Nelisiwe Xaba

Last updated

Nelisiwe Xaba
Nelisiwe Xaba, Plasticization.jpg
NationalitySouth African
EducationJohannesburg Dance Foundation, Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance
Occupation(s)Performance artist and choreopgrapher

Nelisiwe Xaba, born in Soweto, South Africa, is a South African performance artist and choreographer.

Contents

Biography

Born and raised in the Dube neighborhood of Soweto (Johannesburg, South Africa), Nelisiwe Xaba is a performance artist and choreographer who began her career as a dancer in the early 1990s when she received a scholarship to study dance at the Johannesburg Dance Foundation. In 1996, Xaba won another scholarship to the Rambert School of Ballet and Contemporary Dance in London, [1] where she studied ballet and contemporary dance techniques, under the artistic direction of Ross McKim. On her return to South Africa in 1997, Xaba joined the Pact Dance Company before embarking on a freelance career, which allowed her to work with many recognized choreographers, including Robyn Orlin.

Career

Since launching her solo career, Xaba has worked on a number of multimedia projects and has collaborated with visual artists, stylists, theater and television directors, poets and musicians. Xaba's seminal works, Plasticization and They Look At Me & That's All They Think, have been presented internationally for several years. For They Look at Me & That's All They Think, inspired by the story of Saartjie Baartman (often pejoratively called the Hottentot Venus), Xaba worked with stylist Carlo Gibson. In 2008, she collaborated with the Haitian dancer and choreographer Kettly Noël to create Correspondances, a satirical work on relations between women, [2] which was presented in North and South America, Europe and Africa. In 2009, her play Black!...White?, a production of the Center de Développement Chorégraphique (Toulouse, France), toured throughout France. The same year, she created The Venus, combining two of her previous solo pieces, They Look At Me... and Sakhozi Says Non to the Venus, originally commissioned by the Musée du Quai Branly (Paris, France). [3]

Xaba's work is largely influenced by her feminist and anti-racist positions, which challenge stereotypes about the black female body and common notions related to gender. In 2011, Xaba was one of the artists featured by the Goodman Gallery South Africa, which showcases leading contemporary artists from the African continent. In 2013, Xaba was selected to present The Venus in Venice as part of "Imaginary Fact, Contemporary South African Art and the Archive" at the South African Pavilion at the 55 Venice Biennale. [4]

Xaba's art reacts to its social context, and in particular to the condition of women. [1] She often integrates objects to break down the barrier between costume and set and calls upon her audience to reconsider performative and receptive norms. [5] In her piece, Uncles and Angels, she collaborated with director Mocke J. van Veuren to create an interactive performance mixing dance and video that questions the notions of chastity, purity, virginity testing and tradition. Uncles and Angels interrogates these concepts by taking an ironic look at the power relations rooted in bodily interaction through performance and projection. Since premiering at the FNB Dance Umbrella festival in South Africa, Uncles and Angels has been presented in Germany, France (in 2013 in Avignon) and Austria. A 3D film based on the work won the FNB Art Fair prize in 2013. The origin of this work is the reed dance, a traditional custom of celebrating the virginity of girls before marriage, bringing together thousands of young Zulu girls. Although the custom disappeared for a time, it has experienced a resurgence since the early 1980s to the point of becoming a tourist attraction. Some young women are assaulted or raped during the ceremony. [6] In another piece, Scars & Cigarettes, Xaba continues to explore the socialization of men and women through specific gender roles in society, focusing on different rites of passage or rituals unique to men, such as circumcision. [7] Yet another work, Fremde Tänze (Strange Dance), created in 2014 as part of a residency in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany, takes as its starting point work by German choreographers on the concept of exoticism. [1]

A recent issue of The Drama Review devoted several academic articles to Xaba and shifting global audience perspectives on her work. [5]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sarah Baartman</span> Khoikhoi woman (c. 1789–1815)

Sarah Baartman, also spelled Sara, sometimes in the diminutive form Saartje, or Saartjie, and Bartman, Bartmann, was a Khoikhoi woman who was exhibited as a freak show attraction in 19th-century Europe under the name Hottentot Venus, a name which was later attributed to at least one other woman similarly exhibited. The women were exhibited for their steatopygic body type uncommon in Western Europe which not only was perceived as a curiosity at that time, but became subject of scientific interest as well as of erotic projection.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philippe Decouflé</span>

Philippe Decouflé is a French choreographer, dancer, mime artist, and theatre director. As a child he travelled extensively around Lebanon and Morocco before learning his skills as a teenager at the Annie Fratellini École du Cirque and the Marceau Mime School. While frequenting Parisienne nightclubs he discovered and was attracted to contemporary dance, and he eventually moved to the Centre National de la Danse Contemporaine in Angers to study under choreographer Alwin Nicolais. After briefly working as a solo dancer, he formed the Découflé Company of Arts in Bagnolet in 1983, moving it to a former electrical works in the Parisienne suburb of Saint-Denis in 1995.

Marie-Agnès Gillot is a French ballet dancer and choreographer. She danced with the Paris Opera Ballet as an étoiles. She is also POB's first in-house female dancer to choreograph for the company.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frédéric Flamand</span> Belgian actor, director, and choreographer

Frédéric Flamand is a Belgian actor, director, and choreographer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vincent Mantsoe</span> South African dancer and choreographer (born 1971)

Vincent Mantsoe is a South African dancer and choreographer. Raised in the Soweto township outside Johannesburg, he combines the street dance of his childhood with traditional and contemporary dance styles. Spirituality and the cultural influences of African, Aboriginal Australian, Asian, contemporary, and ballet traditions are important influences on Mantsoe's work. He is also the founder of Association Noa.

