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Forum Dança - Meg Stuart | PACAP 8

PACAP 8
soon

Performing Arts Advanced Programme

Curated by Meg Stuart

Edition to take place in 2025

Forum Dança has invited choreographer Meg Stuart to curate the 8th edition of PACAP, which will take place in 2025.

American choreographer and dancer Meg Stuart works from Brussels and Berlin with her company Damaged Goods. Stuart’s oeuvre, which comprises over thirty creations, is situated on the border between dance and theatre. Stuart has been at the forefront of numerous improvisation projects and regularly collaborates with artists in the fields of visual arts, music and dance.

More information about this next edition and the application process will be available soon.

 

More information about Meg Stuart/Damaged Goods here.

PACAP 8 Activities

PACAP 8 / Mystery School lectures

Support and Partnerships

Co-Production PACAP 8: Culturgest | Teatro do Bairro Alto | Anda & Fala | Walk e Talk | Goethe-Institut Portugal, in the scope of Kulturfest festival.

Co-producer in Residency PACAP 8: O Espaço do Tempo

Support PACAP 8: Alkantara | Casa da Dança – Almada | Fundação GDA | Kees Eijrond Foundation | OPART, E.P.E/Estúdios Victor Córdon | O Rumo do Fumo | Piscina

Forum Dança | Parcerias e Apoios PACAP 8

Top image credit © Edouard Jacquinet (2018)

Tempo Real LAB - Laboratório de estudo, transmissão e aplicação da ferramenta Composição em Tempo Real.

Real Time LAB

Laboratory for the study, transmission and application

of the Real-Time Composition tool

From 30 September to 20 December 2024

A course organised as part of the TECER project, an initiative by João Fiadeiro as Forum Dança’s Resident Artist-Researcher.

Applications closed

“Perhaps present time and past time
Are both present in future time
And future time contained in past time.
If all time is eternally present
All time is irredeemable.”

T. S. Eliot, in Four Quartets

 

“Real Time Composition is a tool that puts into practice a radical decentring to approach what goes beyond human experience.”
Emma Bigé, philosopher, dancer, curator

Premise

Real-Time Composition is a tool that “runs the risk” of being successful in solving decision and selection problems in improvisation or composition processes. That’s one of its strengths. But that’s not all that drives us. We’re driven by the desire to find strategies for suspending certainty. To find ways of thinking about action and making thoughts act. Finding ways of not knowing together.

 

TEMPO REAL LAB was born out of the desire to realise this statement.

Proposal

Since Real Time Composition (RTC) began being systematised at the end of the 1990s, João Fiadeiro has been developing strategies to share this tool in an advanced and immersive way, beyond the occasional workshop.

 

This is a course that gives access to the multiple layers of this practice over the course of its duration, from the different angles and scales that make it up, and with balanced and interconnected doses of thought, experimentation and action.

 

A course where CTR is understood as a “field of study”, and which manages to reduce the distance between territories that are normally split between theory and practice; the fictional and the documentary; or observation and action.

 

A course where the appropriation of its tools and concepts happens intuitively and empirically, and where their application responds to the needs of each situation, circumstance and use.

 

We’ve had powerful and intense examples of this sharing in the past – from the “Case Studies” in the 2000s; AND_Lab in the early 2010s and, more recently, PACAP 5 here at Forum Dança in 2021. But these courses always had a parallel “agenda” – artistic creation, scientific research or the discipline of improvisation sensu lato – whereas CTR was always studied in relation to other ends and never as a “means”, a “between”, a “process”.

 

And it’s no coincidence that this happened. It’s not easy to set up a transmission platform to teach/share a practice that, to all intents and purposes, “serves no purpose”. Or rather, it serves “nothing”, the idea of “nothing”, here understood not as “absence” or “emptiness”, but as something still open, as potential, without having been contaminated and conditioned by a closed meaning or a label.

 

But this time, taking advantage of the framework of a CTR Study Centre like TECER, with the perspective of continuity that Forum Dança provides, and the fact that my most direct peers – Márcia Lança, Carolina Campos, Daniel Pizamiglio or Cláudia Dias – already have their own body of work in the research, transmission and application of CTR, we feel ready to dive into this void.

Programme and Timetable

TEMPO REAL LAB will last 12 weeks (from 30 September to 20 December 2024) and will consist of 4 modules of 3 weeks each. Each module consists of a week dedicated to experimenting with one of the performative devices that synthesise Real-Time Composition and two weeks dedicated to studying the backbone of the tool (from its cardinal axis, premises, and principles) and a “focus experiment” of Real-Time Composition.

 

The very desire to draw up a timetable and a kind of “curriculum” is, at first glance, contrary to the nature of the practice of Real-Time Composition, which is to not to be domesticated and which, in its core modus operandi, inhabits the imponderable and the indeterminate. On the other hand, we also know that the rituals and protocols resulting from frameworks such as “course”, “laboratory” or even “school” are nothing more than generic references that attract people to a place. Once together, it is the people who decide what they are actually doing there. All things going well, the power structures associated with these terms will be deactivated, becoming mere pretexts that have mobilised us towards a meeting point. This encounter is the necessary condition for exchange and sharing, the ultimate goal of a transmission and research project.

 

Synthesis-Devices
The synthesis-devices that we will explore are the result of practices developed over the years of CTR’s research and reflect concerns such as: the relationship between performativity and the presence of the spectator, restriction and task as enhancers of environments of performative freedom, the relationship between word and action, the transit between affects, enunciations and their manifestations. These are concerns that synthesise the principles and premises that underpin his practice, especially those in which there is a displacement of the spatio-temporal perception of the event, of the synaesthetic type, where the senses cross, collide and overlap. Towards the start of the course, participants will be given details of each of the devices to be explored.

 

In the first week of each module, through the synthesis devices, we will have the chance to inhabit the CTR experience even before we begin to peel back the various layers that make it up. This action seems absolutely necessary to destabilise the “think first and do later” tendency so present in our Cartesian habits of access to knowledge. In this way, we want to “protect ourselves from ourselves” by reversing the order of the factors, placing ourselves first inside the experience in order to then study its echoes and aftershocks. As the course progresses, even this inversion will be subverted and access to the experience will take place without a clear distinction between practice and theory, in an attempt to blur and abolish the hierarchical boundaries between doing and thinking.

 

At the end of each week, the study of these devices will have a public presentation (four in total). This will allow us to study a central aspect of this practice: the influence of external observation on the way we present (and represent) ourselves. These presentations will also function as ways of “publishing” the experience (in the sense of leaving a public mark), thus producing discourse and creating an archive, one of TECER’s programme axes.

 

Backbone
During the mornings, the meeting point will be with João Fiadeiro and his collaborators, in order to study and experiment with Real-Time Composition from its cardinal axis, its premises and structuring principles, both from the point of view of its concepts and the tools that support it. This period will focus more on how the “machine” works and less on its applicability. If we think of a biological analogy, the CTR will be studied here as if it were a “stem cell”, still undifferentiated, which could become a “specialised” cell (muscle, blood or brain) at any moment.

 

Focus experiment
In the afternoon, the focus will shift to different forms of experimentation and application of this tool, based on the appropriation made over the years by artists such as Márcia Lança, Carolina Campos, Daniel Pizamiglio and Cláudia Dias, who have worked/are working intensively with João Fiadeiro and who have developed their own approaches to this tool. These sessions will allow participants to access different voices within Real-Time Composition, reinforcing the idea that, while it is a rigorous methodology with precise principles and premises, it is also open and permeable to the unique sensibility of those who incorporate it (both those who transmit it and those who receive it).

 

For this reason, the “study areas” designed for these sessions will be a direct consequence of the interests, imaginations and experiences of each artist who will guide the sessions. Depending on who is sharing it, and the angle from which it is approached, we will simultaneously be faced with repetition (of technique) and difference (of approach). This diagonal and oblique quality is part of the structure of this proposal and transmitting it through a multiple experience is the logical consequence of the way it operates.

