Terranova | hidden link
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Mo, 26.05.2025, 20:00 Uhr
Maschinell wummernde Sounds durchdringen den leeren Bühnenraum. Zwei Körper winden sich ruhig um ihre Achse, werden von staccato-haften Impulsen erfasst, finden immer wieder zueinander. Unsichtbar verbunden bewegen sie sich im Einklang, kommunizieren auf nichtmenschliche Weise.
Der Choreograf Diego Tortelli erforscht in Terranova | hidden link mit Dramaturgin Miria Wurm die Interaktionssysteme von Mycelien, den „echten Pilzen“. Fasziniert von nonverbaler Kommunikation betrachtet er Mycelien als vitale Schnittstellen, die Leben verbinden und Umwelt sowie Körpersysteme beeinflussen. Sie bilden unterirdische Netzwerke, die Pflanzen über große Distanzen verbinden und versorgen, aber auch in Wirtsgewebe eindringen und es verändern. Diese kaum erforschten Prinzipien überträgt Tortelli auf das Zusammenspiel zweier Tänzer – ein Wechselspiel von Symbiose und Antibiose.
Dauer: 45 Min
Mechanical sounds pound and penetrate the empty stage space. Two bodies twist as if tossed by the wind, moving calmly and fluidly around their own axes before being abruptly taken over by staccato-like impulses. Time and again, they find each other. Through some invisible process, they seem to connect, moving in perfect harmony, seeming to communicate in a non-human way.
In TERRANOVA | hidden link the choreographer Diego Tortelli, together with his dramaturge Miria Wurm, explores the organic interaction systems of mycelia—i.e. what science also refers to as „true fungi.“ Fascinated by nonverbal communication in general, he views mycelia as a vital interface that connects all forms of life while also possessing the power to alter both our environment and the systems of our inner bodies. Mycelia can form a network of small, branching tubes underground, enabling plants to communicate across vast distances and provide support to one another. At the same time, they also have the ability to penetrate the tissue of their host, altering or even manipulating it from within. Tortelli translates these scientific principles—many of which remain only partially decoded—into the choreographic interplay of two dancers, allowing them to engage in a dynamic tension between symbiosis and antibiosis with their environment.
Der Choreograf Diego Tortelli erforscht in Terranova | hidden link mit Dramaturgin Miria Wurm die Interaktionssysteme von Mycelien, den „echten Pilzen“. Fasziniert von nonverbaler Kommunikation betrachtet er Mycelien als vitale Schnittstellen, die Leben verbinden und Umwelt sowie Körpersysteme beeinflussen. Sie bilden unterirdische Netzwerke, die Pflanzen über große Distanzen verbinden und versorgen, aber auch in Wirtsgewebe eindringen und es verändern. Diese kaum erforschten Prinzipien überträgt Tortelli auf das Zusammenspiel zweier Tänzer – ein Wechselspiel von Symbiose und Antibiose.
Dauer: 45 Min
Mechanical sounds pound and penetrate the empty stage space. Two bodies twist as if tossed by the wind, moving calmly and fluidly around their own axes before being abruptly taken over by staccato-like impulses. Time and again, they find each other. Through some invisible process, they seem to connect, moving in perfect harmony, seeming to communicate in a non-human way.
In TERRANOVA | hidden link the choreographer Diego Tortelli, together with his dramaturge Miria Wurm, explores the organic interaction systems of mycelia—i.e. what science also refers to as „true fungi.“ Fascinated by nonverbal communication in general, he views mycelia as a vital interface that connects all forms of life while also possessing the power to alter both our environment and the systems of our inner bodies. Mycelia can form a network of small, branching tubes underground, enabling plants to communicate across vast distances and provide support to one another. At the same time, they also have the ability to penetrate the tissue of their host, altering or even manipulating it from within. Tortelli translates these scientific principles—many of which remain only partially decoded—into the choreographic interplay of two dancers, allowing them to engage in a dynamic tension between symbiosis and antibiosis with their environment.
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