“Berlin Wall Project” a contemporary dance event
 

Live Broadcast for Wallstories by Nejla Yatkin   view here


This year we are celebrating the 20th anniversary of fall of the Berlin Wall. The basic idea for the “Berlin Wall Project, ” which consists of a concert dance work “Wallstories”, a site specific dance “Dancing with the Berlin Wall” and a short  dance film entitled “The Wall”is to reflect upon what the Wall and its removal meant to the Western world in its broadest sense. We forget this now but the Cold War constantly threatened to turn into a devastating atomic war.  No place captured this reality more than Berlin, Germany – a divided city on the forefront of the battle between East and West.  In the mid eighties, as a teenager in Berlin, I personally felt the threat of imminent conflict. This concern was an ever-present issue in conversations, meetings and demonstrations. This concern was also physically manifest in the form of the Wall, which both separated as well as divided East and West.  Initially, as a child, you were always aware of it as it demarcated freedom from autocracy.  Later, one simply learned to navigate around it.

Then, abruptly, the Wall came down. The world opened up. People, for the first time in decades, had a chance to communicate, to share, move and get to know each other, without feeling the oppressive threat. Being present during the fall and the celebrations at the Brandenburg Gate as well as “Checkpoint Charlie,” I still vividly remember the energy and hope that was present during the marching of thousands of East Berliners into West Berlin. Things continued to change after this point. Having been to Berlin last year, it was amazing to see how the presence of the Wall was altered. The East Side Gallery remained as a great celebratory creation. The Wall, the symbol of oppression and division, had been turned into a symbol of art and entertainment. There are many paintings on the East Side Gallery wall and on the West side, along the Canal, there is now a strip of dance clubs.  These simultaneously embody and trivialize the history somehow.

Drawing upon these observations and experiences, the soul of this project concerns the acknowledgement that physical and political boundaries play an important role in an individual as well as a collective’s life. They are conventions that have been created, adapted, and/or devised by nature and/or humans. So too, are a wide variety of other boundaries. These boundaries can act as national and/or international assets, but they can also act as impediments that restrict or prohibit the flow of resources, commerce, or intellectual property, or barriers that isolate people and divide nations.

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Journal


Reviews

Reviews

Wednesday 25th, April 2012

Read all the reviews about the Berlin Wall Project!


Reviews are In

Reviews are In

Tuesday 24th, April 2012

NYTheatre Review by Staviana Stanescu
Backstage Review by Lisa Jo Sagolla
Oberon's Grove Blog review by Philip Gardner
Infinitybody Blog Review Eva Yaa Asantewaa



Words on the Wall

Words on the Wall

Sunday 22nd, April 2012

Please check out our first Words on the Wall discussion series held each last Friday

Press Release

Press Release

Friday 20th, April 2012

Check out the full press release!


Wallstories at the Fringe NYC

Wallstories at the Fringe NYC

Thursday 11th, August 2011

It’s been 50 years since the Berlin Wall was built and we are in the middle of rehearsing Wallstories for the Fringe NYC festival here in New York. It’s interesting to reflect back on the Wall again this year but this time one the 50 years since it was build. Angela Merkel said in her speech to the President that the first political event from her childhood, she remembers distinctly is the building of the Berlin Wall 50 years ago. She was seven years old at the time. Seeing grown-ups, even her parents, so stunned that they broke out in tears, shook her to the core.



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