|
|
|
 |
"With
his new work Intervalle, Paco Dècina
dances and speaks about love" |
 |
Jean-Dominique
Burtin, La
République du Centre, January
27, 2005 |
 |
 |
Fulfillment. They dance in the air, lying
down, barely touching, wrapped in each other’s
arms, at arm’s length, with body and
soul and in an absolute state of grace. “They” are
Valeria Apicella and Orin Camus, musically
accompanied by the pianist and composer
Xavier Klaine. Then, to a score by Olivier
Renouf, Noriko Matsuyama and Rodolphe Fouillot
take the space. In these two duets, collectively
called Intervalle, the choreographer Paco
Dècina, a past master of the filtering
and changing of time, whose Soffio so enchanted
us last season – here introduces us
to slightly more than an hour of pure happiness.
We watch two couples, two beings who are
drawn together, alternately approaching
and rejecting each other, finally joining
together in peace. With extraordinary sensuality,
fluidity, subtlety and a phenomenal level
of sensitivity in performance rippling between
them, these four performers move with unparalleled
grace. They are lit by Laurent Schneegans
and they dance and dance and it is what
we love to see. |
 |
 |
"The
right distance" |
 |
Philippe Verrièle, Le Journal des Spectacles, December
22, 2004 |
 |
 |
Intervalle by
Paco Dècina
is a work in which two couples interact
and intertwine
in a non anecdotal, plotless form, which
allows one to formulate his or her own
interpretations of the couples’ actions,
regardless of whether this is the choreographer’s
intent. It is useful to know how the piece
was created, to know that Dècina
continues working in the deliberately plotless
mode begun in Neti-Neti (2000).
A piano is set upstage, there is no set.
This is
pure dance, with a barely perceptible virtuosity
involving focus and rhythmic precision,
following a remarkable progression from
extreme slowness to faster speeds. We are
aware of the entanglements, of the assumptions
made by each partner. In the first duet
the man literally penetrates the intimate
spaces of the woman, filling in the spaces
made by her shapes, to a powerfully controlled
piano piece performed and composed by Xavier
Klaine. Distance which unites - Then the
man lies down, another assumes the same
shape; the pianist exits the stage, a new
female dancer enters and the first male
dancer exits. This transition eliminates
any sense of opposition between the two
couples, though they remain inextricably
linked like the two sides of a book, created
as one movement of spirit. Their very distance
unites the duets while the strange score
forces one to listen carefully. One is
intensely aware of the space between the
bodies and the tension therein. One sees
the importance of being at exactly the
right ‘interval’ to cross into
the space of the Other. And, as Merce Cunningham
once said, "whenever two people
are on a stage there is immediately a story
being told, so it is unnecessary to add
anything else." The story of
this particular Intervalle seems to be
that
of all couples who are searching for the
right distance between fusion and autonomy. |
 |
 |
Rosita
Boisseau, Télérama,
February 8, 2005 |
 |
 |
We watch as the space between two bodies
vibrates, flexes, twists, tenses. The choreographer Paco Dècina, who also known
for his choreography of the immobility of certain bodies in space,
presents a sober yet sensual work which avoids showy virtuosity.
Contemplating a piece by Paco Dècina induces a sort of
spiritual revery – this is dance which feels good, from
which one emerges refreshed, in fact you won’t find anything
better anywhere. Intervalle consists ot two duets, one to an
original piano piece by Xavier Klaine, the other to an electronic
score by Olivier Renouf. |
 |
 |
"Intervalle,
interlaced duets paying tribute to the idea of slowness" |
 |
Emérentienne
Dubourg, La
Terrasse, December, 2004 |
 |
 |
Paco Dècina is known as a creator
of minutely fashioned exquisite dances. Even at top speed, his
movements leave visible jet
trails in the air. Clearly it is the right time for him
to explore the idea of the space between bodies, while continuing
his work on slow motion movement, this time through the performances
of Valeria Apicella and Orin Camus, and Noriko Matsuyama and
Rodolphe Fouillot. These four dancers constitute two duets whose
entanglements become part of the choreographic source material,
in successive phases of symbiosis to an original piano score
by Xavier Klaine. Intervalle is incredibly precise, allowing
neither a misstep nor a false note. The audience sees an intense
through line of dancing linking all four dancers. |
 |
 |
"A celebration of moving slowly" |
 |
Cécile
Favier, Presse Océan,
July 3, 2004 |
 |
 |
Paco Dècina’s new work is
called Intervalle.
Here two duos interlock and interchange, embodying two views
of one
concept – moving slowly. One man, one woman, two duets.
Are they meant to be seen as “duo one” and “duo
two”? Paco Dècina explains "The raw material
for me is something unformed which I approach using my intuition,
my understanding of it. The idea of slowness came to me on its
own, it demands complete honesty with the self as well as its
opposite, rapidity. Dance is for me a way to know myself and
others." The piano score, written and performed by
Xavier Klaine, lays down the notion of suspended space, changing
moment
to moment with the extreme slowness of the movement. Each gesture
is executed, stretched out, focused, spare. The spectator realises
he is not seeing Intervalle from the front or from another
angle, he discovers that he is inside a choreographic time warp
conveying
him from place to place, with neither beginning nor end. He begins
seeing the dance as the folds of a fabric of shapes consisting
of micromutations and tiny impulses, infinitely small but infinitely
necessary. The angular curving shapes Paco Dècina gives
to each performer, male and female, evoke the possibilities of
these bodies imbued with their relationships to others, in a
continuous movement of feints and territorial claims. The watchers
and the watched drift into a decompartmentalised space asking
them to close their eyes in order to "see" better,
to go beyond merely visible shapes. This work is close to us
yet so far away. |
 |
 |
|