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64. Cold Song
10 months ago
63. 32: Manuel
10 months ago
62. 31: Alexandra
10 months ago
61. 30: Binetti
10 months ago
59. 29: Chapters
11 months ago
54. 28: Books
11 months ago
53. 27: Outside
11 months ago
51. Annonciation (Excerpt)
11 months ago
49. 26: Crash Course
11 months ago
48. 25: Details
11 months ago
47. 24: Between
1 year ago
45. 22: Reflection
1 year ago
42. 19: Ebony
1 year ago
41. 18: Golan
1 year ago
38. 16: Pamela
1 year ago
“How does the Annonciation, that key moment which underpins a whole religion, resonate in us, what does it awaken?
While so many painters over the past 2000 years have sought time and again to understand the flurry of contradictory symbols, which in effect is what the Annonciation is, it comes as something of a surprise that a theme, a subject in which so many issues about the body are so manifestly implicated should have remained almost entirely absent from choreographic art.
And yet, what we find here, deep down, is truly fascinating.
In traditional iconography, Mary is often shown in an enclosed or walled garden, symbolizing her virginity. There is, therefore, a parallel between what might be called her inner space and her surroundings.
When the angel breaks into this private world, he is saying, in so many words, that the workings of her body are about to be dramatically altered. This explains why it is that, although in the Bible the Virgin displays a serene acceptance of the forthcoming event, many artists have chosen to make her the prey of doubt, anxiety, even rebelliousness.
The strange co-existence of acceptance and rebellion, the collision of space and time, tell us that at the very moment the message is given, fertilization takes place. We are, as it were, inside biology, the very act of conception.
This coming to life in gradual stages takes us to the heart of the process of creating art; the message is no longer an abstraction, it is reality.
Rather than something finished, isn’t what we call nowadays conceptual art the portent of a new art, the Annonciation of an art yet to be born?”
-Angelin Preljocaj

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