Mamela Nyamza is a dancer, teacher, choreographer, curator, director and activist in South Africa. She is trained in a variety of styles of dance including ballet, modern dance, African dance, the Horton technique, Spanish dance, jazz, movement and mime, flying low technique, release technique, gumboot dance and Butoh. Her style of dance and choreography blends aspects of traditional and contemporary dances. Nyamza has performed nationally and internationally. She has choreographed autobiographical, political, and social pieces both on her own and in collaboration with other artists. She draws inspiration from her daily life and her childhood growing up in Gugulethu, as well as her identity as a homosexual, Black, South African woman. She uses her platform to share some of the traumas faced by South African lesbians, such as corrective rape. Additionally, she has created various community outreach projects that have spread dance to different communities within South Africa, including the University of Stellenbosch's Project Move 1524, a group that uses dance therapy to educate on issues relating to HIV/AIDS, domestic violence and drug abuse.

Régine Chopinot, born at Fort-de-l'Eau in Algeria, is a French dancer and choreographer of Contemporary Dance.

Non-dance is a choreographic movement within contemporary dance. It began in the 1990, principally in France. Its practitioners see it as a transdisciplinary movement, dispensing with the movement vocabulary of traditional dance to integrate or substitute that of other performing arts.

José Montalvo is a prominent French dancer and choreographer. A 2001 winner of the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Dance Production, his work has been performed in Europe, America and Asia.

Dominique Dupuy is a French dancer and choreographer of modern dance. He is best known as a pioneer of modern dance in France. Additionally, he runs a choreographic centre as well as an annual dance festival in Provence.

Danseur étoile or danseuse étoile, literally "star dancer", is the highest rank a dancer can reach at the Paris Opera Ballet. It is equivalent to the title "Principal dancer" used in English or to the title "Primo Ballerino" or "Prima Ballerina" in Italian.

Wang Ramirez is a contemporary dance duo composed of Honji Wang and Sébastien Ramirez. The duo formed in 2007 in Perpignan, France. Their dance language is an outgrowth of hip hop meld with influences from contemporary dance, ballet and martial art movements.

Laurence Louppe was a French writer, critic and historian of dance, a specialist in the aesthetics of dance and visual arts and a choreographic artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gilles Jobin</span>

Gilles Jobin is a Swiss dancer, choreographer and director living and working in Geneva, Switzerland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Irène Tassembédo</span>

Irène Tassembédo is a dancer, choreographer and actress from Burkina Faso.

Jeanne Renaud was a Canadian dancer, choreographer, and artistic director, considered to be one of the founders of modern dance in Quebec. Born in Montreal, Renaud studied music at the École de musique Vincent-d'Indy. She trained in classical ballet with Elizabeth Leese and in modern dance with Gérald Crevier in Montreal. She went on to study with Merce Cunningham, Hanya Holm and Mary Anthony in New York City. In 1948, she gave a recital with Françoise Sullivan in Montreal. She taught dance in Paris from 1949 to 1954. In 1952, she joined with Les Automatistes who had left Quebec for Paris to present a performance at the American Club there. From 1959 to 1965, she was associated with Françoise Riopelle at the École de Danse Moderne de Montréal as dancer, teacher and choreographer. In 1966, she founded Le Groupe de la Place Royale, the first official modern dance company in Quebec, with Peter Boneham; she was dancer, choreographer, artistic director and administrator for Le Groupe until 1972.

Béatrice Kombe Gnapa was a dancer and choreographer from the Ivory Coast. She was considered a leading figure in modern experimental dance in Africa.

Françoise Dupuy was a French dancer and choreographer. She was married to fellow dancer and choreographer Dominique Dupuy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marion Barbeau</span> French ballerina and actress (born 1991)

Marion Barbeau is a French ballerina and actress.

Ulysse is a contemporary dance work by French choreographer Jean-Claude Gallotta, created in 1981 for eight dancers. It is considered one of Gallotta's most important works, and a cornerstone of the new French dance movement of the early 1980s. Faithful to his desire to revisit his works, Jean-Claude Gallotta has re-choreographed Ulysse on numerous occasions, offering four different versions to date in terms of performers, scenography and music: Ulysse (1981), Ulysse, re-création (1993), Les Variations d'Ulysse (1995) and Cher Ulysse (2007). Les Variations d'Ulysse, commissioned by the Paris Opera, entered the Paris Opera Ballet repertoire in 1995 under the direction of Brigitte Lefèvre.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Jason, Stefanie (3 March 2015). "Nelisiwe Xaba makes her moves on the politics of exoticism". Mail & Guardian.
  2. Lepidi, Pierre (5 April 2018). "D'Haïti au Mali, la danse transgressive de Kettly Noël". Le Monde (in French).
  3. Boisseau, Rosita (21 November 2011). "Nous sommes toutes des Vénus hottentotes!". Le Monde (in French).
  4. "Nelisiwe Xaba". Charleroi danse. 31 January 2020. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  5. 1 2 Manning, Susan (1 June 2020). "Nelisiwe Xaba: Dancing between South Africa and the Global North". MIT Press Direct. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
  6. Boisseau, Rosita (10 September 2013). "La "nation arc-en-ciel" se danse en Blancs et Noirs". Le Monde (in French).
  7. "Afrique du Sud : danser l'Histoire". TV5 Monde. 5 October 2013.

Bibliography