알렉산드라 바흐쳇지스
알렉산드라 바흐쳇지스(Alexandra Bachzetsis)는 스위스 바젤과 취리히를 기반으로 활동하는 안무가이자 시각 예술가입니다. 바흐쳇지스의 작업은 춤, 퍼포먼스, 시각 예술, 연극이 교차하는 지점에서 전개되며, 신체를 예술 및 비판 기구로 인식하게 하는 복합적인 공간을 조성합니다. 학문과 장르의 경계에 얽매이지 않는 바흐쳇지스의 학제적 자세는 그의 학력에도 투영되어 있습니다. 바흐쳇지스는 취리히 예술 고등학교, 베르시오 디미트리 학교, 벨기에 루벤 STUK 예술센터의 퍼포먼스 교육 프로그램을 졸업했으며, 암스테르담 Das Arts(연극 및 무용 고등 연구 센터)에서 대학원 과정을 이어갔습니다. 학업과 병행하여 현대 무용, 퍼포먼스 분야에서 무용수로 활동했고, 베를린의 Sasha Waltz & Guests와 헨트의 Les Ballets C. de la B. 등과 협업했습니다. 이 때부터 바흐쳇지스의 작업에서는 협업, 전이, 목소리와 신체의 다수성 같은 주제가 주요한 …
알렉산드라 바흐쳇지스(Alexandra Bachzetsis)는 스위스 바젤과 취리히를 기반으로 활동하는 안무가이자 시각 예술가입니다. 바흐쳇지스의 작업은 춤, 퍼포먼스, 시각 예술, 연극이 교차하는 지점에서 전개되며, 신체를 예술 및 비판 기구로 인식하게 하는 복합적인 공간을 조성합니다. 학문과 장르의 경계에 얽매이지 않는 바흐쳇지스의 학제적 자세는 그의 학력에도 투영되어 있습니다. 바흐쳇지스는 취리히 예술 고등학교, 베르시오 디미트리 학교, 벨기에 루벤 STUK 예술센터의 퍼포먼스 교육 프로그램을 졸업했으며, 암스테르담 Das Arts(연극 및 무용 고등 연구 센터)에서 대학원 과정을 이어갔습니다. 학업과 병행하여 현대 무용, 퍼포먼스 분야에서 무용수로 활동했고, 베를린의 Sasha Waltz & Guests와 헨트의 Les Ballets C. de la B. 등과 협업했습니다. 이 때부터 바흐쳇지스의 작업에서는 협업, 전이, 목소리와 신체의 다수성 같은 주제가 주요한 역할을 했고, 더욱 심화되어 신작 개발을 위한 방법론이 되기도 합니다.
바흐쳇지스의 주 관심사는 신체의 안무적 연출입니다. 특히 사람들이 각자의 신체와 정체성을 끊임없이 창조하고 재창조하는 과정에서 대중문화를 참조하여 제스처, 표현, 동일시, 환상을 구성하는 방식에 초점을 맞춥니다. 온라인 미디어, 비디오 클립, 텔레비전을 비롯한 ‘대중적’ 혹은 ‘상업적’ 장르와 발레, 현대 무용, 퍼포먼스 같은 ‘예술’ 형식에서 제스처와 움직임이 사용되는 고유의 방식이 서로 뒤섞이는 양상을 바흐쳇지스는 연구합니다. 장르와 장르 사이에 존재하는 인위적이고 고정되지 않은 관계에서 바흐쳇지스는 인간 신체와 그 변형 가능성을 탐구해야 할 이유를 발견합니다. 그것이 개념적 변형이건 실제적 변형이건 중요하지 않습니다. 궁극적으로 바흐쳇지스는 우리가 스테레오타입과 전형, 선별과 클리셰, 노동과 스펙터클을 통해 각자의 신체를 비롯해 스스로를 연기하고 연출하는 방식에 대해 거듭해서 질문을 던지고 있는 것입니다.
헨드릭 폴케르츠(Hendrik Folkerts) 씀.
소개
Alexandra Bachzetsis (born in Zurich, 1974) lives and works in Zurich and Basel, Switzerland.
Significant exhibitions in a variety of contemporary art spaces and museums include Kunsthalle Basel (Basel, 2008), the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam, 2015/2013), Tate Modern (London, 2014) and the Jumex Museum (Mexico City, 2014), as well as a number of international biennials, such as the 5th Berlin Biennial (Berlin, 2008), (d)OCUMENTA 13 (Kassel, 2012) and the Biennial of Moving Images (Geneva, 2014).