 

A more detailed programme of individual intentions by each artist facilitating the sessions will be shared closer to the course.

Target audience

We are looking for experienced professional artists, linked to performance and contemporary dance, who identify with a transversal, hybrid and oblique position of artistic thought-making. It is important that they already have a consistent body of work of reflection and experimentation, even if they are still at the beginning of their careers, in order to establish themselves as a collective of peers, available for a generous and reciprocal exchange of equals.

 

Even when a safe place of research is created, sustained by a work ethic based on principles of care and mutual respect, the practice of improvisation and performance, by definition, can take performers to places of intense sharing, often vulnerable, where doubt and error have a prominent place. We are therefore looking for profiles of participants who are emotionally mature enough to cope with situations of experimentation that shake them up, even if only a little.

Informations

Select each of the sections below to find out more about the course and the application process.

Language

The course will be conducted in English and Portuguese.

 

Important!
Applications can be sent in Portuguese and/or English.

Dates

After receiving the dossier, the shortlisted applicants will be invited by 19 July 2024 to an online interview (via zoom) with João Fiadeiro and the curatorial team. Applicants will be informed of the final decision by 5 August 2024.

 

  • Pre-selection 15.07.2024 – 18.07.2024
  • Pre-selection results 19.07.2024
  • Interviews 25.07.2024 – 26.07.2024
  • Final Answers by 05.08.2024
  • Programme dates 30.09.2024 – 20.12. 2024

Schedules

The daily schedule of this course will be divided into a morning session and another session in the afternoon.

The course will take place from Tuesday to Thursday, with Fridays dedicated to self-organised group activities.

 

  • 10h00 – 12h30 – morning session
  • 13h30 – 17h15 – afternoon session

Venue

Forum Dança / Espaço da Penha
Travessa do Calado, 26B
1170-070 Lisboa | Portugal

Applications

Elements to be sent:

 

  • Motivation letter with the reasons why you are applying (max. 1 page A4 .pdf)
  • CV with photograph and a short biography included (max. 2 pages A4 .pdf)
  • Portfolio in pdf format or website where the history of your creations can be accessed, published texts or collaborations, with links to video recordings.

 

  • A text answering the following question (max. 1/2 page A4 .pdf): Where does the light go when it goes out?
  • An image that translates the following sentence: “All things are delicately interconnected”
  • A sentence that translates the following image:
FORM

! IMPORTANT NOTE !

We do not accept links to download videos.
The links sent must give direct access to viewing the files online (Youtube, Vimeo, etc.).

Fees

  • Enrolment 120 €
  • Full payment of the course 800 €
  • Payment in 2 instalments 420 € x 2

Scholarships

A reduction of 50 % of the tuition fee scholarship will be awarded upon selection.

Application Form

All fields are mandatory.

Applications are now closed.

Bios

João Fiadeiro

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - João Fiadeiro
João Fiadeiro © Ana Viotti

João Fiadeiro (1965) is a Portuguese performer, choreographer, researcher, teacher and curator.
He belongs to the generation of artists that emerged at the end of the 1980s in Portugal and gave rise to the New Portuguese Dance movement.
In the 1990s he studied and practised Contact-Improvisation intensively, which led him to pursue and systematise his own research into improvisation under the name Real-Time Composition. This research has led him to coordinate workshops in master’s and doctoral programmes at various schools and universities around the world.
He has toured extensively in Europe, North America and South America with his solo and group works.
His career, whether as a choreographer or performer, or as a researcher or curator, has centred on creating the right conditions for experimentation, laboratory practice and interdisciplinary cross-fertilisation.
This activity has been carried out both within the framework of directing artistic programming and research projects, which have included the Centro Cultural da Malaposta (1990-95), Espaço Ginjal (1995-1998), Lugar Comum (1999-2000), Espaço A Capital (2000-2002) and Atelier Re.AL (2004-2019), and within the framework of his artistic practice, through creations and research workshops organised around Real-Time Composition.
Atelier Re.AL was a structure that played a leading role in the development of contemporary dance and transdisciplinary initiatives in Portugal.
In all these different meeting platforms, João Fiadeiro has always been accompanied by artists who have actively participated as creators, performers, researchers and programme-makers, making a decisive contribution to the existence of this project over 30 years of uninterrupted activity.

Márcia Lança

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - Márcia Lança
Márcia Lança

Márcia Lança was born in Beja and lives in Lisbon. In 2008 she founded VAGAR, of which she is artistic director. She has worked as a choreographer and performer in various collaborative configurations.
She moves in territories where the boundaries between the fictional and the real are tenuous and diffused. Her interest in the poetic materiality of concrete actions and tasks is at the centre of her creative processes.
She is passionate about emerging composition collectives, thought as action and situated constructions.

Carolina Campos

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - Carolina Campos
Carolina Campos

Carolina Campos is Brazilian and lives between Lisbon and Barcelona.
She completed the Independent Studies Programme at the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art.
In Brazil she worked with Lia Rodrigues Cia de Danças between 2008 and 2011.
Since 2013 she has collaborated intensively with João Fiadeiro in the training, creation and research of Real Time Composition.
In Barcelona she is associated with the Scottish Creation Centre.

Daniel Pizamiglio

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - Daniel Pizamiglio
Daniel Pizamiglio © Matheus Martins

Daniel Pizamiglio is a Brazilian performer and creator.
From 2008 to 2010 he attended the Technical Dance Course in Fortaleza (2008-2010). During this period, he met choreographer João Fiadeiro and from this encounter he moved to Lisbon in 2012, where he currently lives and works.
Since then, he has studied and practised Real-Time Composition; he took part in Forum Dança’s Study, Research and Choreographic Creation Programme (2015-2016); he has collaborated as a performer, co-creator and assistant director with different artists.
In his authorial work, he seeks an encounter between poetry and the body (“Concrete Dance”) and how to activate the corporeality of affects and relationships (“Pay Attention To Everything From Now On”).

Cláudia Dias

Cláudia Dias 
© Adriano Miranda
Cláudia Dias © Adriano Miranda

Cláudia Dias was born in Lisbon in 1972. She is a choreographer, performer and teacher. She began her dance training at the Academia Almadense, was awarded a scholarship at the Companhia de Dança de Lisboa, completed the Contemporary Dance Performers Training Course at Forum Dança, and attended the Master’s Degree in Performing Arts at the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences, Universidade Nova de Lisboa. She began her work as a performer with the Almada Dance Group. She was a member of the collective Ninho de Víboras. She collaborated with Re.Al and was a central interpreter in João Fiadeiro’s creative strategy and in the development, systematisation and transmission of the Real-Time Composition Technique. She created the pieces Feedback, E.U. (entrevista-me urgentemente), Juntem-se 2 a 2, As águias não geram pombas, Per Ti, Histo, One Woman Show, Visita Guiada, Das coisas nascem coisas, Vontade de ter Vontade, 23 + 1 and Nem tudo o que dizem tem de ser feito nem tudo o que fazemos tem de ser dito. She was an associate artist at Re.Al and Espaço do Tempo and a resident artist at Alkantara. She has published texts in the magazines Boa União and Woman On Scene and in the books Correspondencias.Bad and Escenas do Cambio. She won the Young Creators competition by the Portuguese Arts and Ideas Club in 1998. Nominated for the Best Choreography Award in 2013 and 2017 by the Portuguese Society of Authors. Since 2016 she has been developing the project Sete Anos Sete Peças (Seven Years, Seven Pieces), accumulating functions of direction, creation, interpretation and training. She created the association Sete Anos.

TECER activities

CTR Workshop
Body as space

From August 26th to 30th, 2024, from 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Sensitivity to initial conditions II
An introduction to Real Time Composition: body as space

 

In this workshop, João Fiadeiro will collaborate with performer and artist Márcia Lança to create and study how the initial conditions for the practice of Real-Time Composition are established. The game will always start, as an initial protocol, from positions and relations generated by Márcia and João, which will function as an initial reference for exploring and experimenting with Real-Time Composition. These initial positions-relations will function as micro-scores that will condition the experience of the practice. Finding the experience of freedom within a score-environment composed of restrictions, while at the same time developing autonomous and inter-dependent relationships with those who play (humans and non-humans), will be the “object of study” of this workshop.

