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William Kentridge returns with provocative works that ask rather than answer
William Kentridge returns with provocative works that ask rather than answer

Korea Herald

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Korea Herald

William Kentridge returns with provocative works that ask rather than answer

South African visual artist and filmmaker's 'Sibyl' and 'Shostakovich 10' to be presented in Seoul in May This month, audiences in South Korea will once again encounter the haunting, layered world of the South African artist known for collapsing the boundaries between drawing, film, music and performance. Returning to Korea for the first time in nearly a decade, William Kentridge presents two of his recent works under the GS Arts Center's Artists series: "Sibyl," and multimedia symphonic project 'Shostakovich 10: Oh To Believe in Another World' (2024). These are not works that deliver answers. Rather, they raise questions that resonate long after the lights dim: 'What does it mean to confront death?' 'In whose land can someone be called 'illegal?'' 'What is the relationship of a composer to an authoritarian regime?' To be performed Friday and Saturday at the GS Arts Center, "Sibyl," a double bill comprising 'The Moment Has Gone' and 'Waiting for the Sibyl,' offers Kentridge's signature blend of visual art, performance and political commentary. 'They are like two short stories in a collection,' he said during a press conference Wednesday. 'From the same world, not narratively linked, but they are linked by performers and both confront death.' 'The Moment Has Gone,' a 22-minute film with live singers, unfolds across three dimensions: footage of Kentridge drawing in his studio, poetic evocations of Johannesburg's informal labor and the physical presence of the singers onstage. In contrast, 'Waiting for the Sibyl' transforms the ancient Roman myth of the Cumaean prophetess into a contemporary meditation on uncertainty. In the myth, seekers would write questions on oak leaves and leave them at the Sibyl's cave, only to find that the wind had scattered their answers. 'You'd never know if you were getting your answer or someone else's,' Kentridge said. "The question of uncertainty, of not knowing one's fate, of what one's relationship was to one's death. These are all questions on the stage," he noted. Both "The Moment Has Gone" and "Waiting for the Sibyl" feature music by composer and associate director Nhlanhla Mahlangu, who also hails from South Africa. They described their creative partnership as one that brings a 'vertical' dimension to Kentridge's 'horizontal' practice. When they started working together Kentridge asked Mahlangu, "Can we find something that also goes down? So we've got the movement across, but to find music that winds down into our souls?" Their collaboration would often lead to robust conversations that revealed quite different experiences of growing up in the same city of Johannesburg, a city marked by stark racial and economic divides that persist long after the official end of apartheid. "('The Moment Has Gone') challenges the status quo and it challenges our lives. We are confronted with something very specific: that we grow up in the same city, experiencing different things within the same city. It is a work that puts us in a robust conversation," Mahlangu said. "And the robust conversation is the illegal miners, in whose land are they illegal?" On May 30, 'Shostakovich 10: Oh To Believe in Another World,' Kentridge's visual response to Shostakovich's Symphony No. 10, will be performed with the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra, led by conductor Roderick Cox. Projected behind the orchestra will be a film composed of cardboard models, cut-out masks and stop-motion imagery — a Constructivist visual universe that evokes Stalinist Russia. 'The symphony was first performed just months after Stalin's death,' Kentridge noted. 'Now we hear it as pure music, but it's important to understand the context in which it was made.' Characters such as revolutionaries Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky, and the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky appear as cardboard silhouettes in a rusted, stiff puppet world. 'It becomes a kind of stuck history,' Kentridge said, 'with awkward, hard moves.' "While the music flows continuously, the visuals hold tension,' he added. Despite the political overtones, Kentridge resists the notion that his works preach. 'In many ways, the arts, whether it's with music and theater or image, it is a place where these different questions come together not with an answer but to be discovered in the activity of making,' he said. An official at the GS Caltex Arts Center explained that the two works were chosen to showcase contrasting aspects of Kentridge's artistry. ''Sibyl' best encapsulates William Kentridge's signature style,' the official told The Korea Herald. 'In contrast, the other piece presents a different facet of his work — it engages not with African music but with classical music, and the medium shifts from charcoal to paper. These contrasts were compelling, which is why we decided to include both works.' gypark@

