or do dreams go to sleep during the day?
The Symptoms is a performance collective organized around the Hungarian dancer and choreographer Réka Szabó. The members of The Symptoms are not simply performing artists but fully involved contributors, whose personalities, creativity, and team spirit fundamentally define every work of the company. Their pieces are intellectual and humorous creations mixing dance with text-based acting and pantomime. They typically use commonplaces as a jumping board, transforming them into grotesque, ironic, and often touching collages. The group works in a variety of formats, producing pieces for the stage as well as performances and free improvisations for public spaces and galleries.
Nothing there is based on the coexistence of sophisticated interactive technologies and living bodies on stage. The projected images and figures are equal partners to the dancers on stage, with whom they enter into a personal relationship. The central theme of the performance is the clash between the reality principle and the truth principle. The anxiety generated by this conflict stays with us through our lives and forces us to vest with meaning the random events of an ill-comprehended world, and to perceive the chaotic reality surrounding us as a subject-centric system that makes sense. The dramaturgy of the piece mirrors this conflict, with the succession of scenes following a dream-like logic in a space inhabited by a single object: a door that opens in one direction only.
Dancers: Ákos Dózsa , Rita Góbi , Andrea Nagy, Dániel Szász , Zsófia Tamara Vadas , Csaba Varga
Performed to thudding jazz, the piece plays out a waking dream shot through with bizarre terrors. Half-glimpsed tableaux reminiscent of David Lynch’s film Eraserhead morph into surreal ballroom sequences in swimsuits and spats that pay homage to Pina Bausch. Vignettes of pain, fear and sadness swim dreamily against a lighting track of eye-popping strangeness. Extraordinary.
Luke Jennings, The Guardian
international award:
The piece was performed to great acclaim as part of The Turning World international season at The Place (London), the National Theater in Prague, at the Aura Dance Festival in Kaunas (Latvia) and at the INFANT Festival in Novi Sad.
Coproduction partners: Computer and Automation Research Institute of the Hungarian, Academy of Sciences (MTA SZTAKI), Trafó House of Contemporary Arts