In 2016, Alexandra Bachzetsis participated in “The Parliament of Bodies” and “Continuum”, Public Programmes at documenta 14. In January 2017, she presented Massacre: Variations on a Theme at MoMA, New York City. Later that year her work was included in documenta 14 exhibitions at Athens and Kassel. In June 2018, Alexandra Bachzetsis presented her performances „Private: Wear a mask when you talk to me“ and „Private Song“ at the High Line New York. „An Ideal for Living“ (2018), a solo exhibition at the Centre Culturel Suisse in Paris opened and the performance „Escape Act“ (2018) premiered at Pact Zollverein in Essen (DE). The latest work “Chasing a Ghost” (2019) has been commissioned by the Art Institute of Chicago and toured in Europe since.
She has received notable awards and was nominated for the DESTE Prize (2011) and is a laureate of the Migros Kulturprozent Jubilee Award (2007), the Swiss Art Award (2016/2011) and Swiss Performance Prize (2012).
„A Feminine Dance Work, Made ‘in a Very Brutal Way’.“ The New York Times, by Siobhan Burke, January 17, 2017.
“I can’t believe it’s happening,” the choreographer Alexandra Bachzetsis said on a recent afternoon, gazing up at the vast white walls of the Marron Atrium, one of the busiest spaces at the Museum of Modern Art. For the first time, Ms. Bachzetsis was seeing parts of her new work, “Massacre: Variations on a Theme,” on the scale she had envisioned. Two video projections, each taking up the width of nearly a whole wall, showed subtly violent scenes: A woman thrashed on the floor of a …
“I can’t believe it’s happening,” the choreographer Alexandra Bachzetsis said on a recent afternoon, gazing up at the vast white walls of the Marron Atrium, one of the busiest spaces at the Museum of Modern Art.
For the first time, Ms. Bachzetsis was seeing parts of her new work, “Massacre: Variations on a Theme,” on the scale she had envisioned. Two video projections, each taking up the width of nearly a whole wall, showed subtly violent scenes: A woman thrashed on the floor of a cardboard-padded room; another woman straddled a mirror, her bare legs inscribed with what looked like the stitching of skintight jeans; a grand piano played itself, producing an ominous looping refrain.
“Massacre,” on view through Jan. 31, is a video installation by day and, on select nights after museum hours, a live performance. Each component stands on its own — you don’t have to see the installation to appreciate the performance, and vice versa — though they deal with similar themes, what Ms.
Bachzetsis calls “excessive rituals” and “personal and collective nightmares.”
Born in Zurich and now living in Athens, Ms. Bachzetsis, 42, danced with the Zurich Opera, the German choreographer Sasha Waltz and the Belgian troupe Les Ballets C de la B early in her career. Her own work, which often explores “the limitation of the feminine or the power of it,” as she puts it, has toured extensively in Europe, at theaters and gallery spaces, but “Massacre” is only her second New York show. (The first was at the Swiss Institute in 2015.)
Created for the atrium at the invitation of Stuart Comer, chief curator in the Modern’s department of media and performance art, “Massacre” grew out of her interest in “The Rite of Spring,” the Vaslav Nijinsky’s 1913 ballet to Stravinsky’s pounding score. Though Ms. Bachzetsis never intended to create yet another adaptation of “Rite,” “Massacre” possesses something of that ballet’s ruthlessness, in its furiously repetitive movement and its macabre original score by Tobias Koch.
For the video (created with Glen Fogel) and the live performance (featuring three female dancers and two pianists), Ms. Bachzetsis researched ecstatic dance and movement — “the idea of sacrificing
yourself or dancing yourself to death,” she said. These ranged from Northern Soul, the craze born in 1970s northern England in response to American soul music, to the convulsive phenomenon known as tarantism, most common among women in southern Italy in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Ideas of phantom limbs, second skins and body distortions — the female body, in particular — also populate the work, taking cues from Dada and Surrealist imagery. “This is maybe the most feminine piece I’ve made, in a very brutal way,” Ms. Bachzetsis said. “I feel violence is so much part of what surrounds us and what we carry in the body.”
Over coffee near the museum, she discussed choreographing across disciplinary borders and near
geographic ones ravaged by war. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
What’s challenging about making work for the MoMA atrium?