GS Arts Center in Seoul to open April with American Ballet Theatre show
GS Arts Center in Seoul to open April with American Ballet Theatre show

Korea Herald

time12-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Korea Herald

GS Arts Center in Seoul to open April with American Ballet Theatre show

Located in former LG Arts Center in southern Seoul, new performing arts center to focus on interdisciplinary artists 'GS Arts Center is looking for its audience,' said Sunny Park, CEO of the soon-to-open GS Arts Center, at a press conference on Tuesday. The new performing arts venue, poised to raise its curtain in April, occupies the former home of LG Arts Center Yeoksam, which relocated to Magok in 2022. It is housed within GS Tower, near Yeoksam Station in Seoul's Gangnam District. With a remodeling budget of 32 billion won ($22 million), the venue has slightly expanded its seating capacity from 1,103 to 1,211 and upgraded backstage facilities, all while preserving the center's core structure. American Ballet Theatre will open the new GS Arts Center April 24-27 with "American Ballet Theatre: From Classic to Contemporary," which combines two mid-length ballets with gala-style excerpts, offering the audience a diverse repertoire. All five Korean dancers at the company -- principal dancers Seo Hee and Ahn Joo-won, soloists Park Sun-mi and Han Sung-woo and Seo Yoon-jung from the corps de ballet -- will join ABT's 13 other principal dancers for the performances. William Kentridge, Marcos Morau for curated series The key initiative of the GS Arts Center's programming is its annual "Artists" series spotlighting two to three multidisciplinary creators each year for an in-depth exploration of their work. Blurring the boundaries between music, dance, theater and media art, the series will showcase artists whose work defies categorization, offering audiences a multidimensional experience. 'We hope this will be more than just a venue. We want it to be a space that shapes the flow of contemporary culture,' Park said. 'We seek to present artists in a way that highlights not only their artistic imagination but also how their experiences and ideas intersect across genres.' South African visual artist and director William Kentridge and Spanish contemporary choreographer Marcos Morau are leading the inaugural edition, both known for their genre-defying, interdisciplinary work. One of the world's foremost contemporary artists, Kentridge is known for his work across charcoal drawings, prints, sculpture, opera and tapestry. Two of his quintessential productions will soon arrive in Seoul. "Sibyl" is set to run May 9-10. It will include a short film with live music, "The Moment Has Gone," and the visually striking chamber opera "Waiting for the Sibyl." "Oh To Believe in Another World: Shostakovich 10," which combines Kentridge's signature visuals with Dmitri Shostakovich's Symphony No. 10, will be staged May 30. Marking the 50th anniversary of the composer's passing. The production will feature a live performance by the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra. Three works by choreographer Morau, who creates worlds and imaginary landscapes where movement and image converge and transform into one another, are coming to Seoul, also in May. The Ballet Nacional de Espana's "Afanador," slated for April 30–May 1, blends traditional flamenco with contemporary staging and black-and-white photography-like mise-en-scene. "Pasionaria," scheduled for May 16-18, a hallmark of Morau's visionary imagination, will be performed by his dance company La Veronal, while "Totentanz – Morgen ist die Frage" (also known as "Dance of Death") starts at GS Arts Center's lobby May 17-18, extending it into an immersive art space. Ballet, jazz and musicals The GS Arts Center will also collaborate with the Korean National Ballet on the Kylian Project in June, a triple bill of Czech choreographer Jiri Kylian's 'Forgotten Land,' 'Falling Angels' (Korean premiere) and Sechs Tanze." In addition, the Seoul Jazz Festival will bring a theater edition to the venue, presenting jazz legends such as Pat Metheny, Brad Mehldau, Christian McBride and Marcus Gilmore in an intimate indoor setting. Looking ahead to the fall season, the Broadway musical "The Great Gatsby" arrives in late July. The musical, which premiered last year and is set for London's West End in April, is produced by the Korean production company, OD Company. Additionally, the Olivier Award-winning stage adaptation of "Life of Pi" will be staged in November.

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