group, commission
2022
An inter-dependency that is needed
for everyone to be able to move,
move closer, move in,
and move apart.
Sensitivity to a presence that is not merely alongside, but an attention that notices the subtlest changes in mimic and expression, posture and tone.
A being, present.
For his group choreography Ecto-Fictions, Ian Kaler revisited his 2010 graduation production Save a horse ride a cowboy. Kaler, who found his love for horses at the age of 6. The PARASOL participants explored connections between his choreographic work and the interaction, (non-verbal) communication with horses and contextualized them within the movement practice of riding.
Ecto-Fictions develops a fictitious documentary stage narrative that addresses questions concerning togetherness and cohesion. The title already alludes to the quality of an ‘external’ perception and reflects on processes of projection and ascription in the interaction and encounter with animals. Ecto-Fictions represents the attempt to create a space for enhanced and utopian visions of corpo*realit*ies, where attributions and classifications can be studied.
Artistic Direction, Choreography, Text:
Ian Kaler
Performance:
Alex Bailey, Camilla Schielin, Júlia Rúbies Subirós, Shahrzad Nazarpour, Theresa Scheinecker
Music, Soundtrack:
Hermione Frank aka rRoxymore
Setting:
Stephanie Rauch
Set Construction:
Marco Tölzer
Costume:
Johanna Frahm
Light Design:
Victor Duran
Cinematography:
Diara Sow
Video Design, Editing:
Dafne Narvaez Berlfein
Gaffer:
Nick Prokesch
Best Boy Grip:
Sebastian Bauer, Marco Tölzer
Voice Over Speaker:
Francine Belinga
Voice Over Recording:
Andreas Hamza
Horsemanship Workshop:
Schottenhof – Zentrum für Tiergestützte Pädagogik
Volting Workshop:
Hanna Tavolato
Production Management:
das Schaufenster
Coproduction:
Ian Kaler and Tanzquartier Wien
Supported by the City of Vienna, Department of Cultural Affairs, and the NATIONAL PERFORMANCE NETWORK – STEPPING OUT, funded by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media within the framework of the initiative NEUSTART KULTUR. Assistance Program for Dance.
Original photos:
Eva Würdinger
Photo collage:
Johnny Chang
For his group choreography Ecto-Fictions, Ian Kaler revisited his 2010 graduation production Save a horse ride a cowboy. Kaler, who found his love for horses at the age of 6. The PARASOL participants explored connections between his choreographic work and the interaction, (non-verbal) communication with horses and contextualized them within the movement practice of riding.
Ecto-Fictions develops a fictitious documentary stage narrative that addresses questions concerning togetherness and cohesion. The title already alludes to the quality of an ‘external’ perception and reflects on processes of projection and ascription in the interaction and encounter with animals. Ecto-Fictions represents the attempt to create a space for enhanced and utopian visions of corpo*realit*ies, where attributions and classifications can be studied.
Artistic Direction, Choreography, Text:
Ian Kaler
Performance:
Alex Bailey, Camilla Schielin, Júlia Rúbies Subirós, Shahrzad Nazarpour, Theresa Scheinecker
Music, Soundtrack:
Hermione Frank aka rRoxymore
Setting:
Stephanie Rauch
Set Construction:
Marco Tölzer
Costume:
Johanna Frahm
Light Design:
Victor Duran
Cinematography:
Diara Sow
Video Design, Editing:
Dafne Narvaez Berlfein
Gaffer:
Nick Prokesch
Best Boy Grip:
Sebastian Bauer, Marco Tölzer
Voice Over Speaker:
Francine Belinga
Voice Over Recording:
Andreas Hamza
Horsemanship Workshop:
Schottenhof – Zentrum für Tiergestützte Pädagogik
Volting Workshop:
Hanna Tavolato
Production Management:
das Schaufenster
Coproduction:
Ian Kaler and Tanzquartier Wien
Supported by the City of Vienna, Department of Cultural Affairs, and the NATIONAL PERFORMANCE NETWORK – STEPPING OUT, funded by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and Media within the framework of the initiative NEUSTART KULTUR. Assistance Program for Dance.
Original photos:
Eva Würdinger
Photo collage:
Johnny Chang
solo, live music, commission
2021
I can’t recall what it actually looked like, the entrance to the house, but I know the feeling of it.
I don’t know if my memory is accurate.
Leaving took much less thought.
but I go blank,
this is the part of the journey that I can’t picture…
In order to accompany something else is it that we need to STEP ASIDE… SIT DOWN… SIT BACK.. to make available a possibility?
THIS effort to KEEP with something.
To KEEP it up, the being-next-to-and
with something.
To run parallel and congruent…
Leaves us wrecked.
The departure is profound,
it is disorienting, a taxing pain
eventuating towards a
NECESSARY ALONENESS.
