Close-up: Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui

The dance sensation teams up with Antony Gormley (and his magic boxes...)

News in pictures
World news in pictures
From the blogs

Barking Blondes: Oh no! Not another dog book!

Have you ever picked up a box of 100 books? This week has found the two of us lugging around the eq...

Question Time with Mathew Jonson

Mathew Jonson has been a hero of mine for quite some time now. His timeless piece, Marionette, was o...

Dish of the Day: Lily Vanilli’s recipe for making a human brain cake

A slight deviation from style this week and admittedly a bit weird, but at least I can finally say I...

Something For The Weekend in London: May 24-26

We love London for its multiculturalism, so we’re all about that cross-cultural life this weekend by...

       

Part contortionist, part visionary, part poet, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui is not most people's idea of a dancer-choreographer. He's not most people's idea of a Belgian either. Born to a Flemish mother and Moroccan father, his name means "Mr Arab from the East", though his pale, northern, elfin looks make you wonder what his parents were thinking.

"Of course that twin cultural identity feeds into what I do," he says. "I was raised a Muslim and now I'm not. But that's no more significant than that I was mad on drawing when I was a kid. I wanted to draw reality, but when I drew clouds, I'd also draw the things I could see in them. The great thing about dancing is that you're both the pencil and the artist. I still translate the world into something beyond the facts."

Cherkaoui first made an impact on the contemporary dance stage with Belgian group Les Ballets C de la B, since when he has created 10 shows in seven years (and he's only 31). These included Zero Degrees, a wildly praised collaboration with British-Bangladeshi dancer Akram Khan and sculptor Antony Gormley at Sadler's Wells, which has just finished a run in New York.

Click here to watch scenes from Cherkaoui's new show, Myth

This month Sadler's Wells hosts not one, but two Cherkaoui projects. Sutra involves 17 monks from China's Shaolin Temple – where he spent two months in training – and, again, conceptual input from Gormley, this time in the form of lorry-loads of open-sided boxes that generate imagery as varied as tumbling dominoes and a Himalayan peak. By contrast, Myth is a mysterious piece about two characters increasingly spooked by their shadows, spectacularly evoked by 19 dancers. "It comes from Jung," Cherkaoui explains. "He believed that when an idea comes into your head, its opposite lies just behind it."

' Myth', Friday-Saturday; 'Sutra', 27-31 May, Sadler's Wells, London EC1 (0844 412 4300)

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus

Day In a Page

Andrew Mitchell: 'It's no good feeling hard done by'

Andrew Mitchell: 'It's no good feeling hard done by'

In his first interview since 'plebgate', the former Chief Whip opens up just enough to concede that, in politics, you have to take the rough with the smooth
Corruption and the FCO: Blue skies, white sands, dark clouds

Corruption and the FCO: Blue skies, white sands, dark clouds

Special report: Met police call for criminal inquiry into former diplomat's Cayman Islands rule
Fallen angel: Winona Ryder on bouncing back from her decade in the wilderness

Fallen angel: Winona Ryder bounces back

She owned the 1990s... but then she disappeared. Now, Ms Ryder is back with quite the bang in her latest role, as the wife of a notorious real-life Mob hitman.
Roman Polanski shakes Cannes Film Festival

Roman Polanski shakes Cannes Film Festival

The director's new film, 'Venus in Fur', is one of the raciest on offer
Rev Richard Coles: 'I don’t have any concerns that God is cross with me for being gay and eventually the Church won’t either'

Rev Richard Coles on the Church and homosexuality

The mellifluous, erudite and witty Coles is the nation's most pop-culture-friendly priest
'Baghdad likes to live from crisis to crisis': Civil war looms in Iraq

Patrick Cockburn: Civil war looms in Iraq

The governor of Kirkuk - one of the country's most violent but successful provinces - fears the worst
Written on the body: Tattooists at pains to point out their artistic credentials

Written on the body

Tattooists at pains to point out their artistic credentials
Conquering Everest: 60 facts about the world's tallest mountain

Conquering Everest: 60 facts about the world's tallest mountain

The IoS marks the sixtieth anniversary of Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay first reaching the peak of the highest mountain on Earth
A new, and irreversible, Dust Bowl looms

Rupert Cornwell: A new, and irreversible, Dust Bowl looms

The destructive power of tornadoes will be as nothing once the Great Plains' vast underground water reserve dries up
Every creature's needless death diminshes us all

Philip Hoare: Every creature's needless death diminishes us all

A 60 per cent decline in our national species should alarm us, yet few of us act. But to mind more about animals would reflect well on society
Killing with kindness: Burma's religious battleground - and the monks at the heart of it

Killing with kindness: Burma's religious battleground

Six years ago, the world cheered the monks behind Burma’s Saffron Revolution. Now, a horrific new eruption of religious slaughter is being blamed on a 'Buddhist Bin Laden'.
Let's take it outside: Bill Granger's Bank Holiday feast

Let's take it outside: Bill Granger's Bank Holiday feast

You can’t always depend on the weather – but you can avoid the pitfalls of the British barbecue by preparing an elaborate outdoor feast indoors ahead of time...
The Calvin report: Stirring Champions League final shows how far English game must advance

The Calvin report

Stirring Champions League final shows how far English game must advance
10 big questions for the British & Irish Lions to answer

10 big questions for the British & Irish Lions to answer

Warren Gatland's squad fly Down Under aiming to do justice to the expectations – and hoping the Wallabies stay in the pub
The Last Word: Golf must end the hypocrisy before its halo slips totally

The Last Word

Golf must end the hypocrisy before its halo slips totally