Marc Bogaerts
Marc Bogaerts | |
---|---|
Born |
Antwerp, Belgium | 16 July 1951
Nationality | Belgium |
Education | The Royal Ballet of Flanders |
Known for | Theatre, Dance |
Notable work | Not strictly Rubens, Carmina Burana, The Emperor’s Dream |
Website | |
www.bogaertsproductions.net |
Marc Bogaerts (born 16 July 1951) is a Belgian choreographer and artistic director.[1] He has worked internationally for over more than 50 dance, opera and circus companies. Bogaerts stipulates that our current generational dynamic is complex and routed in the mundane and monotonous rigors of our daily need to survive or surpass. Therefore he believes in the need to counterbalance routine by symmetrically presenting traditionally segregated styles such as opera, ballet, nouveau circus and stationary art. Following postmodernism, Marc Bogaerts builds a bridge between all forms of physical expression. Making unconventional combinations (modern dancers with athletes, circus artists with ballroom dancers, ice skaters with snake women, breakdancers with classical dancers) and bringing in his productions sport, art, ecology/innovations together he creates unusual symbiosis.
Biography
He studied 7 years Latin, Greek and philosophy with the Jesuits, which influenced his later work by integrated understanding of all sports, the unity of body and soul, as it was formulated by the ancient Greeks. In 1975 he started his career as a dancer and soon also as a choreographer with the Royal Ballet of Flanders. From 1982 to 1993 he resided in New York, where he danced as an honorary guest performer with Merce Cunningham, Trisha Brown and Laura Dean, taught at the Actors Studio in New York and initiated numerous artistic social projects raising awareness about abortion, drugs and genocide. From New York he moved to Berlin. As the only choreographer working for all three opera houses in Berlin: Deutsche Oper Berlin, Staatsoper Unter den Linden, Komische Oper Berlin he created performances such as Carmina Burana, L’Histoire du Soldat or Four Seasons. He has also worked for many Olympic ice skaters. Under the guidance of Marc Bogaerts and Martin Skotnicky, the two German ice skaters Kati Winkler and René Lohse would go on to win the bronze medal in Ice Dancing at the World Figure Skating Championships 2004. Later on Bogaerts worked in Canada, Japan, Switzerland, Portugal and Romania. Living all around the world he finds inspiration for his interdisciplinary productions. At the moment creating a synthesis of sport and stage art is in the centre of his artistic work.
Work
Dance productions
He choreographed so far for more than 48 operas, dance companies and circus groups including:
- Royal Danish Ballet
- The Royal Ballet of Flanders
- Deutsche Oper Berlin
- Staatsoper Unter den Linden
- Tanztheater of the Komische Oper Berlin
- Joffrey Ballet Chicago
- Santa Barbara Ballet
- Dance Theatre Indianapolis
- Washington Ballet
- Milwaukee Ballet
- Southern Ballet
- Ballett des Stadttheater St-Gallen
- Companhia de Danza Lisboa
- National Opera of Bucharest
- Mecklenburgische Staatstheater Schwerin
- Bayerische Staatsballett
- Deutsches Fernsehballet
He represented Belgium at the Contemporary Dance Festival in the Guggenheim Museum (Bilbao, Spain)
The Emperor’s Dream with performances in Brussels, Frankfurt (Jahrhunderhalle) and Madrid was a production made for the celebrations of the change of millennium.
For The National Ballet of the Opera Bucharest he made a contemporary dance production Midsummernight’s dream.
For the International Theatre Festival of Sibiu he choreographed the production Moi Rodin (director- Mihai Maniutiu, text by Patrick Roegiers). Performances were shown also at the International Theatre Festival in Russia, Poland, Israel, France, Korea, Canada.
He created a multi dance project De koninginnen van de nacht with participation of: Jean Bosco Safari and Geike Arnaert, European and World Champion in Karate Tina Bellemans, boxer and ex-Mr. Universe Bill Richardson accompanied by live drum music with the Japanese Wadokyo / taiko Tenbe.
His production Not strictly Rubens for the Royal Ballet of Flanders (music- Praga Kahn, costumes- Walter Van Beirendonck) involved creating new MTV video clip, a CD and a fashion exhibition in Antwerp.
