Troubleyn | Jan Fabre

NOT ONCE. - biographies

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Born 1948 in Riga, Latvia, Mikhail Baryshnikov is considered one of the greatest dancers of our time. After commencing a spectacular career with the Kirov Ballet in Leningrad, he came to the West in 1974, settling in New York City as principal dancer with American Ballet Theatre (ABT). In 1979 he joined New York City Ballet, where he worked with George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins. A year later he was appointed artistic director of ABT where, for the next decade, he introduced a new generation of dancers and choreographers. From 1990-2002, Mr. Baryshnikov was director and dancer of the White Oak Dance Project, a modern dance company he co-founded with choreographer Mark Morris. As an actor he has performed widely on- and off-Broadway, as well as in television and film, receiving a Tony Award nomination and a Drama Desk Award for Metamorphosis, and an Academy Award nomination for The Turning Point. In 2005, he launched Baryshnikov Arts Center (BAC) in New York City, a creative space designed to support multidisciplinary artists from around the globe. Among Mr. Baryshnikov’s many awards are the Kennedy Center Honors, the National Medal of Arts, the Commonwealth Award, the Chubb Fellowship, the Jerome Robbins Award, and the Vilcek Award. In 2010, he was given the rank of Officer of the French Legion of Honor, and in 2017 he received Japan’s prestigious Praemium Imperiale International Arts Award in Theatre/Film. He recently toured Brodsky/Baryshnikov, a theatrical solo work directed by Latvian director Alvis Hermanis. Current projects include a second play with Hermanis entitle The White Helicopter with New Rige Theatre premiered in NOvember 2019 and NOT ONCE., a cinematic installation developed in collaboration with Jan Fabre and Phil Griffin.

Jan Fabre (Antwerp, 1958) is considered one of the most innovative and versatile artists of his days. Over the past 30 years, he has produced works as a visual artist, theatre maker and author. In the late 1970s, the young Jan Fabre caused a sensation as a performance artist. In 1982, the work This is theatre like it was to be expected and foreseen and two years later The power of theatrical madness challenged the foundations of the European theatre establishment. Chaos and discipline, repetition and madness, metamorphosis and the anonymous are indispensable ingredients in Fabre’s theatre. The body in all its forms has always been a central object of his research. Productions such as Je suis sang, Angel of Death, Quando l’uomo principale è una donna, Orgy of Tolerance, Preparatio Mortis and Prometheus-Landscape II have earned Fabre international acclaim. In 2005, Jan Fabre was artiste associé of the Festival d’Avignon. He then created Histoire des Larmes for the cour d’honneur, where he had already performed Je suis sang in 2001 and a retake of Je suis sang in 2005. In 2007, Jan Fabre created Requiem für eine Metamorphose for the Felsenreitschule of Salzburg. His latest performances for the larger stages, the impressive Mount Olympus — To Glorify the Cult of Tragedy — A 24-hour performance and Belgian Rules/Belgium Rules received international acclaim. As an author, he has written several theatre texts that were translated worldwide, including We need heroes now, Another sleepy dusty delta day, I am a mistake, A tribe that's me, the King of Plagiarism, Etant donnés... For Mount Olympus he wrote several texts about sleep and dreams: Remnants.
Over the years, Jan Fabre has also built up an exceptional oeuvre as a visual artist. He has become well known to a wide audience with the Tivoli castle (1990), Heaven of Delight (2002), in which the ceiling of the Mirror Room at the Royal Palace in Brussels is drawn with jewel beetle wing-shields, his open-air sculptures, including The man who measures the clouds (1998), Searching for Utopia (2003) and Totem (2000-2004). Among recent much-discussed exhibitions we can mention: L’ange de la métamorphose (Louvre, Paris 2008), From the Cellar to the Attic - From the Feet to the Brain (Kunsthaus Bregenz, 2008; Venice Biennale, 2009), The Hour Blue (Kunsthistorische Museum Vienna, 2011), Hortus/Corpus (Kröller-Müller Museum Otterlo, 2011), Pietas (Venice Biennale, 2011) and Stigmata. Actions and Performances 1976 – 2013 (MAXXI, Rome, 2013 and M HKA, Antwerp, 2015). Jan Fabre was the first living artist to present his work at the Louvre, Paris (L’Ange de la metamorphose, 2008). He was invited by the State Hermitage Museum in St-Petersburg to create a large-scale exhibition in 2016.That same year, Jan Fabre presented Spiritual Guards at three historical sites in Florence. In 2018, Fabre presented his research on the brain at the Fondation Maeght and exhibited a challenging selection of new and rarely seen works of art during Jan Fabre. Ecstasy & Oracles’(Monreale – Agrigento, Sicily). Among recent projects we can mention Oro Ross, gold and coral sculptures, blood drawings, which opened in 2019 on serveral lociatins in Naples and The Man Who Measures The Clouds (Monument to the Measure of the Immeasureable) in Venice, installed by the Garden of Palazzo Balbi Valier and visible from the Grand canal. For more updates: see www.angelos.be

Phil Griffin (Born in Wegberg, Germany in 1964) graduated from ‘Ballet Rambert’ in London as a dancer and choreographer.  He joined the Troubleyn Company of Jan Fabre and toured the world with the performance Das Glas im Kopf wird vom GlasThe dance sections. As Creative director at MCA in London, Griffin commissioned films, music videos and album artwork for many artists including C&C Music Factory, Mariah Carey, Destiny’s Child and Bobby Brown.  His photography portraits of luminous artists include Amy Winehouse, Adele, Kevin Spacey, Sigourney Weaver, Sir Paul McCartney, Prince, John Bon Jovi, Rhianna, Annie Lennox, Naomi Cambell, Jay Z and Helen Mirren. As a filmmaker Phil has created films and books with Bon Jovi, Britney Spears, Jay Z, Rhianna, The Royal Ballet prima ballerina Darcy Bussell and His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. The 2016 feature length art film Surrender explores the work & process of Flemish artist Jan Fabre in the making of Mount Olympus – To Glorify the Cult of Tragedy and was paired with Griffins first solo Photographic show featuring stills from the Fabre working process.  In 2017,  he participated in The Artist / Knight, a group show at Gaasbeek Castle with Damian Hirst, Tracey Emin, Yoko Ono and Barbara Kruger, curated by Joanna De Vos.  He opened a first solo show in Los Angeles and was featured in a group show at Galerie Carles Tache. A second Solo show Dark Matter followed exploring emotions, masculinity and color.  In 2019, a touring exhibition Unseen Icons looks back on Griffin’s 25 years as an image maker – with portraits include HRH Prince Charles & HRH Prince William, Diana Ross, Jon Bon Jovi, Jan Fabre, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Amy Winehouse and Sir Paul McCartney. 

 

 

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