“In
our work we speak of the blacks and the whites, highly incorrect and
imprecise, but therefore often close to the way of thinking that defines
a reality that is incorrect and imprecise. We think in two systems and
make performances that are loved and hated by European and African
audiences with a thousand misunderstandings.” – Monika Gintersdorfer
in: ZEIT No. 53/2009
“No
relativising, no explaining, no irony, just insisting until it lives!” –
Monika Gintersdorfer in: ZEIT No. 53/2009
“Above all, we can profit from the cultural differences
– in both systems.” – Monika Gintersdorfer in: ZEIT No. 53/2009
More than six years ago, director
Monika Gintersdorfer and visual artist Knut Klaßen set out on a mission
to teach the theatre world a lesson. Then they landed on the Ivory
Coast. What comes across like a tragic re-enactment of a crusade in the
guise of an educational leave in the work of many of their colleagues,
who had prescribed themselves an artistic blood transfusion in foreign
cultures, turns out very differently in the case of these two –
radically different! Here, theatre gains a new meaning in its
sociopolitical function, its aesthetic, and its conceptuality. Instead
of an approach with a stylised image of intercultural understanding
between peoples, it is the assertion of difference that is the motor
behind this performative eruption – a club full of people dancing,
drinking, rapping, DJing, and modelling. Society, politics, religion,
philosophy, and cultural differences are dealt with “on the side”:
theatre wins back the power that allows it to return to life!
Last
autumn, Gintersdorfer/Klaßen, in cooperation with their Ivorian and
European colleagues, presented the product of years of work in Berlin
and Hamburg. “Rue Princesse”, named after the legendary leisure area in
the capital Abidjan, is a three-day festival that merges theatre, dance,
media art, installations as well as animation, rap, DJing, dance, and
fashion. For the donaufestival 2011, the polycultural artist network has
created a new festival whose name was inspired by the fabled club New
Black in Abidjan. In addition to precisely timed theatre and dance
pieces, the Stadtsaal Krems aka The New Black will be the centre of an
artistic social plastic for three weekend evenings, boasting all the
attributes every good club has to offer. Given the collaboration between
musician and producer Patrick Pulsinger and stars from the Ivorian club
scene, we can expect fresh musical material in the framework of this
project. “Coupé is a slang expression from the streets of Abidjan that
basically means to mess around or be drunk. In the Parisian reality of
the Ivorians, the meaning transformed to deceive, bluff, to make a deal,
followed by décaler and travailler, to bugger off and work…”
The
intercultural approach of Gintersdorfer/Klaßen’s performance project is
based on a subversive lifestyle, a club and performance culture called
“Coupé Décaler”, which was originated in 2003 by the group Jet Set and
since then has made a triumphal march through African and European club
scenes. In the parallel world between the war-torn Ivory Coast and the
Ivorian diaspora in Paris, the “Jet Settist” life in a mix of subversive
self-assertion, dandyism, and glamour became an offensive, performative
game with codes and clichés. Theatrical stagings of one’s own life,
glamour, the constant invention of new dance styles, exclusive designer
fashion, expensive cigars and fat automobiles obscured everyday worries
like precarious living conditions or the money and legal problems of
migrants in Paris’ banlieues. The self-proclaimed stars of Coupé Décaler
abandoned the common image of the “migrant”, beginning with their
outward appearance, and defied the common ascriptions cast by the “white
gaze”. In the clubs, the DJs sing stories about a Jet Set world in
which migrants occupy the chief positions: bankers, ambassadors or
presidents. The political mixes with irony, amusement and show.
Based
on the subcultural game of Coupé Décaler, the performance “Betrügen”
(Deceive) plays, for example, with the loss of the difference between an
actual life situation and a supposed role. “Warum Gott Afrika Verlassen
Hat” (Why God Left Africa) deals with self-racism from the “black
perspective” in a sarcastic satire, while the dance series “Logobi” (an
African street dance) examines the culturally contrasting notion of
dance: “Contemporary dance? We didn’t understand it, an undefined
system, a post-colonial bluff that we Africans go along with in order to
secure participation in international festivals and grant money.” In
the confrontation between Ivorian and European choreographers, different
dance ideologies rooted in the respective society and discourse come
into question. “Das Ende des Westerns” (The End of the Western)
dramatises the cockfight between the two Ivorian presidential “election
winners”: “At the opening of an eco-hotel, Laurent Gbagbo mentions that
he watches western films at night. Especially the end. Only two
candidates remain, the good guy and the bad guy, but in the end there
can only be one.” Plays such as “Othello” or “Macbeth” form conceptual
scratching posts from Western high culture where cultural differences
and misunderstandings become a productive artistic battlefield between
the “black” and “white” perspectives on the respective own and other
culture. Colonialism, migration, fatalities, religion, politics: major
themes are addressed on the basis of everyday experience in a drastic,
yet seemingly improvised way. Textual authorship doesn’t exist anymore.
The collective sets themes, the content and linguistic charge ensues
through the individual performers in the course of the rehearsals, and
in the performance the actors play a linguistic ping-pong match with
impromptu translations of French texts into German.
Concept, direction: Monika Gintersdorfer, Knut Klaßen
Team: Marc
Aschenbrenner, Anelka Chanel, Gotta Depri, DJ Meko, Ted Gaier, Hauke
Heumann, Melissa Logan, Nadine Jessen, Prince Kreol, Timor Litzenberger,
Shaggy Sharoof, SKelly, Franck Edmond, Yao alias Gadoukou la Star,
Voodoo Chanel
Assistent: Josefine Jochum
www.gintersdorferklassen.org