Last Landscape

A self-portrait facing a landscape

Teatro delle Passioni, Modena

28/10/2005 21:00
29/10/2005 19:00
30/10/2005 16:00

cast Josef Nadj ,Vladimir Tarasov
music Vladimir Tarasov
lighting Rémi Nicola
props Michel Tardif
masks Jacqueline Bosson
video Thierry Thibaudeau
texts Myriam Bloede
coproduced by Centre chorégraphique national d’Orléans, Festival d’Avignon, Emilia Romagna teatro Fondazione (Modène)
duration 1h
national première
in collaboration with AterDanza and Fondazione Teatro Comunale di Modena


Look with the whole body, like a painter, transpose a vision, create a show from that experience. This is what Josef Nadj is trying to do together with composer-percussionist Vladimir Tarasov. On the stage, images replace words, while a captivating dialogue weaves itself between music and dance. The musician-impro artist arranges his sounds and rhythms in a number of variations. The choreographer-dancer describes a subtle world with gestures and masks. His dance is a strange one. It seems to come from far away, capturing the small, physical, almost archaic movements which precede the creation of a work. From sequences to paintings, the space is constantly changing with the use of shadow and light, curious materials and surfaces, closing and distancing effects. Beyond time and with an enchanted rapport with objects that define his world, Josef Nadj choreographs each impulse behind each gesture. He restores the sketch. A man facing a landscape. Last Landscape, the last one. A self-portrait. The origin of this show is real place, a place which has marked the choreographer since his childhood. Near his home village in ex-Yugoslavia. There is a wild, desert-like and clay-earth area of land. In the past it was the home for nomadic tribes, and it is said that it has a miraculous source which is the subject of many took root. In a completely abstract way, with the mysterious sense of signs which is found in all his pieces, the artist performs his own journey. Facing the landscape, he wonders about the two-pronged aspect of his approach. Behind the man on stage is a plastician. So gradually, the actor fades and leaves matter, colour and energy to draw their own, different landscape.

From Kanjiza, in Vojvodina, ex-Yugoslavia, Josef Nadj settled in France at the beginning of the 1980s to hone is acting skills. He discovered contemporary dance with François Verret, Catherine Diverrès and Mark Tompkins and started up his own theatre company, Jel. In 1995, he was appointed as director of the Centre Chorégraphique National d’Orléans, and since then he has produced about twenty pieces. The inspiration for the main body of his work is drawn from his native village, but most of his creations are inspired by the work of his favourite authors such as Gesa Csath, Comedia Tempio (1990), Franz Kafka, Les Veilleurs (1999), Bruno Schulz, Les Philosophes (2001), and Raymond Rousse, Poussière de Soleils (2004). At the same time, he put on a number of exhibitions and installations such as sculptures on the theme of time, photography, drawings and miniatures which are like sketches in a creation logbook. Laboratories of vision or metaphysical mazes, irony is present in all Josef Nadj's works. They result from a ritual of the absurd, maintaining a number of different links between life and death, between what is living and what inanimate, between marvels and matter. Josef Nadj will be the Associate Artist for the 60th Avignon Festival in 2006. In Modena, he has already presented Woyzeck, based on the work by Büchner, and Le Temps du Repli.

Josef Nadj web site

The show



Programme
Vie Scena Contemporanea Festival is an Emilia Romagna Teatro Fondazione project, www.emiliaromagnateatro.com