Informations

Select each of the sections below to find out more about the workshop and the enrolment process.

Who is it for

This cycle of workshops is aimed at artist-researchers with experience in improvisation (in dance, performance or theatre).

Maximum number of participants: 16 people.

Schedules

Summer workshop: From 26 to 30 August 2024, from 14h00 to 18h00.

Venue

Forum Dança / Espaço da Penha
Travessa do Calado, 26B
1170-070 Lisboa

Participation fee

    • Registration fee: €100 (one hundred euros);
    • 10% discount: for people who attend or have attended Forum Dança long-term courses (CGPAE/PEPCC/etc.);
    • 25% discount: for people who attend or have attended PACAP.

Pre-registration

Pre-registration is done using the form available on our website and will be validated once proof of payment has been received and sent to our email address.

Registration process

  1. Pre-register online using the form provided;
  2. Wait for our email with payment instructions;
  3. Pay your registration fee as indicated in the email sent to you;
  4. Send us proof of payment to our email address;
  5. Your registration will only be validated once we have received your receipt.

Registration form

All fields are mandatory.

Registrations are closed.

Contextualisation

Select each of the sections below to find out more.

*Real Time Composition

* Real Time Composition is a term used in a wide range of artistic interactions and contexts, most commonly in the field of electronic music and its relationship with computer science. In the field of contemporary dance, it is used by many artists as a synonym for the practice of “improvisation” (a term somewhat “hijacked” by common sense as an arbitrary, disorganized or chaotic experience), in order to emphasize the complexity and rigor involved in the act of improvising, especially when presented publicly.

 

When João Fiadeiro began his research into improvisation in the 1990s, the expression most often used to claim this rigor was “instant composition”. Intuitively João Fiadeiro decided to adopt the notion of ” real time composition” to designate his research, because it was the term that best corresponded to the experience of expanded, distended and plastic time that he had when “colliding” with the unknown, whether when improvising or composing. He was later able to better formulate this resistance to the term “instantaneous” when he realized that an important part of the hypothesis he put forward as a researcher, on the performer’s experience with time, was based on the premise that the idea of an “instant” is made by the human being, who has decided, out of interest (and profit) that an instant is the thinnest slice of time and that successive instants replace the previous one.

 

More recently, by accessing the writings of authors who think about the concept of time, this reasoning has gained even more ground. In particular through the formulation of “operative time” that Giorgio Agamben uses in “The Time That Remains”. To defend his hypothesis, Agamben relies on the linguist Gustave Guillaume (1883-1960) who states (in his book Temps et Verbe) that “all mental experience, however rapid [it may be], requires a certain amount of time, which may be very brief, but is no less real”. What Guillaume defines as “operative time” (and João Fiadeiro as “real time”) is exactly “the time that the mind uses to realize an image-time”. Agamben complements this reasoning when he says that “a careful examination of the phenomena of language shows that languages organize their verbal systems not according to the preceding linear scheme (…) but through the reference of the constructed image in the operative time of its construction.” Operative time (or, as Fiadeiro would say, “real time”) “is neither the line – representable but unthinkable – of chronological time, nor the instant – equally unthinkable – of its end, and even less a segment extracted from chronological time (…). It is rather the operative time that urges on chronological time and works and transforms it from within, time that we need in order to bring time to an end – in this sense: the time that remains.”

 

When discussing the term “instant” or “real time” to designate the type of “improvisation” João Fiadeiro researches, he is not referring to the time shared between improviser and spectator, but to the internal time of the performer, in the management of the experience that mediates the identification, circumscription and processing of stimuli; the selection and choice of relation possibilities; and their consequent manifestation in the form of gesture and action.

 

João Fiadeiro’s use of the expression Real Time Composition to describe his research and practice must be understood in the light of this reflection.

João Fiadeiro

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - João Fiadeiro
João Fiadeiro © Ana Viotti

João Fiadeiro (1965) belongs to the generation of artists who emerged in the late eighties in Portugal and gave rise to Nova Dança Portuguesa [New Portuguese Dance], a movement highly influenced by the Judson Dance Theater in America and New Dance scene in Europe.

 

Between 1990 and 2019 he was Atelier RE.AL’s artistic director, a venue that played a major role in the development of contemporary dance and trans-disciplinary initiatives in Portugal, both within art and between art, science and society. Among the projects organized by this association, the LAB/Moving Projects (1992-2006), a work-in-progress platform from emergent artists; “Restos, rastos e traços” (Leftovers, tracks and traces) and “G.host” (2009-2011), two residency programs focused on documentation practices for contemporary art; and the project AND_Lab (2011-2014), a research laboratory working on the relationship between ethics, aesthetics and politics, are among the initiatives that had the biggest impact in the community.

 

João Fiadeiro has toured extensively throughout Europe, North America and South America with his solo and group works. His pieces navigate in-between disciplines (performance, dance and theater), contexts (theaters, museums or site-specific) and formats (choreographies, happenings or lecture-performances), in an attempt to maintain a “radical sensitivity” towards the present and remain vigilant against any form of stagnation or loss of critical discourse.

 

Between 1995 and 2003 he collaborated with Artistas Unidos (United Artists), a Lisbon based theater company, where he was responsible for the movement of the actors in pieces from Silva Melo, Shakespeare, Brecht, Goethe, etc.. For this company he also staged plays by Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot), Sarah Kane (Psychosis 4’48’’) and Jon Fosse (Nightsongs).

 

Parallel to his work as a choreographer, theater director and curator, João Fiadeiro studied and practiced intensively Contact-Improvisation in the 90’s which led him to pursue and systematize his own research on improvisation under the designation of Real Time Composition. This research, which started as a tool to support his own creative practices, has since been used by researchers from art and science (coming from fields as diverse as anthropology, complex systems sciences or economy), as a theoretical-practical platform to study decision-making, representation and collaboration. This work has led him to teach extensively in different independent venues in Europe and South America (Brasil, Uruguay, Argentina and Chile) and to lead workshop sessions in the most important master programs and schools in Europe that relate to contemporary dance like PACAP/Forum Dança; EXERCE Master, MA in Arts Practice and Visual Culture at Rainha Sofia Museum; SoDA MA Program; Performing Studies at the Hamburg University; Amsterdam Master of Choreography; Master of Theatre DasArts; a.pass_advanced performance and scenography studies; MA Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki; Villa Arson; Centre National de la Danse, etc.

 

The Real Time Composition tool has since expanded its application outside the artistic field with initiatives like “Soft Skills for Hard Decisions”, designed in collaboration with the economist António Alvarenga and applied in human resources departments of foundations; or the discipline “Social Stigmergy” designed for the PhD program at ISCTE University in Lisbon with the complex system scientist Jorge Louçã.

 

In 2018 João Fiadeiro published his book “Anatomy of a Decision” where he synthesized his life long research on Real Time Composition and in 2019 co-curate (with Romain Bigé) the exhibition Drafting Interior Techniques at Culturgest Gallery, the first retrospective look taken at Steve Paxton work and legacy.

Márcia Lança

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - Márcia Lança
Márcia Lança

Márcia Lança was born in Beja and lives in Lisbon. In 2008 she founded VAGAR, of which she is artistic director. She has worked as a choreographer and performer in various collaborative configurations.

 

She moves in territories where the boundaries between the fictional and the real are tenuous and diffuse. Her interest in the poetic materiality of concrete actions and tasks is at the centre of her creative processes.

 

She is passionate about emerging collective compositions, thought as action and situated constructions.

