Kalipso
- 7.00 EUR Odrasla
- 5.00 EUR dijaki, študenti, upokojenci
- Processing costs fee per ticket is 1 EUR. Tax is included.
- Responsible organizer and seller
Plesni Teater Ljubljana- Prijateljeva 2a, 1000 Ljubljana
- +386 (0)1 430 83 44
- [email protected]
Festival City of Women 2016
Tina Valentan
CALYPSO
performance
Author and Performer: Tina Valentan
Music and Outside Eye: Tian Rotteveel
Dramaturg: Aleksandra Blagojević
Artistic Advisory: Snježana Premuš
Costume Designer: Urška Recer
Lighting Designer: Urška Vohar
Theoretical Reflection: Tea Hvala
Executive Producer: Amela Meštrovac
Produced by: City of Women, Association for the Promotion of Women in Culture
Co-produced by: Plesni Teater Ljubljana, Plesna Izba Maribor
Supported by: JSKD / Public Fund for Cultural Activities of RS, Maska Institute
Special thanks to: Luka Martin Škof, Andreja Kopač, Vesna Juvan, Nina Meško, Institute for Culture, Tourism and Sport Murska Sobota
About the performance
Which came first, the chicken or the egg? The egg in the chicken, the chicken in the egg.
Calypso is ridiculously unimportant and thick-headed. Calypso is goddess. Calypso is a night club for all sorts of males. Calypso unveils new horizons for the entertainment industry by capitalizing on creative sexuality, reassuring you that plain scrap iron can be turned to gold! Calypso (orig. to deceive, to hide) represents individual and collective patterns that are being transmitted invisibly and secretly through space and time, affecting also individual lives. Thick-headedness proves to be the tool of the elite again and again. Those unknowing of the history don’t know what they are resisting against.
(Andreja Kopač, Tina Valentan)
What is an artwork made of? In this performance the answer is obvious but hidden. It is hidden in two golden eggs that travel a long way from barely perceived feeling in the womb to the staged performance. In it, the dancer addresses nothing less than all creation saying: “Welcome to the Peace space station!”
Calypso by Tina Valentan isn't from Homer yet it is – the same as the immortal nymph Calypso – from a solitary land of shadows. It draws strength from the blackness of its inner universe which carefully forms into a movement and voice and reluctantly reveals secrets to the mortals too soon. What she shares with the mythological Calypso is mainly the name: καλ?πτω (kalypto) is a Greek word for covering or concealing and in the figurative meaning hiding, deceiving but also protection. The care of the self.
Calypso and Calypso: two seducers surrounded by symbols of opulence. They give away their wealth with the generosity of those who have nothing but the awareness that before we break it anything can hatch from the golden egg. All possibilities are open. But Tina Valentan's Calypso is compelled to choose only one way before breaking the egg. What will come out of it: an artistic or biological miracle? A performance or a child? In her picture of the world, every cell holds the entire cosmos and everything is connected, a tree, a dinosaur and a human – therefore creativity and art and motherhood are not mutually exclusive. But in the world she lives in there is not enough money for both. There's no place for the diversity that Calypso takes immense pleasure in: an astronaut, a dancer, a cosmonaut, a pop star, a bimbo and mystical visionary all in one.
This is the origin of pain and snarling. Disguising because you can only pick one in such a flattened world. It appears that even the magical power of the golden eggs fails. No matter how Calypso protects and hatches them, they remain speechless. Self-sufficient. She tries in vain to revive the ancient mythopoetic picture of the world as a cosmic egg where everything begins and ends, and where there’s truly plenty of room for everybody. Here and now, Calypso has to transform from a goddess into a pop star, and stuff all her dimensions into an exotic hat. Like a contemporary Carmen Miranda who traded calypso and samba for synthetic rhythms, she dances around and more out of a habit than desire she impertinently flirts with the audience which despite seeing it all still feels embarrassed.
To make matters worse, Calypso removes golden eggs from her eyes from where they move directly to the ovaries and converts from an astronaut-cosmonaut at the Mir space station into an ordinary mortal condemned to biology. But before we sign out in disappointment as her guests, we should look back and forth and remember where the golden eggs came from and where they are going. Do ovaries really direct Calypso or could it be that she directs them? Is this captivity or freedom? What about both at the same time? Mystics nod assent. Baroque poet Angelus Silesius might have wondered which came first, the chicken or the egg, and gave an answer himself: “The egg in the chicken, and the chicken in the egg.” It is not difficult to imagine that in the Piece dance hall, Calypso would cheerfully propose him a toast with egg liqueur and with an extravagant hat on her head call out: “Long live tutti frutti!”
Tea Hvala