I thanked the driver for picking me up. It’s not everyday that people must trust the albeit temporary companionship of someone they have not met prior.
I’ll admit there was a part of me that was nervous…can I be so trusting?
POINTS OF DEPARTURE is a stage piece in three parts building a narrative across time-lines and media.
The piece starts with a video prologue of footage (cinematography: Diara Sow, editing: Dafne Narvaez Berlfein) of Ian Kaler performing with a hawk in a forest. The idea to work with a hawk in this piece stems from a conversation with set designer Stephanie Rauch who’s creating an abandoned suburban parking-lot-meets-edge-of-the-forest scenery for the piece. The video is structured as an expanding loop, blending layers of spacial perception, physique/body image and movement of the hawk and the human protagonist. This over-layering of characters for the video-prologue is inspired by the mythological figure of the „harpy“ which is described as a character with a birds body and a woman’s head. Hyphen, the title of the ImPulsTanz premiere, emphasizes the connection between the two otherwise unjoined figures.
For the second part Kaler invited choreographer Jen Rosenblit to write and direct a monologue for him. Starting point for the text and character was working on a teenage character who fluctuates between inner monologue, storytelling, memory recollection, diary entry and sporadic, casual addresses to the outside (ie. audience). The character blends auto-biographical and fictional narratives and develops more and more of a physicality as the text and performance progresses.
For the final part of the performance the choreographer and movement director Stéphane “Peeps” Moun shares techniques from his practice informed by elements of housedance, hip hop, Tapdance & jazz- dance. Together they work on blending Kaler’s own movement practice with Peeps’s methods and approach to co-choreograph a powerful as well as subtle, hypnotic movement sequence.
Berlin-based music producer rRoxymore aka Hermione Frank plays the electronic live soundtrack weaving a thread and performing together with Kaler. Lighting designer Thomas Zamolo contributes live lights to the piece.
Concept, Artistic Director, Performance:
Ian Kaler
Music composed, produced and performed by:
Hermione Frank aka rRoxymore
PART ONE
Direction:
Ian Kaler
Concept:
Stephanie Rauch and Ian Kaler
Cinematography:
Diara Sow
Camera Assistance:
David Schwier
Video Editing:
Dafne Narvaez Berlfein
Hawk Trainer:
Ilka Simm
PART TWO
Text and Direction:
Jen Rosenblit
PART THREE
Choreographer/Movement Director:
Stéphane “Peeps” Moun
POINTS OF DEPARTURE
Set Design:
Stephanie Rauch
Lightdesign/Technical Direction:
Thomas Zamolo
Acting Coach:
Catarina Campos Costa
Voice Training:
Marian Hudek
Outside Eye:
Chris Standfest
Coordination Set Design:
Ben Clark
Production Management:
das Schaufenster (Vienna) and Martina Neu (Berlin)
Production:
Ian Kaler
Coproduction:
HAU Hebbel am Ufer, ImPulsTanz – Vienna International Dance Festival, Norrlandsoperan, PACT Zollverein
Supported by:
Stadt Wien Kultur, BMKÖS
Funded by:
Hauptstadtkulturfonds Berlin
Original photos:
Eva Würdinger
Photo collage:
Johnny Chang
POINTS OF DEPARTURE is a stage piece in three parts building a narrative across time-lines and media.
The piece starts with a video prologue of footage (cinematography: Diara Sow, editing: Dafne Narvaez Berlfein) of Ian Kaler performing with a hawk in a forest. The idea to work with a hawk in this piece stems from a conversation with set designer Stephanie Rauch who’s creating an abandoned suburban parking-lot-meets-edge-of-the-forest scenery for the piece. The video is structured as an expanding loop, blending layers of spacial perception, physique/body image and movement of the hawk and the human protagonist. This over-layering of characters for the video-prologue is inspired by the mythological figure of the „harpy“ which is described as a character with a birds body and a woman’s head. Hyphen, the title of the ImPulsTanz premiere, emphasizes the connection between the two otherwise unjoined figures.
For the second part Kaler invited choreographer Jen Rosenblit to write and direct a monologue for him. Starting point for the text and character was working on a teenage character who fluctuates between inner monologue, storytelling, memory recollection, diary entry and sporadic, casual addresses to the outside (ie. audience). The character blends auto-biographical and fictional narratives and develops more and more of a physicality as the text and performance progresses.
For the final part of the performance the choreographer and movement director Stéphane “Peeps” Moun shares techniques from his practice informed by elements of housedance, hip hop, Tapdance & jazz- dance. Together they work on blending Kaler’s own movement practice with Peeps’s methods and approach to co-choreograph a powerful as well as subtle, hypnotic movement sequence.