His production DuXtrou (Antwerp Accent) was described by the press as a poetic, unprecedented event.
He made Dorian Gray (Oscar Wilde) for the ballet and orchestra of the Staatstheater Schwerin.
His Sleeping Beauty with 40 actors and dancers was shown on a contemporary dance theater presentation for the Cluj-Napoca National Theatre, Romania.
Opera
- La traviata, Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - Vlaamse Opera
- Carmina Burana, L'Histoire du Soldat - Deutsche Oper Berlin
- Pur ti miro - Balthasar-Neumann-Ensemble, Thomas Hengelbrock, GMD Volksoper Wiena
- El Divisione del Mondo - Schwetzingen Festival and Innsbruck Festival of Early Music
Circus
- The nouveau circus "All about Eve"- Tollwoodfestival, Munich
- Cirque du Soleil- Montreal, Canada
- 50 Jahren Artistenschule- Friedrichstadtpalast, Berlin
Mass spectacles
- 100 years of the Scouts- King Baudouin Stadium, Brussels, for 80.000 young spectators
- Father Damiaen
- Opening Pan American Games (Indianapolis, USA)
Music theater
- Sound of Silence - Japan: I Fiamminghi
- Mingus and Mairan with Charles Deruwe
- Dracula for the Mecklenburgische Staatstheater Schwerin
- Code Red for Praga Khan
- Eroticon - Inja Van Gastel / Maurice Engelen
Street theater
- Not strictly Van Eyck - Street theatre with band "Carpe Diem" and the improvisational actors from Quicksilver
Film/videoclips
- The Great Globe, Si le Monde... and Tipassa - multi-media installations together with conductor of the Night of the Proms- Robert Groslot
- Hooverphonic
- Placebo
- Praga Kahn
Sport v.s. Art
Since 10 years Bogaerts works worldwide in close cooperation with numerous Olympic training centers in order to bring more value in the world of sport. He led many artistic skate dancers to the Olympic Games, did the opening of the Pan American Games and was also the director of the Berlin International Deutsches Turnfest in Deutschlandhalle where he proposed 18,000 spectators (live RBB broadcast) his vision of bringing sport and art together. With the idea of Sport vs Art he made in Belgium productions for Rotterdam Sport Congress, FIG-Gala (Ghent 2006), Flemish Sport Prize Award (Brussels, KVS 2006), "Apotheosis" (Antwerp), Ghent Sports Arena, West-Flemish Sport Prize, "S.P.O.R.T." Hour Culture at the Catholic University of Leuven.
Teaching
Convinced about stagnation of modern dance after the death of Limón and Graham, foreseeing new development in contemporary and classical dance, Bogaerts developed a methodical-pedagogic system starting at age of twelve, that combines the Vaganova method with Limón technique and emphasises on the knowledge he acquired working for many Olympic Training centres worldwide. He taught this system at the Staatliche Ballettschule Berlin, Ballettschule der Wiener Staatsoper, Heinz-Bosl-Stiftung Munich, the Royal Ballet School Antwerp, the Australian Conservatory of Ballet, the Victoria College of the Arts, University of North Carolina School of the Arts, Saint Petersburg and the Royal Danish Ballet School.
Awards and achievements
- For his drug awareness work in collaboration with the "Just Say No" week established by Nancy Reagan the Mayor of Orlando created Marc Bogaerts Day.
- For his work with orphans in collaboration with Boystown he received the Keys to the City Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
- Chosen to be knighted as a Commander in the Order of Merit for lifetime achievement by the Foreign Office of Belgium in 2008.
- Received the highest protection of the Queen Fabiola and the First Lady Christiane Herzog for "Requiem von Mozart".
References
- ↑ Burns, Diane Hubbard (4 February 1990). "Marc Bogaerts touches the heart as a choreographer of conscience". Orlando Sentinel. p. F1. Retrieved 5 August 2011.
External links
- www.bogaertsproductions.net
- The Festival
- The Keys to the Kingdom on YouTube
- Review of 'Not Strictly Rubens'
- Kunstenaars&CO about Marc Bogaerts
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