It’s huge. And it has a huge audience; it’s crazy the amount of people that stream in and out every day. The sound [of people talking] is very dominant. And it’s visible from many levels. But it’s also magical. It has an amazing energy, almost ceremonial.
Do you think of yourself as working primarily in one discipline?
I’m more interested in finding the right language for something. I never wanted to situate myself here or there. It’s more important to think “What does this idea need? What’s the strongest way to develop it?” rather than “No matter what, make choreography” or “No matter what, make a film.”
So you have to be well versed in many approaches.
Maybe. It’s also a matter of looking for the right collaborations or partners or institutions. It’s completely different to work with a theater on a commission versus a museum. It’s interesting to have this dialogue with a context. Often I formulate a work both for the theater and visual-art context. “Massacre,” for
example, could tour as an exhibition or only as a stage piece.
Did “The Rite of Spring” interest you because of the female sacrifice — the Chosen One dancing herself to death?
Yes. I was always very fascinated and kind of terrified with that story, and I love the music, in particular the four-handed version for piano, which was created for the ballet studio, so that the dancers could
rehearse. It really carries both that fear and ambition to get lost or lose yourself.
One striking image in “Massacre” is the use of mirrors to bisect the body and reflect it back on itself. You mentioned that this is a reference to mirror therapy for phantom limbs. Where does this interest come from?
I find this fascinating, thinking about what if the body isn’t there? Or what if what you think is your body is somewhere else? It became interesting to me in Athens, in both a symbolic and very direct way, from
witnessing the amazing amount of refugees and people in the streets who have been completely
displaced. When you live close to this direct impact of the problems of war, you’re confronted with
something very profound that’s missing all the time. What do you do?
In a way, it feels completely ridiculous and redundant to make work that communicates about an idea of loss or displacement, because it’s on such a meta level of relating to the thing. Should you abandon your family and go and work in a camp? What should you do?
Do you think your work can do something?
I don’t feel that I’m an activist performance artist. I think work is always political. Or the body is political — what you achieve through your body and through other bodies. But I don’t think it offers any straight-forward solution. You can only hope that it makes some people think for themselves.
출판물
Broschat, Natalie. “Alexandra Bachzetsis und Bruno Beltrão bei Tanz im August”, September 2018.
Poiré, Léa. “Trouble dans le genre”, Mouvement, September 2018.
Garcia-Carré, Céline. “Les Ambiguïtés d’ Alexandra Bachzetsis” L’ŒIL, November 2018.
“Au Bord de la Danse”, Les Inrockuptibles, October, 2018.
Seibert, Brian. “Fish, Stilettos and Underwear: The Dances Go On”, The New York Times, Jan 2017.
Burke, Siobhan. “A Feminine Dance Work, Made ’in a Very Brutal Way’”, The New York Times, Jan 17, 2017.
Tieke, Kristina. “Nach der Performance ist vor der Performance“, Artline magazine III, July 2016.
David Everitt Howe. “Dance in the Ruins“, Mousse Magazine issue #50, October-November 2015.
McLean-Ferris, Laura. “Can you feel it? Body and soul in the performances of Alexandra Bachzetsis,” frieze d/e, n. 20 June-August 2015.
Bachzetsis, Alexandra. “My influences. Artist, performer and choreographer Alexandra Bachzetsis on her influences”, Frieze Magazine, March 2017.
Wohlthat, Martin. “Mit Drumsticks und Stöckelschuhen“, Neue Zürcher Zeitung, May 2012.
Herzberg, Stefanie. „Eine virtuose Etude von Alexandra Bachzetsis“, Tages-Anzeiger, May 2012.
“Alexandra Bachzetsis talkes to Catherine Wood about confronting the audience with their own voyeuristic gaze”
, Kaleidoscope, Issue Spring 2012.
Szewczyk, Monika. “Le paradoxe de l’autonomie“, Le Phare n.9, Sept – Dec 2011.
Hunt, Andrew. “A Piece Danced Alone“, Frieze Blog, 2011.
Ziltener, Alfred. “Grosses Solo für zwei Tänzerinnen“, Basellandschaftliche
Zeitung, Februar 11, 2007.
Meneghetti, Christoph. „Verhör einer Doppelgängerin“, Basler Zeitung, Februar 12, 2011.
전시
스토리