 

More information here

TECER activities

CTR Workshop
Space as body

From April 1st to 5th, from 2:00pm to 6:00pm

Sensitivity to initial conditions I
An introduction to Real-Time Composition: space as body

 

In this workshop, João Fiadeiro will collaborate with architect and artist João Gonçalo Lopes to create the initial conditions for practicing Real Time Composition. The game will always start, as an initial protocol, from a “prepared space” (a bit like John Cage’s “prepared piano”), which will function as a territory for exploring and experimenting with Real Time Composition. This preparation will create a spatial topography which, through the obstructions and restrictions created, will condition the experience of the practice. Finding the experience of freedom within a score-environment composed of restrictions, while developing autonomous and inter-dependent relationships with those who play (humans and non-humans), will be this workshop’s “object of study”.

Informations

Select each of the sections below to find out more about the workshop and the enrolment process.

Who is it for

This cycle of workshops is aimed at artist-researchers with experience in improvisation (in dance, performance or theatre).

Maximum number of participants: 16 people.

Schedules

Easter Workshop: From 1 to 5 April 2024, from 14h00 to 18h00.

Venue

Forum Dança / Espaço da Penha
Travessa do Calado, 26B
1170-070 Lisboa

Participation fee

    • Registration fee: €100 (one hundred euros);
    • 10% discount: for people who attend or have attended Forum Dança long-term courses (CGPAE/PEPCC/etc.);
    • 25% discount: for people who attend or have attended PACAP.

Pre-registration

Pre-registration is done using the form available on our website and will be validated once proof of payment has been received and sent to our email address.

Registration process

  1. Pre-register online using the form provided;
  2. Wait for our email with payment instructions;
  3. Pay your registration fee as indicated in the email sent to you;
  4. Send us proof of payment to our email address;
  5. Your registration will only be validated once we have received your receipt.

Registration form

All fields are mandatory.

Registrations are now closed.

Contextualisation

Select each of the sections below to find out more.

*Real Time Composition

* Real Time Composition is a term used in a wide range of artistic interactions and contexts, most commonly in the field of electronic music and its relationship with computer science. In the field of contemporary dance, it is used by many artists as a synonym for the practice of “improvisation” (a term somewhat “hijacked” by common sense as an arbitrary, disorganized or chaotic experience), in order to emphasize the complexity and rigor involved in the act of improvising, especially when presented publicly.

 

When João Fiadeiro began his research into improvisation in the 1990s, the expression most often used to claim this rigor was “instant composition”. Intuitively João Fiadeiro decided to adopt the notion of ” real time composition” to designate his research, because it was the term that best corresponded to the experience of expanded, distended and plastic time that he had when “colliding” with the unknown, whether when improvising or composing. He was later able to better formulate this resistance to the term “instantaneous” when he realized that an important part of the hypothesis he put forward as a researcher, on the performer’s experience with time, was based on the premise that the idea of an “instant” is made by the human being, who has decided, out of interest (and profit) that an instant is the thinnest slice of time and that successive instants replace the previous one.

 

More recently, by accessing the writings of authors who think about the concept of time, this reasoning has gained even more ground. In particular through the formulation of “operative time” that Giorgio Agamben uses in “The Time That Remains”. To defend his hypothesis, Agamben relies on the linguist Gustave Guillaume (1883-1960) who states (in his book Temps et Verbe) that “all mental experience, however rapid [it may be], requires a certain amount of time, which may be very brief, but is no less real”. What Guillaume defines as “operative time” (and João Fiadeiro as “real time”) is exactly “the time that the mind uses to realize an image-time”. Agamben complements this reasoning when he says that “a careful examination of the phenomena of language shows that languages organize their verbal systems not according to the preceding linear scheme (…) but through the reference of the constructed image in the operative time of its construction.” Operative time (or, as Fiadeiro would say, “real time”) “is neither the line – representable but unthinkable – of chronological time, nor the instant – equally unthinkable – of its end, and even less a segment extracted from chronological time (…). It is rather the operative time that urges on chronological time and works and transforms it from within, time that we need in order to bring time to an end – in this sense: the time that remains.”

 

When discussing the term “instant” or “real time” to designate the type of “improvisation” João Fiadeiro researches, he is not referring to the time shared between improviser and spectator, but to the internal time of the performer, in the management of the experience that mediates the identification, circumscription and processing of stimuli; the selection and choice of relation possibilities; and their consequent manifestation in the form of gesture and action.

 

João Fiadeiro’s use of the expression Real Time Composition to describe his research and practice must be understood in the light of this reflection.

João Fiadeiro

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - João Fiadeiro
João Fiadeiro © Ana Viotti

João Fiadeiro (1965) belongs to the generation of artists who emerged in the late eighties in Portugal and gave rise to Nova Dança Portuguesa [New Portuguese Dance], a movement highly influenced by the Judson Dance Theater in America and New Dance scene in Europe.

 

Between 1990 and 2019 he was Atelier RE.AL’s artistic director, a venue that played a major role in the development of contemporary dance and trans-disciplinary initiatives in Portugal, both within art and between art, science and society. Among the projects organized by this association, the LAB/Moving Projects (1992-2006), a work-in-progress platform from emergent artists; “Restos, rastos e traços” (Leftovers, tracks and traces) and “G.host” (2009-2011), two residency programs focused on documentation practices for contemporary art; and the project AND_Lab (2011-2014), a research laboratory working on the relationship between ethics, aesthetics and politics, are among the initiatives that had the biggest impact in the community.

 

João Fiadeiro has toured extensively throughout Europe, North America and South America with his solo and group works. His pieces navigate in-between disciplines (performance, dance and theater), contexts (theaters, museums or site-specific) and formats (choreographies, happenings or lecture-performances), in an attempt to maintain a “radical sensitivity” towards the present and remain vigilant against any form of stagnation or loss of critical discourse.

 

Between 1995 and 2003 he collaborated with Artistas Unidos (United Artists), a Lisbon based theater company, where he was responsible for the movement of the actors in pieces from Silva Melo, Shakespeare, Brecht, Goethe, etc.. For this company he also staged plays by Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot), Sarah Kane (Psychosis 4’48’’) and Jon Fosse (Nightsongs).

 

Parallel to his work as a choreographer, theater director and curator, João Fiadeiro studied and practiced intensively Contact-Improvisation in the 90’s which led him to pursue and systematize his own research on improvisation under the designation of Real Time Composition. This research, which started as a tool to support his own creative practices, has since been used by researchers from art and science (coming from fields as diverse as anthropology, complex systems sciences or economy), as a theoretical-practical platform to study decision-making, representation and collaboration. This work has led him to teach extensively in different independent venues in Europe and South America (Brasil, Uruguay, Argentina and Chile) and to lead workshop sessions in the most important master programs and schools in Europe that relate to contemporary dance like PACAP/Forum Dança; EXERCE Master, MA in Arts Practice and Visual Culture at Rainha Sofia Museum; SoDA MA Program; Performing Studies at the Hamburg University; Amsterdam Master of Choreography; Master of Theatre DasArts; a.pass_advanced performance and scenography studies; MA Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki; Villa Arson; Centre National de la Danse, etc.

 

The Real Time Composition tool has since expanded its application outside the artistic field with initiatives like “Soft Skills for Hard Decisions”, designed in collaboration with the economist António Alvarenga and applied in human resources departments of foundations; or the discipline “Social Stigmergy” designed for the PhD program at ISCTE University in Lisbon with the complex system scientist Jorge Louçã.

 

In 2018 João Fiadeiro published his book “Anatomy of a Decision” where he synthesized his life long research on Real Time Composition and in 2019 co-curate (with Romain Bigé) the exhibition Drafting Interior Techniques at Culturgest Gallery, the first retrospective look taken at Steve Paxton work and legacy.

João Gonçalo Lopes

João Gonçalo Lopes
João Gonçalo Lopes © Gustavo Ciríaco

João Gonçalo Lopes is an architect working across disciplines between art, design and education. Having had a diverse experience in different parts of the globe, he is currently working with a hands-on approach on scales that go from urban design, to art instalations or furniture design.

