caused the Opera House season to be cancelled.
As it
happened, the lock-down also coincided with the 2019 bushfire crisis which
overwhelmed Australia. Dessner himself was deeply affected by the images coming
out of Australia of the bushfire devastation, so when approached by Bonachela
for more music to extend the work into a full-evening presentation, he readily
agreed, and it is this extended version that Canberra audiences were treated to
during this season.
Occasionally
the ensemble pauses or drops into sections of complicated unison variations,
their movements dictated by the urgency of Dessner’s score. For 65 minutes,
non-stop, 16 super-fit dancers jump, twirl, twist, writhe and contort their
bodies around the floor. As the work progresses the backdrop slowly ascends to reveal
another brightly lit backdrop which throws the dancers into silhouette.
The dancers now form various groups and combinations, each working independently of the other, with arms and legs shooting out unexpectedly forming beautiful sculptural shapes and patterns. The result is both mesmerising and fascinating, but happening so quickly that it is hard to remember exactly what you saw, within seconds of seeing it. Impermanence?
Punctuating
the predominately ensemble sections were a series of intricate, short muscular
solos. Those by Chloe Leong and Dimitri Kleioris caught this reviewer’s eye.
Other dancers also impressed but were not easy to recognise in the sometimes subdued
lighting.
“Impermanence”
ends surprisingly with an emotional solo performed by a male dancer to the song
“Another World” composed by Anohni, the lyrics concluding with the words…
“I need another place. Will there be peace?
I
need another world. This one’s nearly gone.”
A deeply
felt response to a perplexing time “Impermanence” is a stunning addition to the
long line of compelling dance works created by Raphael Bonachela for the Sydney
Dance Company.
Photos by Pedro Greig.
This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au