PRODA Oslo start-up week

As part of PRODA Oslo's start-up week, there will be a program at Dansens Hus and Danseinformasjonen Friday, August 14th.

PRODA FADDER

PRODA Oslo invites you to three days filled with dance, enrichment and social meeting places. The program includes a 3-day workshop with Tone Kittelsen – How to solo?, as well as professional discussions and meetings with various dance artists. The start-up week is an arena to get to know PRODA, get in touch with other newly established dance artists and get to know the professional dance field a little better.


Friday, August 14th, the start up program takes place at Dansens Hus and Danseinformasjonen:

09:00-10:30: Get-to-know workshop – with Caroline Skjørshammer and Sara Einbu
11:00-14:00: How to Solo? – workshop with Tone Kittelsen
14:00-15:30: Waffle Friday at Danseinformasjonen


Simple snacks and coffee/tea will be served. Please bring your own lunch.
Participation is free - but registration is required! (NB - limited places).
For the full program and registration, click here!

Sara Caro
Foto av Caroline: Spencer Lookabough - Foto av Sara: Magnus Gangstad Jørgensen

Get-to-know workshop – with Caroline Skjørshammer and Sara Einbu

We will guide you through an informal chat about being a newly established practitioner. Where do I start?
The workshop offers a space for sharing and sparring without pressure and stress.

 

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Foto Sigrun Drivdal Johnsen Danseinformasjonen0 G0 A0675 11381228910449954955
Tone Kittelsen - Foto: Sigrun Drivdal Johnsen

How to Solo? – Tone Kittelsen
A performative practice on and off stage

How to Solo? is a concept where we work on solo work together, led by Tone Kittelsen. The concept is based on her curiosity for the solo format, and a desire to have more people to share her own practice with. We work with the intuitive dance, the one that cannot be planned, but must be allowed to arise in and of itself.

In How to Solo? we work alone, but together. The solo is the dance you do alone, the one that comes from yourself and affects your own and/or others' work. It is an open space where the threshold is low for working in front of each other and sharing intuitive ideas. 

During the workshop, it is a point that we show, take or dance the word for each other. We practice the spontaneous dance, the one we have not practiced, but that lies there latently. What comes there and then in the moment. We practice that our dance will take and find space whether it is new, finished, half-finished or polished by the thought. The physical experience our body possesses.

The workshop will end in an open performance where we are the audience for each other and where the audience has the opportunity to look in and watch us work on the floor. There will be space for each person to stand on the floor but also for us to work alone - in community.