🧑‍🎤 Ohad Naharin Deca Dance

Establishedin 1964 as a repertoire company by the Baroness Batsheva de Rothschild, The Batsheva Dance Company is one of the world’s most prominent and renowned dance troupes. The company stands at the forefront of the local and international dance world, thanks to the bold choreographic voice of the house choreographer Ohad Naharin and to OhadNaharin – Deca Dance. Created for the first time in 2000, this program celebrated Ohad Naharin’s ten years of creation within the company by offering a striking collage of excerpts from his repertoire. Regularly recomposed and enriched since, the piece is today the opportunity, for the Israeli choreographer, to show the variety of his HarvardDance Project performs Ohad Naharin’s "Echad Mi Yodea" at Farkas Hall. Courtesy of Liza Voll. Zambrano’s instructions often came in the form of metaphors rather than explicit direction. “Collapse your pelvis,” he said in a tranquil tone. The students squatted slightly. “Soften your knees and your ankles.” OhadNaharin (born 1952) (Hebrew: אוהד נהרין) is an Israeli contemporary dancer, Naharin says himself, “Deca Dance is not a new work. It is more about reconstruction: I like to take pieces or sections of existing works and rework it, reorganize it and create the possibility to look at it from a new angle. DecaDance. Established in Tel Aviv in 1964, Batsheva took its name from its founder, Baroness Batsheva (Bethsabee) de Rothschild, a member of the prominent banking family. Martha Graham was the company’s first artistic director, and Israeli-born choreographer Ohad Naharin took over in 1990. The company made its first Pillow appearance in Dance100 Dance Analysis 1 Inspiration, preparation and performance creates a unique experience when encountering a new production. Watching a performance creates somewhat of an emotion unique to many and when observing Ohad Naharin Deca Dance I felt that unique experience. The performance was very impressive and showed different EchadMi Yodea Batsheva Dance Company Coreographed by Ohad Naharin OhadNaharin returns to “Three”, which he created for the Batsheva Dance Company in 2005 – a seminal piece that Benjamin Millepied once described as one of the most intriguing works featured in the program in all of his years as director of the Paris Opera Ballet. “Three” is a triptych comprised of three sections: Bellus, Humus, and Echad Mi Yodea' from "Decadance" / "Deca'le" for the entire family By Ohad Naharin Performed by Batsheva - the Young Ensemble 75 minutes without intermission Iam also inspired by Naharin's very formulaic way of piecing sequences and staging together. There were many occasions in Three that made your jaw drop, Naharin knew how to work with audience' focus and make sense of everything by changing the dynamic, or working with repitition, or creating a pattern of movement that would generally morph into Artisticdirector/ choreographer Ohad Naharin takes contemporary dance to a whole new level. Deca Dance is comprised of 10 dances taken from previous Naharin choreographies. WhyI Choreograph: Ohad Naharin. Ohad Naharin. September 30, 2013. Sometimes I feel like my brain is on fire and the only way to put the fire out is by daydreaming about choreography. Choreographing is how I go places I have never been before, and, many times, could not even imagine exist. Like people might have felt a few Butthe film Out of Focus offers the public a peek inside the process of Ohad Naharin, artistic director of Israel’s Batsheva Dance Company. In 2007, filmmaker Tomer Heymann focused his lens on Naharin as the choreographer coached New York’s Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet in Deca Dance . Besides close up views of the choreography, Decadance. Imaginé pour la première fois en 2000, ce programme Deca Dance célébrait alors les dix ans de création d'Ohad Naharin au sein de la compagnie en offrant un saisissant collage d'extraits de son répertoire. Régulièrement recomposée et enrichie depuis, la pièce est aujourd'hui l'occasion, pour le chorégraphe israélien, de ByOhad NaharinPerformed by 16 dancers60 minutes, without intermission*The show includes some Hebrew textAn adaptation of Peter Handke’s play “Offending the 2Xoz.

ohad naharin deca dance