 

With a context based attitude, his work is rooted in collaboration and community building processes, focusing on the ecology of materials as means to achieve conscious and complex realities.

 

He values spaces and objects that exist as enablers of experience. For this he uses a broad set of tools that come from different disciplines be it social, political, artistic, constructive or spatial.

 

More information here.

TECER activities

TECER | CTR 2024

The weekly sessions, occasional workshops and annual courses organized by TECER | CTR at Forum Dança aim to multiply the platforms for accessing Real Time Composition, both in terms of intensity and proposed contents.

 

In 2024 we are offering two workshops – at Easter and in the summer – entitled “Sensitivity to Initial Conditions: an introduction to Real Time Composition”. These are practical workshops, where bodies are invited to act and interact, so although it is open to performers, researchers and artists from any artistic discipline or area of thought (as long as they are curious about the concepts presented in this presentation), there must be a physical predisposition for participation. The main language will be Portuguese. If there are participants who do not speak Portuguese, we will try to organize forms of shared translation within the group. Registrations will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis.

Easter Workshop

From April 1st to 5th, from 2:00pm to 6:00pm

Sensitivity to initial conditions I
An introduction to Real-Time Composition: space as body

Summer Workshop

From August 26th to 30th, from 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Sensitivity to initial conditions II
An introduction to Real Time Composition: body as space

Composição em Tempo Real, João Fiadeiro / Forum Dança

CTR open sessions

Every Monday from 6pm to 8pm

Sessions open to the community
With the facilitation of João Fiadeiro, Márcia Lança, Cláudia Dias, Carolina Campos and/or Daniel Pizamiglio.

Tempo Real LAB - Laboratório de estudo, transmissão e aplicação da ferramenta Composição em Tempo Real.

Intensive CTR program

From September 30th to December 20th 2024

 

Intensive 12-week research and experimentation programme in Real-Time Composition.

TECER activities

Palestra "A Minha História da Dança", por Mark Tompkins

Mark Tompkins

28 March 2024, at 18h30
Espaço da Penha – Lisbon
Approximate duration: 2 hours

Free entry, subject to capacity.

 

An American dancer, choreographer, singer and teacher, he founded the I.D.A. Company in 1983. His way of making unidentified performance objects, mixing dance, music, song, text and video, has become his signature. Solos, group pieces, concerts and improvised performances are all elements of this journey, which began in the 1970s, with the complicity of set and costume designer Jean-Louis Badet in 1988. His passion for real-time composition has led him to collaborate with dancers, musicians, light designers and video makers. Recognised for his teaching, he travels all over the world. In 2008, he was awarded the SACD Choreography Prize for his work as a whole (Society of Dramatic Authors Composers).

 

Fascinated by the frictions and resonances between high and low entertainment, his shows are inspired by popular forms such as cabaret, music hall, musicals and burlesque, as well as themes of ambiguity and ambivalence. She sings and dances in the concerts of Sarah Murcia & musicians, NEVER MIND THE FUTURE and MY MOTHER IS A FISH, and collaborates with choreographer Mariana Tengner Barros in A POWER BALLAD and RESURRECTION. He recently published ONE SHOT dialogues on real time composition, with Meg Stuart and the images of Gilles Toutevoix at Editions L’œil d’or. His most recent performances: a solo STAYIN ALIVE (2018) and a trio CELEBRATION (2021).

 

Photo © Denise Luccioni

Real Time Composition, João Fiadeiro / Forum Dança

TECER | CTR 1

Time | Study | Composition | Experimentation | Real 2

“If we observe the spider at work, what it eventually weaves first (…) is not the web; what eventually happens is that the little pearl that it weaved, suspended on the end of the thread carried by the wind, finds a branch [a wall, a corner]. (…) Is it possible to say that the spider has the project of weaving its web? I don’t think so. It’s better to say that the web has the project of being woven.”

 

Fernand Deligny, O Aracniano

Presentation

TECER | CTR is a project directed by João Fiadeiro as part of his role as artist-researcher in residency at Forum Dança. Through this platform, João Fiadeiro intends to transmit the study (and study the transmission) of Real Time Composition*, a (theoretical) practice and a (practical) theory that offers itself as a “field”, a place-territory that aims to welcome and host the forces at play in what we conventionally call the present. Within this present and from RTC’s perspective, an expanded time moves, simultaneously “no more” and “not yet”. A non-linear time, experienced like a Möbius band, with no inside or outside, with no before nor after. A time where the shadow, the margin and the fragment have the same prominence as what is in the light, in the center and in the whole. A time when positions are taken so that com3 -positions can take place.

 

To share Real Time Composition from the potency within the “not-knowing” and not from the power carried by the “knowing”. To share Real Time Composition, reducing the distance and the split between theory and practice, process and product, action and observation, action and procrastination, memory and forgetting, teaching and learning.

 

This is TECER | CTR ambition as a center for the study and experimentation of Real Time Composition.


1 TECER | CTR is the Portuguese acronym for Weaving Real Time Composition.
2 Time, Study, Composition, Experimentation, Real.
3 In Portuguese, the preposition “com” means “with” and taking a position-with instead of com-posing (arriving with a readymade “with”) is the performer’s main challenge in this practice. Following and repeating this modus operandi will eventually give place to a set of relations between positions (position-with-position-with-position-with- position…) which is how an emergent system can be generated within this practice.

Contextualisation

Select each of the sections below to find out more.

Sensitivity to Initial Conditions

In Real Time Composition, the rules of the game are defined as the game is played and not, as in most games (including the game of life) before the game begins. Before beginning the practice of Real Time Composition, what is established as common ground are the premises and principles that govern the game, in a kind of collective ethical commitment where its singularity is circumscribed, its cardinal axes are defined, and the conceptual framework of this practice is established. In general terms, the three premises that guide this commitment can be summarized using simple coordinates:

  1. You don’t explain your move.
  2. You don’t play twice in a row.
  3. You don’t correct the previous move.

Following (and as a result of) these initial restrictions, the game unfolds in a fine and meticulous management by the players, of the doses of repetition and difference that, at each move, are introduced into the system.

 

Another key concept in this practice is the principle of “non-linearity”. In Real Time Composition, it is always the subsequent action that retroactively establishes the rules of the game (of that game is being played, because as soon as the game in question ends, the rules are instantaneously obsolete). That’s why you can only really talk about a game when you are halfway through. In other words, for most of the time Real Time Composition experience isn’t spent playing the game but finding the game. This encounter takes place a) when, from a position, you establish a relation; and b) when, from that relation you establish an operation. This process takes place in three stages:

  1. The time when a “position” takes place.
  2. The time when a “com (with)” takes place (creating a “positioning-with” type of relationship).
  3. The time when a “positioning-with” takes place (creating a “positioning-with-positioning” type of operation).

The resulting “positioning-with-positioning” operation works like an equation, a fractal that expands into what we call instant, moment or present. Developing a sensitivity to this triad – positioning-with-positioning – is the necessary condition to play Real Time Composition’s game.

*Real Time Composition

* Real Time Composition is a term used in a wide range of artistic interactions and contexts, most commonly in the field of electronic music and its relationship with computer science. In the field of contemporary dance, it is used by many artists as a synonym for the practice of “improvisation” (a term somewhat “hijacked” by common sense as an arbitrary, disorganized or chaotic experience), in order to emphasize the complexity and rigor involved in the act of improvising, especially when presented publicly.

 

When João Fiadeiro began his research into improvisation in the 1990s, the expression most often used to claim this rigor was “instant composition”. Intuitively João Fiadeiro decided to adopt the notion of ” real time composition” to designate his research, because it was the term that best corresponded to the experience of expanded, distended and plastic time that he had when “colliding” with the unknown, whether when improvising or composing. He was later able to better formulate this resistance to the term “instantaneous” when he realized that an important part of the hypothesis he put forward as a researcher, on the performer’s experience with time, was based on the premise that the idea of an “instant” is made by the human being, who has decided, out of interest (and profit) that an instant is the thinnest slice of time and that successive instants replace the previous one.

