The latest work from the series Endangered Human Movements is based on a pre-Hispanic dance form used by the Spanish crown (Casa de Austria / Habsburg) in the conquest of Mexico as “Danza de conquista”.
Referring to the two exhibitions in mumok - Pattern and Decoration and Vertigo - this programme presents music videos that focus on ideas of patterns and decorations as well as illusions.
The Viennese choreographer, the New York-and-Berlin-based performer and the French musician-artist relate thoughts and experiences, wrap themselves in colourful blankets and are in the company of pictures waiting to be looked at.
Together with the spectators, five dancers explore the dividing line between enjoying to be part of something and jumping on the bandwagon: energetic dancing with a touch of political satire, somewhat confrontational, and as contradictory as reality itself
The Viennese choreographer, the New York-and-Berlin-based performer and the French musician-artist relate thoughts and experiences, wrap themselves in colourful blankets and are in the company of pictures waiting to be looked at.
Two Egyptian dancers trained in Cairo, Vienna and New York make up the collective nasa4nasa. Noura Seif Hassanein and Salma Abdel Salam say: “We seek the satisfaction the audience feels when body and space create something that is truly beautiful.”
Every Thursday from 6 pm to 9 pm, ticket prices are reduced: students under 27 years old pay only € 6,50, other visitors pay € 9 instead of the standard price of € 13.
Elsa and Gabriel. Her love, her life together, her study of art in Paris. The rhythm of days and nights, the images on Youtube or Facebook, the signs of the streets, the movements of a society in the storm of change.
Two Egyptian dancers trained in Cairo, Vienna and New York make up the collective nasa4nasa. Noura Seif Hassanein and Salma Abdel Salam say: “We seek the satisfaction the audience feels when body and space create something that is truly beautiful.”
Two Egyptian dancers trained in Cairo, Vienna and New York make up the collective nasa4nasa. Noura Seif Hassanein and Salma Abdel Salam say: “We seek the satisfaction the audience feels when body and space create something that is truly beautiful.”