New Works presents BOGOTÁ with PuSh International Performing Arts Festival, January 31 and February 1
Montreal’s Andrea Peña & Artists construct a brutalist landscape inspired by Colombia’s political and spiritual heritage
BOGOTÁ. Photo by Félixe Godbout Delavaud
New Works and PuSh International Performing Arts Festival present BOGOTÁ by Montreal’s Andrea Peña & Artists at the Vancouver Playhouse on January 31 and February 1 at 8 pm in partnership with Vancouver Latin American Cultural Centre. The performance on January 31 will be followed by a post-show talkback.
Visceral, transgressive, and magnetic, BOGOTÁ constructs a brutalist landscape out of choreography inspired by Colombia’s political and spiritual heritage. With striking intensity, nine performers chronicle transformations between chaos and rebirth, incarnating the tensions of ever-unfolding and turbulent histories.
Offering a raw, physical experience of mutation and resurrection, BOGOTÁ delves into inherited mythologies to consider how origins and mortality are expressed through the endless cycles of existence and death. This powerful work employs movement as a vehicle for storytelling, honouring the rebellion of deviant bodies and paying tribute to resilience within the post-colonial era.
Learn more through New Works and purchase tickets here.
Post sponsored by New Works.
Related Articles
In this PuSh Fest, Music on Main, and Dance Centre premiere, humming songs, whispered words, and hypnotic movement bring a sense of serenity and connection to a chaotic world
With staging that evokes a Chicago jazz bar, the Dance Centre and PuSh Festival co-presentation draws on matrilineal fashion and line dancing
Program features Pite’s Frontier, a deep dive into the unknown, and Kylián’s 27’52”, an exploration of theoretical elements
In a riveting PuSh Festival and New Works copresentation, Belgium’s Cherish Menzo plays with repetition, chopped-and-screwed music, and flashing dental grillz
In DanceHouse and The Cultch co-presentation, the Hungarian company is full of flowing bodies and rippling fabric
In the deeply moving production, dancers embody the ancient tale of death and longing by tapping into their own experiences of tragedy
Productions that “push” forms include dance works that play with props and stereotypes, as well as ethereal odes to nature and the northern lights
Producer Natália Fábics says the Hungarian work, co-presented by DanceHouse and The Cultch, is as much a contemporary artwork and philosophical epic as a fusion of circus and dance
Choreographer’s latest creation is a dazzling blend of dance, lighting, and sound that draws on her Black matrilineal heritage
Big bands play West African music with guests Dawn Pemberton, Khari McClelland, and others
Electrifying performance reclaims hyper-sexualized “video vixen” of hip hop’s golden era
Festival brings live performances, conversations, and community workshops to the Scotiabank Dance Centre and Morrow
Chimerik 似不像 and New Works XR partner to continue the online festival with new artistic producer Caroline Chien-MacCaull
Provocatively reimagined endings to opera and Shakespeare were among the random scenes that stuck with us from the year onstage
Having steered the company toward full houses and extensive touring, French-born dance artist will leave after 40th-anniversary season
Set to a score by Mendelssohn, whimsical show puts a Northern Canadian twist on Shakespeare’s timeless comedy
The Leading Ladies bring to life Duke Ellington’s swingy twist on Tchaikovsky score at December 14 screening
Amid tulle tutus and fleecey lambs, director Chan Hon Goh reflects on the history of the “feel-good production”
Hungarian dance-circus company invites audiences to witness a visceral, mesmerizing spectacle set in the aftermath of a destroyed world
Pond hockey, RCMP battles, and polar bears bring this unique rendition home—with classic Russian touches, of course
Company’s annual holiday twist on The Nutcracker features a flavoursome assortment of styles, from classical ballet to hip hop to ’60s swing