 

More recently, by accessing the writings of authors who think about the concept of time, this reasoning has gained even more ground. In particular through the formulation of “operative time” that Giorgio Agamben uses in “The Time That Remains”. To defend his hypothesis, Agamben relies on the linguist Gustave Guillaume (1883-1960) who states (in his book Temps et Verbe) that “all mental experience, however rapid [it may be], requires a certain amount of time, which may be very brief, but is no less real”. What Guillaume defines as “operative time” (and João Fiadeiro as “real time”) is exactly “the time that the mind uses to realize an image-time”. Agamben complements this reasoning when he says that “a careful examination of the phenomena of language shows that languages organize their verbal systems not according to the preceding linear scheme (…) but through the reference of the constructed image in the operative time of its construction.” Operative time (or, as Fiadeiro would say, “real time”) “is neither the line – representable but unthinkable – of chronological time, nor the instant – equally unthinkable – of its end, and even less a segment extracted from chronological time (…). It is rather the operative time that urges on chronological time and works and transforms it from within, time that we need in order to bring time to an end – in this sense: the time that remains.”

 

When discussing the term “instant” or “real time” to designate the type of “improvisation” João Fiadeiro researches, he is not referring to the time shared between improviser and spectator, but to the internal time of the performer, in the management of the experience that mediates the identification, circumscription and processing of stimuli; the selection and choice of relation possibilities; and their consequent manifestation in the form of gesture and action.

 

João Fiadeiro’s use of the expression Real Time Composition to describe his research and practice must be understood in the light of this reflection.

João Fiadeiro

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - João Fiadeiro
João Fiadeiro © Ana Viotti

João Fiadeiro (1965) belongs to the generation of artists who emerged in the late eighties in Portugal and gave rise to Nova Dança Portuguesa [New Portuguese Dance], a movement highly influenced by the Judson Dance Theater in America and New Dance scene in Europe.

 

Between 1990 and 2019 he was Atelier RE.AL’s artistic director, a venue that played a major role in the development of contemporary dance and trans-disciplinary initiatives in Portugal, both within art and between art, science and society. Among the projects organized by this association, the LAB/Moving Projects (1992-2006), a work-in-progress platform from emergent artists; “Restos, rastos e traços” (Leftovers, tracks and traces) and “G.host” (2009-2011), two residency programs focused on documentation practices for contemporary art; and the project AND_Lab (2011-2014), a research laboratory working on the relationship between ethics, aesthetics and politics, are among the initiatives that had the biggest impact in the community.

 

João Fiadeiro has toured extensively throughout Europe, North America and South America with his solo and group works. His pieces navigate in-between disciplines (performance, dance and theater), contexts (theaters, museums or site-specific) and formats (choreographies, happenings or lecture-performances), in an attempt to maintain a “radical sensitivity” towards the present and remain vigilant against any form of stagnation or loss of critical discourse.

 

Between 1995 and 2003 he collaborated with Artistas Unidos (United Artists), a Lisbon based theater company, where he was responsible for the movement of the actors in pieces from Silva Melo, Shakespeare, Brecht, Goethe, etc.. For this company he also staged plays by Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot), Sarah Kane (Psychosis 4’48’’) and Jon Fosse (Nightsongs).

 

Parallel to his work as a choreographer, theater director and curator, João Fiadeiro studied and practiced intensively Contact-Improvisation in the 90’s which led him to pursue and systematize his own research on improvisation under the designation of Real Time Composition. This research, which started as a tool to support his own creative practices, has since been used by researchers from art and science (coming from fields as diverse as anthropology, complex systems sciences or economy), as a theoretical-practical platform to study decision-making, representation and collaboration. This work has led him to teach extensively in different independent venues in Europe and South America (Brasil, Uruguay, Argentina and Chile) and to lead workshop sessions in the most important master programs and schools in Europe that relate to contemporary dance like PACAP/Forum Dança; EXERCE Master, MA in Arts Practice and Visual Culture at Rainha Sofia Museum; SoDA MA Program; Performing Studies at the Hamburg University; Amsterdam Master of Choreography; Master of Theatre DasArts; a.pass_advanced performance and scenography studies; MA Theatre Academy of the University of the Arts Helsinki; Villa Arson; Centre National de la Danse, etc.

 

The Real Time Composition tool has since expanded its application outside the artistic field with initiatives like “Soft Skills for Hard Decisions”, designed in collaboration with the economist António Alvarenga and applied in human resources departments of foundations; or the discipline “Social Stigmergy” designed for the PhD program at ISCTE University in Lisbon with the complex system scientist Jorge Louçã.

 

In 2018 João Fiadeiro published his book “Anatomy of a Decision” where he synthesized his life long research on Real Time Composition and in 2019 co-curate (with Romain Bigé) the exhibition Drafting Interior Techniques at Culturgest Gallery, the first retrospective look taken at Steve Paxton work and legacy.

General Note

For those wishing to take part in any of our CTR transmission and practice programmes

 

Even though we are committed to creating a safe place of practice, sustained by a work ethic based on principles of care and mutual respect, the experience of improvisation and performance, by definition, can take performers to places of intense sharing, often vulnerable and emotionally charged, where doubt and error have a prominent place. When signing up, bear in mind that in this practice you may find yourself in situations of experimentation that shake up your comfort zones, even if only temporarily.

TECER activities

Núcleo - Programa de Residências Artísticas do Forum Dança

Núcleo 2024

Núcleo emerges as a project that fulfils one of Forum Dança’s objectives: to host artistic residencies and the informal presentations that result from them, under the care of a specific programme line.

It has a self-reflexive impulse in Forum Dança’s history, referencing the Núcleo de Apoio Coreográfico (NAC) – Choreographic Support Centre -, which in the 1990s was an important platform for supporting the creation and internationalization of Portuguese dance.

It is a place of experimentation, where the craft of creating, showing, reflecting, creating circularity with the artistic community and its public side in the creation and mediation of audiences is taken care of.

Artistic Residencies 2024

Open Call deadline: February 4, 2024

As one of Forum Dança’s objectives is to support residencies, in accordance with the programme outlined by its artistic direction, the Residency Programme is designed to create a space that allows for a period of experimentation and research through action, linking creation with transmission to the artistic community.

This year’s programme will support three projects in the field of contemporary dance or performance. We will favour projects that are at an early stage of development.

The programme offers rehearsal space, artistic supervision by Forum Dança’s associate artist-researcher João Fiadeiro and a support grant of €750 (seven hundred and fifty euros).

Periods

  • Residency 1: October 7 to 18
  • Residency 2: October 28 to November 8
  • Residency 3: November 18 to 29

Conditions

  1. Support for 3 projects selected by Forum Dança’s management;
  2. A grant of €750 (seven hundred and fifty euros) per residency, upon submission of a green receipt or equivalent (in the case of artists not resident in Portugal, must present a tax residency certificate issued by the authorities in their country of residence.);
  3. Support for publicising the project in Forum Dança’s media;
  4. Final public sharing, in the residency space, in the form of an informal show, talk or similar, with João Fiadeiro as mediator;
  5. Mandatory mention of “Support for Creation – Forum Dança” and insertion of the logo in all the project’s promotional material;
  6. Provision of the record of the presentation of the supported project, where applicable, for archiving in the Forum Dança Documentation Centre;
  7. The organisation of travel, accommodation, meals, and medical assistance during the period of the residencies is the sole responsibility of those taking part.

Artistic supervision

These artistic residencies will be overseen by João Fiadeiro.

Forum Dança | PACAP 5 - João Fiadeiro
João Fiadeiro © Ana Viotti

Born in 1965, João Fiadeiro is part of a generation of choreographers that emerged in the late 1980’s and gave rise to the Nova Dança Portuguesa (New Portuguese Dance).

