CLAIM YOUR PLACE

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"Claim your place" involves entering the darkness and deepness of violence, searching for its inner beauty.

How do we relate with violence? To what extent do we accept the violence within ourselves and in society? And would its evolution through history be the core of this creation? A mixture of languages, latest techniques in image processing and their relation with movement and text will define the dramaturgy of the piece.

This is a multidisciplinary show/performance where form and content reinforce themselves using the uniqueness of the different artistic languages.

The relation between form and content goes beyond the question of where and how, to be positioned before the violence. Consequently, three different formats are created with the same material that will be adapted to the parameters of each format. The formats are created from the point of view of the spectator in which the receiver and content will relate to each other in a particular way.

Thus, we will see Claim Your Place IP (Installation Performance) in which the spectator will be found wrapped by the image and the action. Claim Your Place PE (Scenic Piece) in which the action will be live and Claim Your Place VD (Video Dances) in which the receiver/audience will observe the proposal from the outside.

Claim Your Place is composed by three pieces conceived as a whole but that can function also independently.

Creation and Direction: NURIA LEGARDA AND LAIA CABRERA

 

 

 

 

iron heads

Do we need to express violence?
What are the limits of the human violence? When does violence begin?
Where in us does violence reside?
Nature as source of evil. When violence is denied, does it take more complex forms?
Should we talk about its limits?
Is it a violent act if it causes pleasure? Why does violence produce pleasure?
Which pleasure causes violence? Can agreed violence cause pleasure?
Or does violence as abuse cause greater pleasure?
Where in us does this violence reside?
The body as receiver of violence.
The body as violent explosion.
What remains after a violent act?
What remains of a body that has been receiving violence?
What is after violence?
Is violence fearful?
Does it attract?