Carlotta Ikeda

Carlotta Ikeda, born Sanae Ikeda[2] (19 February 1941 – 24 September 2014), was a Japanese-born butoh dancer. She chose her artist name, Carlotta, after Carlotta Grisi.[1]

Carlotta Ikeda
Born
Sanae Ikeda

(1941-02-19)19 February 1941
Fukui, Japan[1]
Died24 September 2014(2014-09-24) (aged 73)
Occupationdancer, choreographer
Years active1960-2014
Former groupsDairakudakan, Ariadone
Websitehttp://ariadone.fr/eng/

Biography

Carlotta Ikeda, who had studied modern dance in the tradition of Martha Graham and Mary Wigman from 1960 to 1964, began to collaborate in the early 1970s with the Japanese butoh group Dairakudakan. In 1974, she founded with Kô Murobushi the Ariadone Company, an all-female butoh dance troupe.[3] In the 1980s, she settled in France, first in Paris and later in Bordeaux.[1] In Europe she became well-known after she performed solo Utt.[2]

Choreographies (selection)

  • 1975: Mesu Kasan (re-performed in 2005)
  • 1980: Zarathoustra - at Sogetsu Hall in Tokyo
  • 1981: Utt - at Sogetsu Hall in Tokyo
  • 1993: Aï-Amour - at Danse Hus in Stockholm, Sweden
  • 1996: Waiting after a text by Marguerite Duras - at Théâtre national de la danse et de l'image
  • 1999: Haru no saïten - Un sacre du printemps - at Théâtre de la Bastille in Paris
  • 2002: Togue - at Vieille Charité, Marseille
  • 2005: Zarathoustra-Variations - at Centre culturel des Carmes, Langon
  • 2008: Uchuu Cabaret - création Les Hivernales - CDC d'Avignon
  • 2010: Chez Ikkyû - création Le Cuvier - CDC d'Aquitaine
  • 2011: Medea - at Théâtre Paris-Villette
  • 2012: Un coup de don - at Festival Automne en Normandie

References

  1. "La danseuse et chorégraphe japonaise Carlotta Ikeda est décédée à Bordeaux" (in French). Retrieved 27 September 2014.
  2. Panorama de la danse contemporaine. 90 chorégraphes, Rosita Boisseau, Éditions Textuel, Paris, 2006, p. 270-271, ISBN 2-84597-188-5.
  3. "Japanese dancer Carlotta Ikeda dies in France". Retrieved 27 September 2014.

Bibliography

Carlotta Ikeda: Danse Butô et au-delà pby Laurencine Lot, Jean-Marc Adolphe, éditions Favre Sa, 2005, ISBN 978-2828908645.

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