IMPRESSIONS: Russell Maliphant

IMPRESSIONS: Russell Maliphant

Published on February 13, 2012
ACharlotte MacMillan

The Rodin Project in Paris

IMPRESSIONS: Sadler's Wells London / Russell Maliphant

Le Projet Rodin (The Rodin Project)

Choreography: Russell Maliphant

Lighting: Michael Hulls

Music: Alexandre Zekke

Sets/Décor: Es Devlin and Bronia Housman with Russell Maliphant

Costumes: Stevie Stewart

Rehearsal Director: Dana Fouras

Technical Team: Andy Downie, Jon Beattie, Ben Walker

Théâtre National de Chaillot, Paris

February 9, 2012


 

The Birth of a Dance

© Ann Moradian for The Dance Enthusiast
 
Premieres are tricky... but being lulled to sleep during a dance performance is never a good sign. I assume that some of the weaknesses in Russell Maliphant's The Rodin Project will be worked out by the time it arrives in New York.
 
Alexander Zekke's music for this production is beautiful in and of itself. I keep hearing that sweet, low voice of the opening cello. It enters my blood stream. I mean, it's that beautiful! The movement, however, happens in a world apart from the music. Clear and often abrupt shifts in the score seem uncalled for and unrelated to the dance. This disconnect appears without purpose and, in spite of its beauty, I don't find the the lulling quality of the music helpful.
Russell Maliphant's The Rodin Project- Photo ©Charlotte MacMillan
 
The first half of the The Rodin Project is all white on white, with costumes (that remind me too much of diapers) in the same off-white tone as the the fabric that is hung and piled on stage, alluding to marble columns and marble quarries. The second half of the dance is black on black, referring, I assume, to the bronze that Auguste Rodin also sculpted with. Russell Maliphant's palette choice is understandable, but it carries with it a serious challenge to the dance's visibility.

 
The lighting by Maliphant's long-time collaborator, Michael Hulls, aims for atmosphere and feeling, but I can't see the dance or the dancers. There is an interesting moment where the partial lighting from behind almost works--the deep red tones hinting at the kind of heat that softens bronze-- but overall, the dancers are hidden from us in a way that doesn't serve.
 
We want to see this dance, and these dancers. They are strong and beautiful, even if underutilized.  Three women: Ella Mesma, Carys Staton and Jennifer White, seem decorative rather than integral to the piece. The male-female partnering feels almost formulaic. It is the men alone who have the interesting choreography in this work.
 
A capoeira-like duet between Tommy Franzen and Thomasin Gülgeç holds some lovely moments. The men move together with a smooth power and fluid control I have seldom seen. The duet in the second half, with Tommy Franzen and Dickson Mbi, is unforgettable. Franzen and Mbi move up and down and upside-down the face of a black wall, defying gravity as gently as if they were in free fall. We know that  great effort must be required to hang by one hand and slide smoothly down the side of a wall, but we don't see it and we don't feel it. Instead we feel the tenderness of cat feet and kindness as the men  help each other explore this vertical surface.It is impossible to ignore the reference to Rodin's masterpiece, The Gates of Hell, because of the sculptural play along the vertical plane. But it remains a reference to an inspiration, rather than an interpretation or reproduction of another artist's work.
Russell Maliphant's The Rodin Project- Photo ©Charlotte MacMillan

 
The highlight of the evening was a solo performed by Dickson Mbi. This one is really black on black, with Mbi's dark skin sculpted by the light but, finally, just enough light to see. Mbi's performance is brilliant and everything comes together here, visually, viscerally, emotionally and intellectually. Mbi pops from one precise form to another, creating a kinetic 'strobe light affect' . Interspersed between pure abstract movement are moments of passionate expression, measured carefully, but escaping nonetheless, like built up steam. This must be the "popping" (as opposed to hip-hopping) aspect of Maliphant's exploration in this work.
With the sound of metal hammering against metal, I experience the birth of sculpture, with its own structure, yearnings and necessities. I am particularly struck by the contradiction between the impersonal quality of metal and the very personal expression Rodin imbued on his most potent works.
 
It would be satisfying to say that The Rodin Project illustrates the brilliance of Rodin's work throughout, but it doesn't. Not yet, anyway. There are other beautiful moments, to be sure. But, apart from these more vivid sections, the overall work, at this stage, is oomph-less; the the use of a strobe light at the end seemed like a cheap way to try to wake us up. Still, I am curious to see this piece a year from now.

 
 

 


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