Dumi Moyi - Francois Chaignaud

A dance mashup of high- and low-brow culture.
Jasmine Crittenden
Published on September 29, 2015
Updated on October 09, 2015

Overview

Legendary French choreographer François Chaignaud is coming to Australia for the first time, and he’s bringing with him his whizz-bang work Dumi Moyi, created in collaboration with French fashion designer Romain Brau.

The show is inspired by the monumental costumes and transformative power of traditional religious dances performed in Malabar, India. But it also draws on 19th-century dime theatre, various mythologies and contemporary aesthetics. And the music is a giddying multicultural blend of Ukrainian, Filipino and Sephardic rhythms.

Despite this ambitious range of influences, Dumi Moyi is intended for intimate performance. So Carriageworks is opening its Elston Room for the occasion, where audiences can stand in proximity to the dancers. Only 40 tickets will be available per show.

Since the work premiered at the 2013 Montpellier Danse Festival, it has appeared in galleries, basements and a chapel. At Carriageworks, it’ll be performed several times a day, allowing viewers to make return visits.

Chaignaud is renowned all over the world for exciting, innovative choreography. His previous projects include a giant dance party at New York City's The Kitchen, the transformation of the Tate Modern into a live performance museum and a history of grim music performed at London's Sadler's Wells.

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