Frédéric Flamand Explained

Frédéric Flamand
Birth Date:1946
Birth Place:Brussels
Nationality:Belgian
Known For:Charleroi / Danses
Occupation:Choreographer

Frédéric Flamand (born 1946 in Brussels) is a Belgian actor, director, and choreographer.

Biography

Flamand founded the Plan K contemporary dance company in 1973. From 1979, it occupied a former sugar refinery in Molenbeek.[1] He was interested in interdisciplinary work and hosted artists such as Bob Wilson, William S. Burroughs, Steve Lacy, Decouflé, Marie Chouinard, Joy Division, and the Eurythmics.

As director and choreographer, Flamand worked with many architects, including Fabrizio Plessi, Elizabeth Diller, Ricardo Scofidio, Zaha Hadid, Jean Nouvel, Thom Mayne, and more recently, Dominique Perrault and the Campana brothers, working to connect the dancer's body to the surrounding architecture.[1]

Flamand was appointed head of the former Royal Ballet of Wallonia in 1991 and renamed the company Charleroi / Danses.[1] It became the first contemporary dance company in Belgium, and Flamand made the company well-known in Belgium and internationally.[2] On February 28, 1998, Maurice Bejart was condemned by the Belgian courts for his choreography of Presbytery, which plagiarized an extract from Flamand's 1989 "The Fall of Icarus". The work has a winged dancer crossing the stage wearing video monitors as shoes.[3]

In September 2004, Flamand was appointed manager of the Ballet National de Marseille and the Marseille National School of Dance.[1] Eric Vu-An has been his assistant since 2005. He was appointed the artistic director of the International Dance Festival of Cannes for the years 2011-2013.

Selected works

With Theatre Laboratoire Vicinal

1972: "Lunapark"[4] and "Tramp"[5] (went on tour and performed at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York City)

With Plan K

1980: "Quarantine"

1984: "Scan Lines"

1987: "If Pyramids Were Square"

1989: "The Fall of Icarus" with Fabrizio Plessi

With Charleroi / Danses

1992: "Titanic" with Fabrizio Plessi

1994: "Ex Machina" with Fabrizio Plessi

1994: "Hull and Machinery"

1996: "Speed and Memory"

1996: "Moving Target" with Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio[6]

1998: "EJM 1 and 2" 'with Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio

1998: "Gender"

2000: "Metapolis" with Zaha Hadid

2000: "The Future of Work" with Jean Nouvel

2001: "Body / Work / Leisure" with Jean Nouvel

2003: "Silent Collisions" with Thom Mayne

2005: "Eight" in collaboration with Marion Ballester

With the Ballet National de Marseille

2005: "The Radiant City" with Dominique Perrault[7]

2006: "Metapolis II" with Zaha Hadid

2007: "Metamorphosis" with Humberto and Fernando Campana[8]

2009: "The Trouble of Narcissus"[9]

2010: "The Truth 25 times a second" with Ai Weiwei

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Panorama de la danse contemporaine. 90 chorégraphes . Rosita Boisseau . Éditions Textuel . . 2006 . 204–205.
  2. Web site: Presentation . Charleroi Danses . 2012-04-05 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120326220257/http://www.charleroi-danses.be/fr/charleroidanses/presentation . 2012-03-26.
  3. Le Soir and . 28 February 1998.
  4. La MaMa Archives Digital Collections. "Production: 'Lunapark' (1972)". Accessed April 25, 2018.
  5. La MaMa Archives Digital Collections. "Production: 'Tramp' (1972)". Accessed April 25, 2018.
  6. Web site: Frédéric Flamand / Diller + Scofidio > Moving target . numeridanse.tv . 2012-04-06.
  7. Web site: Frédéric Flamand / Dominique Perrault > Le cite radieuse . numeridanse.tv . 2012-04-06.
  8. Web site: Intégrale de Métamorphoses . numeridanse.tv.
  9. Web site: Intégrale du Trouble de Narcisse . numeridanse.tv.