His career, both as a choreographer or performer and as a researcher or curator, has centered on creating conditions for experimentation, for laboratorial practices and for the intersection between artistic and scientific research. This activity was developed as much by coordinating programming and artistic research projects at Centro Cultural da Malaposta [1990-95], Espaço Ginjal [1995-98], Lugar Comum [1999-2000], Espaço A Capital [2000-2002] and Atelier Real [2004-2019] as by his artistic practice through his choreographies and the research workshops on and around Real Time Composition.

In all these different platforms João Fiadeiro was always accompanied by artists that participated as creators, performers, researchers and programmers, contributing in a decisive manner to the existence of this project through thirty years of non-stop activity.

Process

Applications must be submitted by February 4, 2024.

The results will be announced by email, by April 1, 2024.

Application form

All fields marked with * are mandatory.

Applications are closed.

Results

The following projects were supported:

 

  • Residency I – 28 October to 8 November: Clarissa Rêgo Teixeira
  • Residency II – 18 to 29 November: Herlandson Duarte
  • Residency III – 9 to 20 December: Inés Sybille Vooduness

 

The residencies will always have an informal show on the last day (Fridays).

In addition to filling in the form at the bottom of this page, you must send us a filled-in project sheet in pdf format (up to 2 MB). The project sheet is available at this link:

 

Project Sheet | Application Núcleo 2024

Foram apoiados os seguintes projetos:

 

  • Residência 1 (7-18 Agosto): Ana Renata Polónia com o projecto VERBAL IMAGES
  • Residência 2 (21 Agosto-1 Setembro): Inês Cartaxo com o projecto SUPERADAPTATION
  • Residência 3 (21 Agosto-1 Setembro): Sara Manubens e Ves Liberta com o projecto NOSFERATU: A SYMPHONY OF HORROR
  • Residência 4 (16 – 27 Outubro): Djam Neguin com o projecto Tx@bet_a
  • Residência 5 (30 Outubro – 10 Novembro): Sara Bernardo com o projecto Efemérida
  • Residência 6 (13 – 24 Novembro): Andrei Bessa e Acauã El Bandide Shereya com o projecto URRO – Parte 3 – Para não caber no mundo
32.º CGPAE 2024 - Algarve - Curso de Gestão/Produção das Artes do Espetáculo

32.º CGPAE | Algarve

Performing Arts Management/Production Course | Algarve

From 22nd February to 24th October 2024
Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Online edition with face-to-face classes, aimed at the Algarve.

Introduction

The Performing Arts Management/Production Course has thirty editions, being responsible for the training and integration of professionals in the performing arts in Portugal.

With a pedagogical curriculum that covers the practical and theoretical parameters of professionalization in the cultural area, it is composed of a teaching staff that is active within the sector.

This characteristic gives it a constant updating and approximation to the reality of the environment and the artistic structures that compose it.

The course takes place annually at Espaço da Penha, in Lisbon, and editions may occasionally be organized in other regions of the country.

This edition of the course is especially aimed at people living in the Algarve region, will have an online component and occasional face-to-face meetings in the region, for talks, debates and visits to cultural and artistic structures based in the Algarve.

General Objectives

To professionalize cultural agents through the acquisition of skills such as: planning and outlining management, production, programming and financing strategies within the scope of the Performing Arts.

Integration and professionalization throughout the course, with its structure being pedagogically oriented towards the application of knowledge in the performing arts sector.

Coordenação Pedagógica

Dora Carvalho

Debate Mediation and Project Monitoring

Nelson Guerreiro

31.º CGPAE 2024 - Curso de Gestão/Produção das Artes do Espetáculo

31.º CGPAE | Lisboa

CGPAE

Performing Arts Management/Production Course 2024

February 2 to December 14 2024

Introduction

The Performing Arts Management/Production Course has thirty editions, being responsible for the training and integration of professionals in the performing arts in Portugal.

With a pedagogical curriculum that covers the practical and theoretical parameters of professionalization in the cultural area, it is composed of a teaching staff that is active within the sector.

This characteristic gives it a constant updating and approximation to the reality of the environment and the artistic structures that compose it.

The course takes place annually at Espaço da Penha, in Lisbon, and editions may occasionally be organized in other regions of the country.

General Objectives

To professionalize cultural agents through the acquisition of skills such as: planning and outlining management, production, programming and financing strategies within the scope of the Performing Arts.

Integration and professionalization throughout the course, with its structure being pedagogically oriented towards the application of knowledge in the performing arts sector.

Pedagogical Coordination

Dora Carvalho

Forum Dança - Workshop Butoh 2023 - Yael Karavan

Workshop Butoh
Yael Karavan

9 and 10 December 2023 | 11h00 – 17h00

Butoh fu – Composition with images, the mysterious language of Ankoku Butoh

 

Butoh is an avant-garde, radical, revolutionary dance of transformation, which emerged at the end of the 50ese in Japan, it is not a technique but rather a method and a philosophy, an approach to dance that is born within us and connects us to our essence, nature, the universe and the cycles of life and death.

Tatsumi Hijikata, the main Ankoku Butoh Dance Founder (Ankoku Butoh- dance of Darkness) used imagery to choreograph his dancers. Butoh-Fu is something that Yukio Waguri, one of his long time dancers, put together from his own notes of the words used by T.Hijikata when he choreographed his dancers at Asbestos-kan, the studio he led in Tokyo.

In this workshop, Karavan introduces, explores and gives experience of numerous original Butoh-Fu, taking us onto a journey through the origins researching for new ways of writing dance / movement scores. Butoh-Fu allows us to encounter the absurd, dadaist and obscure realms of Tatsumi Hijikata, Kazuo Ohno and Ankoku Butoh.

The main elements that will be explored in the workshop are metamorphoses, dance through imagery, presence, awareness, and the tension between opposites with the aim to free the body from its mundane preconceived set of gestures and movements and thus allowing us to access a deeper and more authentic essence of movement and archetypal expression.

Questioning how Butoh can be translated into a European Body and why Butoh is still extremely relevant nowadays, Karavan shares more than 25 years of Butoh experience, during which she had the opportunity to work with founders of Butoh in Japan, Kazuo Ohno and Motofuji San – wife of T. Hijikata – as well as with Tadashi Endo and MAMU dance theatre, Yumiko Yoshioka and Ten-Pen-Chi, Sankai Juku, Minako Seki, Carlota Ikeda, Akira Kasai, Ko Morobushi and Natsu Nakajuma among others.

 

Photo © Raul Bartolome

General Information

Dates: 9th and 10th December (Saturday and Sunday) 2023
Time: 11.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
Venue: Forum Dança – Espaço da Penha, Lisbon
Target audience: Professionals, students and people with previous experience in movement, dance and/or theatre.
Maximum number of participants: 20 people

Pré-inscrição

Pre-registration is made using the form available on our website and will be validated once proof of payment has been received and sent to our email address.

Pre-registration process

  1. Pre-register online using the form provided;
  2. Wait for our email with payment instructions;
  3. Pay your registration fee as indicated in the email sent to you;
  4. Send us proof of payment by email;
  5. Your registration will only be validated once we have received your receipt.

Participation Fee

  • Until 2nd December: €75.00
  • From 3 December: €85.00
  • 10% discount: for people who attend or have attended Forum Dança long-term courses (PACAP/CGPAE/PEPCC/etc.);

Bio

Yael Karavan
Yael Karavan

International performer, dancer and Artistic director of the Karavan Ensemble, Yael was born in Israel and grew up in Florence, Paris and London. In her dance research she travelled across Europe, Japan, Russia and Brazil searching for a physical language of expression bridging between East and West dance and theatre. Her work is often described as visual poetry, drawing on elements of Butoh, dance, mime, clown, physical and visual theatre she explores themes of Memory, Metamorphosis, the invisible and the notion of repetitive cycles, as well as current urgent socio-political issues such as climate change, immigration, diversity and inequality. Karavan’s work is presented worldwide in theatres, galleries and museums, often in a site-specific context. She studied and worked with Butoh masters such as Kazuo Ohno, Tadashi Endo, Carlotta Ikeda, Yumiko Yoshioka, Akiko Motofuji, Ko Morobushi, Natsu Nakajima, Akira Kasai, Yuko Kaseki, Minako Seki, Atsushi Takenuchi and sankai Juku amongst others. She was a member of Tadashi Endo’s MA-MU Dance Theatre for nearly 8 years and of Ten-Pen-Chi led by Yumiko Yoshioka for 3 years and has been teaching workshops internationally since 1999.