Berlin-based music producer rRoxymore aka Hermione Frank plays the electronic live soundtrack weaving a thread and performing together with Kaler. Lighting designer Thomas Zamolo contributes live lights to the piece.
Concept, Artistic Director, Performance:
Ian Kaler
Music composed, produced and performed by:
Hermione Frank aka rRoxymore
PART ONE
Direction:
Ian Kaler
Concept:
Stephanie Rauch and Ian Kaler
Cinematography:
Diara Sow
Camera Assistance:
David Schwier
Video Editing:
Dafne Narvaez Berlfein
Hawk Trainer:
Ilka Simm
PART TWO
Text and Direction:
Jen Rosenblit
PART THREE
Choreographer/Movement Director:
Stéphane “Peeps” Moun
POINTS OF DEPARTURE
Set Design:
Stephanie Rauch
Lightdesign/Technical Direction:
Thomas Zamolo
Acting Coach:
Catarina Campos Costa
Voice Training:
Marian Hudek
Outside Eye:
Chris Standfest
Coordination Set Design:
Ben Clark
Production Management:
das Schaufenster (Vienna) and Martina Neu (Berlin)
Production:
Ian Kaler
Coproduction:
HAU Hebbel am Ufer, ImPulsTanz – Vienna International Dance Festival, Norrlandsoperan, PACT Zollverein
Supported by:
Stadt Wien Kultur, BMKÖS
Funded by:
Hauptstadtkulturfonds Berlin
Original photos:
Eva Würdinger
Photo collage:
Johnny Chang
group, commission
2019
Choreographer Ian Kaler created for the first time a big stage production for Cullberg. ON THE CUSP is a mix of live-practicing and synchronized movements, a spectrum of emotions and projections. It is a combined live and video work, on a series of different topics. The work presents a collection of portraits, of the individuals, as well as of the group. Every dancer has their own story, and the company connects them. Who are the people in the group, and how do they construct this group? Are they characters or do they want to play a certain role? Shifting from different kind of characters, who are they in private and how does that shape the stage character? The music of electronically synthesized brass sound composed by Planningtorock creates bold, dramatic, playful and deeply moving dance pieces.
The work is a collection of portraits, one of each dancer, and one of the group. What will you create with the company?
“I want to play with a mix of live-practicing and synchronized movements. It will be a combined live and video work, a series of different topics, in different ways. I am very interested in narrative, how little stories can be told through the body. I want to create portraits, of the individuals, as well as a portrait of the group. Every dancer has their own story, and the company connects them. Who are the people in the group, and how do they construct this group? Are they characters or do they want to play a certain role? Shifting from different kind of characters, who are they in private and how does that shape the stage character? Almost like a fake documentary. I will work with screens, and the bodies as screens and stand-ins of representations and imagination. And I will work with creating intensities, let the dancers play inside the system that the group is and generates. Every dancer will have their own mark in terms of character, movement, presence, clothing.. It might turn out to be funny, sad, and a bit ambivalent – I wanna go through a spectrum of emotions and projections. Originally I come from the abstract, going towards how I can tell stories. I want to explore that further in this process.”
Concept, Choreographic framing and direction:
Ian Kaler
Created together with the dancers of Cullbergbaletten Dancers:
Adam Schütt, Anand Bolder, Camille Prieux, Daniel Sjökvist, Eleanor Campbell, Eszter Czédulás, Eva Mohn, Freddy Houndekindo, Gesine Moog, Giacomo Citton, Katie Jacobson, Mohamed Y. Shika, Suelem de Oliveira da Silva, Unn Faleide, Vincent Van der Plas and other dancers of the Cullbergbaletten
Music composed and produced by:
Planningtorock
Set design:
Stephanie Rauch
Lighting design, cinematography and editing:
Imogen Heath
Costume design:
Stéphane Peeps / FAAM Studio
Choreographic assistant:
Stéphane Peeps
Production Management Vienna:
das Schaufenster
Produced by:
Ian Kaler and Cullbergbaletten
Co-produced by:
Tanzquartier Wien, Norrlandsoperan Umeå, PACT Zollverein Essen
Ian Kaler is supported by the Municipal Department of Cultural Affairs, Vienna.
Original photos
Vienna:
Eva Würdinger
Stockholm:
Märtha Thisner
Choreographer Ian Kaler created for the first time a big stage production for Cullberg. ON THE CUSP is a mix of live-practicing and synchronized movements, a spectrum of emotions and projections. It is a combined live and video work, on a series of different topics. The work presents a collection of portraits, of the individuals, as well as of the group. Every dancer has their own story, and the company connects them. Who are the people in the group, and how do they construct this group? Are they characters or do they want to play a certain role? Shifting from different kind of characters, who are they in private and how does that shape the stage character? The music of electronically synthesized brass sound composed by Planningtorock creates bold, dramatic, playful and deeply moving dance pieces.
The work is a collection of portraits, one of each dancer, and one of the group. What will you create with the company?
“I want to play with a mix of live-practicing and synchronized movements. It will be a combined live and video work, a series of different topics, in different ways. I am very interested in narrative, how little stories can be told through the body. I want to create portraits, of the individuals, as well as a portrait of the group. Every dancer has their own story, and the company connects them. Who are the people in the group, and how do they construct this group? Are they characters or do they want to play a certain role? Shifting from different kind of characters, who are they in private and how does that shape the stage character? Almost like a fake documentary. I will work with screens, and the bodies as screens and stand-ins of representations and imagination. And I will work with creating intensities, let the dancers play inside the system that the group is and generates. Every dancer will have their own mark in terms of character, movement, presence, clothing.. It might turn out to be funny, sad, and a bit ambivalent – I wanna go through a spectrum of emotions and projections. Originally I come from the abstract, going towards how I can tell stories. I want to explore that further in this process.”
Concept, Choreographic framing and direction:
Ian Kaler
Created together with the dancers of Cullbergbaletten Dancers:
Adam Schütt, Anand Bolder, Camille Prieux, Daniel Sjökvist, Eleanor Campbell, Eszter Czédulás, Eva Mohn, Freddy Houndekindo, Gesine Moog, Giacomo Citton, Katie Jacobson, Mohamed Y. Shika, Suelem de Oliveira da Silva, Unn Faleide, Vincent Van der Plas and other dancers of the Cullbergbaletten
Music composed and produced by:
Planningtorock
Set design:
Stephanie Rauch
Lighting design, cinematography and editing:
Imogen Heath
Costume design:
Stéphane Peeps / FAAM Studio
Choreographic assistant:
Stéphane Peeps
Production Management Vienna:
das Schaufenster
Produced by:
Ian Kaler and Cullbergbaletten
Co-produced by:
Tanzquartier Wien, Norrlandsoperan Umeå, PACT Zollverein Essen
Ian Kaler is supported by the Municipal Department of Cultural Affairs, Vienna.
Original photos
Vienna:
Eva Würdinger
Stockholm:
Märtha Thisner
ECTO–FICTIONS
group, commission
2022
UPCYCLING
group, commission, education
2022
POINTS OF DEPARTURE
solo, live music, commission
2021
INOSCULATION
lecture performance
2020
ON THE CUSP
group, commission
2019
POWERHOUSE
collaboration
2019
RAW PRACTICE
practice format, live music and lights, site-specific
2017–19
TRANSOME
excerpt from LIVFE for Queer Futures HAU
2019
LIVFE
solo
2017
INCIPIENT FUTURES
duet, live music
2016
GATEWAYS TO MOVEMENT
duet, live music
2015
THE EMOTIONALITY OF THE JAW
solo, live music
2015
CONTINGENCIES
group, site-specific
2014
UNTIMELY ENCOUNTERS
duet
2013
ONE PLACE AFTER
solo
2013
LEARNING TO LOOK SIDEWAYS
group, trio
2012
close
What are possible ways of dividing, structuring or fragmenting presence in our togetherness?
LEARNING TO LOOK SIDEWAYS examines the tableau as an image carrier, as a constantly changing structure, and thus also reflects the process of the performers: an interplay of different possibilities to transform, structure and shift a common topography of physically present and absent into fragmented cycles of movement.
The performers appear shadowy, they are carriers of ambiguous, almost silent and yet changeable images. A series of interrupted and yet coherent poses/attitudes emerges, which never really create a common story between the performers, but nevertheless create images and situations.
The artists do not follow a fixed dramaturgy; they work simultaneously and shifted, together and separately. The dance develops analogously to an energy field that requires careful handling, redistribution and directive. It is precisely this energy that is fed back into the empty space, into the actors themselves and into the perception of the audience. It’s housed where there’s no obvious affirmation, so it’s just a kind of potentiality that’s being performed.
Concept/Choreography:
Ian Kaler
Performance:
Alex Baczynski-Jenkins, Ian Kaler and Antonija Livingstone / Dolores Hulan (Krakau, Leuven)
Light Design:
Bruno Pocheron ROOM
Setting:
Stephanie Rauch
Music/Sound:
Brendan Dougherty
Dramaturgy:
Heike Albrecht
Project Management:
das Schaufenster
Production:
Ian Kaler
Coproduction:
Tanzquartier Wien, Tanzfabrik Berlin, TANZTAGE BERLIN / Sophiensaele
With Support by:
Wien Kultur, Austrian Cultural Forum Berlin, advancing performing arts project and Turbo Residence Impulstanz
Photo:
Eva Würdinger