 

More information: www.yaelkaravan.com

Pre-registration form

Registrations are now closed.

Palestra "A Minha História da Dança", por Cristina Planas Leitão

Cristina
Planas Leitão

18 January 2024, at 18h30
Camões Library – Lisbon
Approximate duration: 2 hours

Free entry, subject to registration.

 

Choreographer, performing arts programmer and teacher. She is co-artistic director of Ágora’s Performing Arts Department (Teatro Municipal do Porto, DDD – Festival Dias da Dança, CAMPUS Paulo Cunha e Silva), having taken over as interim artistic director in July 2022, and the performing arts programme, under the artistic direction of Tiago Guedes, since 2019. In 2011, she was one of the initiators of the desNORTE meetings (2011-2017) and was a member of the Braga’27 consultancy group.

Her aggregative curatorial practice focuses on the development of sustainable creative formats, new narratives and caring relationships in the performing arts. She approaches her choreographic work as an act of resistance and affection, researching themes connected to social and political movements, and their relationship to the performing body in the intimacy of the theatre. She created The very delicious piece and The Very Boring Piece, with Jasmina Krizaj, bear me, FM [featuring mortuum] and UM [unimal], chosen as one of the best pieces in 2018 by JN and Expresso. In 2023 he premieres [O SISTEMA] in a co-production with 23 Milhas, TM Faro and TAGV.

Her work is documented in the RTP2 series Portugal que Dança. She has a degree in contemporary dance from ArtEZ, where she is a mentor and regular teacher. She teaches internationally, using a somatic and unconventional approach.

 

Photo © José Caldeira

Palestra "A Minha História da Dança", por Margarida Bettencourt

Margarida Bettencourt

2 November 2023, at 18h30
Camões Library – Lisbon
Approximate duration: 2 hours

Free entry, subject to registration.

 

Margarida Bettencourt was born in 1962 in Johannesburg, South Africa, where she started dance classes as a child while also taking part in sporting activities such as swimming, gymnastics and tennis. She moved with her family to Portugal in 1973. She is a dancer-choreographer and dance teacher who is considered one of the pioneers of Portuguese New Dance.

She attended the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation’s dance training courses and then joined the company where she danced from 1980 to 1993. She soon began working independently, solo and in collaboration with other artists, namely the dancer and choreographer João Natividade with whom she formed the group Aparte. She maintained a close creative relationship with composers Carlos Zíngaro and Constança Capdeville, with works commissioned by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation’s Acarte Service, Culturgest, Forum Dança and the Danças na Cidade Festival.

Her solo work is characterised by an emphasis on the body as a potential for expression and communication – in 2009 the adaptation of ‘At Once’ by American choreographer Deborah Hay, in collaboration with artist João Tabarra, was another stage in this research.

From 1997 to 2012 she taught at various dance teaching institutions, namely the Escola de Dança do Conservatório Nacional, Escola Superior de Dança, Forum Dança, and was a member of various reflection groups on dance teaching in Portugal.

In 2006 she was a tutor on the Choreography Course organised by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation.

In 2007, she completed her training as a therapeutic chi kung instructor at the Escola Superior de Medicina Tradicional Chinesa – where she now regularly teaches this discipline in various contexts.
She has continued her research into the development of a relationship with the body as a potential transformative, therapeutic and inspiring force – exploring the integration of her personal history and experience as a dancer, training and practice with anatomy, the physiology of the body, processes and rituals of creation.

After accompanying her father during his last year of life, she trained as a volunteer to accompany people at the end of their lives – with AMARA, an association whose mission is dignity in life and death. All these experiences have fuelled the way she develops and shares her practice with passion and devotion for the body and movement as a vital force.

 

Photo © António Rebolo

Palestra "A Minha História da Dança", por Sofia Neuparth

Sofia Neuparth

12 October 2023, at 18h30
Camões Library – Lisbon
Approximate duration: 2 hours

Free entry, subject to registration.

 

Sofia Neuparth has a unique career in Contemporary Art in Portugal. It is her understanding of the body as an event in relationship that determines all her actions, from the training work she has been doing since the early 1980s to the programming of the professional structure she co-created and directs. This is how, at the end of the 1980s, he created a space for research, experimentation, training, creation and artistic documentation that supports practices in the study of the Body, Movement and the Common: c.e.m-centro em movimento. The c.e.m organisation’s regular programming includes the Experimental Space (in existence since 1993), the work with the city since 2005 (Pedras – practices with people and places), the research / creation / training programmes (such as O Risco da Dança, FIA or DEMORA) that have been taking shape since the late 1990s, and the constant side-by-side monitoring of paths of experimentation and creation.

 

A teacher, researcher and creator, she nurtures the continuous reflection to which she dedicates herself, exercising the generation of possible worlds and practising Art as a fundamental form of Knowledge. Active and critical in relation to the recurrent implementation of policies (not just cultural ones) that tend to stifle the vitality of existence, she was involved in the creation of APPD (Portuguese Association for Dance) and REDE (Association of Structures for Contemporary Dance), which she co-directed for several years, continuing to be attentive and involved in the generation of implicated and vibrant ways of being.

 

She keeps the experience of dance open in the encounter with other forms of knowledge such as embryology or philosophy, from which creations such as ‘mmm – a physical poem’ (2005), ‘practices for seeing the invisible and keeping it a secret’ (dance-book 2010), ‘1 or 2 comedidos contentments’ (2011), or ‘Sopro’ (2017 – with Margarida Agostinho and Bruno de Azevedo) or publications (‘written in a state of dance’) such as ‘movimento’ 2014 or ‘Criação’ 2020, the latter with Margarida Agostinho, have emerged.

 

For more information: www.c-e-m.org

 

Photograph © Valentina Parravicini

Composição em Tempo Real, João Fiadeiro / Forum Dança

Real Time Composition
Open Sessions 2023/2024

Mondays, from 6pm to 8pm

Facilitated by João Fiadeiro, Márcia Lança,

Cláudia Dias, Carolina Campos and/or Daniel Pizamiglio

During the period in which REAL (a structure run by João Fiadeiro from 1990-2019) ran Atelier Real, open sessions were organised for the community to practice Real Time Composition, free of charge. These were unpretentious sessions, somewhere between a jam and a master class, which had an important impact on the community of artists at the time and on research into (and around) this tool. They were also very important sessions as a meeting place and for the creation of professional and emotional networks that continue to this day.

 

Over the next few months, as part of the programme of activity developed within the framework of Forum Dança’s Resident Research Artist position, we will replicate these sessions to share our experience, but also to allow ourselves to be contaminated by discourses, perspectives and practices outside our comfort zone. These sessions are open to anyone – artist or non-artist, with or without experience of improvisation, with a background in practice or theory – as long as the premises and principles of this practice arouse curiosity.

 

“The ‘object of study’ of Real Time Composition is the interval that emerges when linear time is interrupted and the sense of continuity is suspended (via accident, incident or ‘just because’). The space that opens up as a result of this interruption is where Real Time Composition research takes place. Within this space, time has that rare quality of being simultaneously ‘no more’ and ‘not yet’. Within this space, time is not linear (or even circular), but ‘twisted’ (like the topological surface of the ‘Möbius Tape’), governed by laws that do not respect the conventional notions of before and after, inside and outside or far and near.”

João Fiadeiro

Participation is free, just show up!

TECER activities

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