Right from the very start, Frédéric Flamands career
has been characterised by three main elements: encounter, dialogue and
a certain utopia tinged with realism.
He set up Plan K in 1973, using it to question the status and representation
of the human body by integrating visual arts and audio-visual technology
into the living spectacle, and thus laying the foundations for the interdisciplinary
approach which still fuels his work today. Plan K began performing abroad
almost immediately and the international recognition the company received
meant that it soon became firmly established.
Convinced that it is vital for a company to be linked to a venue where
encounters can be made, Frédéric Flamand opened a multi-arts
centre in Brussels in 1979 in an old 4,000 m2 sugar refinery. Artists
from different disciplines came, including Bob Wilson, William Burroughs,
Charlemagne Palestine, Steve Lacy, Pierre Droulers, Philippe Decouflé,
Marie Chouinard, Michael Galasso, Thomas Schütte, Joy Division
and Eurythmics. The refinery was also a place of work, establishing
an international dialogue between dance, visual arts, music and audio-visual
arts, thus continuing along the lines of Plan Ks initial vocation.
Invited to Kassels Dokumenta 8 to perform If Pyramids Were
Square created in 1987 with the visual artist Marin Kasimir
there Frédéric Flamand met the Venetian artist
Fabrizio Plessi. Together they worked on a trilogy about technology
in three different eras. La Chute dIcare (1989) concerns
the Renaissance and small-scale production technologies. This first
part of the trilogy, created to original music by Michael Nyman, was
commissioned by Gérard Mortier, then Director of La Monnaie,
the Belgian National Opera. This work at La Monnaie made Frédéric
Flamand a fixture on major international stages.
It was followed by Titanic (1992), about the revolution
in heavy industry at the start of the 20th century, and Ex Machina
(1994) which evokes the end of the 20th century and the proliferation
of image and communications technologies. This piece was invited to
the Venice Biennale in 1995.
In 1991, Frédéric Flamand was appointed artistic director
of the Ballet Royal de Wallonie, a neo-classical company which he renamed
Charleroi/Danses, Centre chorégraphique de la Communauté
française de Belgique to emphasise the companys precise
location in an industrial city under redevelopment and the different
missions it had. It was after this appointment that he began working
more intensively on integrating classical dance and contemporary techniques,
convinced that it is more fruitful to make them talk to each other than
set them against each other. With Charleroi/Danses, Frédéric
Flamand combined his own creative work, co-productions with different
companies from Belgiums French-speaking community, the establishment
of a training programme for professional dancers and the organisation
of biennial international dance events. The themes of these events have
been chosen for their relevance in relation to the human beings
position in a contemporary environment: Corps et Machines
in 1994, Vitesse et Mémoire in 1996 and Gender
in 1998. Whether Frédéric Flamand draws his inspiration
from the past or from today, his prime concern is to question the status
of the contemporary body the dancers preferred tool
in the relationship it has with its environment.
In 1996, Frédéric Flamand started reflecting on the relationship
between dance and architecture, both of them being arts that structure
space. For Moving Target, he chose to work with New York
architects Elisabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio, gaining inspiration
from the uncensored notebooks of Vaslav Nijinsky, one of the first classical
dancers to build bridges with contemporary dance.
E.J.M 1 and E.J.M. 2 followed, based on works
by Eadweard James Muybridge and Etienne Jules Marey, again in collaboration
with Elisabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio. E.J.M. 2 was
created for the Ballet de lOpéra National de Lyon and E.J.M.
1 for Compagnie Charleroi/Danses Plan K, and both were
premiered at the Opéra National de Lyon.
In 2000, Frédéric Flamand created Metapolis
with the Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid, winner the 2004 Pritzker
Prize, the architectural equivalent of the Nobel Prize. The same year,
Frédéric Flamand met Jean Nouvel when he was commissioned
to create a piece for Hannovers Expo 2000. The resultant piece,
The Future of Work, was seen by more than 600,000 people
over a five-month period. This fitted perfectly with Frédéric
Flamands concern to attract the widest possible audiences for
dance. This same approach has led him to alternate presentations of
his work on traditional stages and in disused venues: a mill train,
a Charleroi swimming pool or the Arsenal in Venice to give just a few
examples.
In 2001, he created the double piece Body/Work and Body/Work/Leisure.
An extension of his collaboration with the architect Jean Nouvel, it
was premiered at the International Dance Festival in Cannes.
Frédéric Flamands interest in establishing a dialogue
between dance and other artistic disciplines led to him being offered
the post of artistic director of the Venice Biennales first International
Contemporary Dance Festival in 2003. As with the biennial events in
Charleroi, Frédéric Flamand chose a topical theme for
this first festival, BodyÛCity, in which the relationship
between the human being and the city is considered, and bringing together
companies from many continents. He inaugurated the festival with Silent
Collisions created with the Californian architect Thom
Mayne parts of which have been broadcast on Arte.
Frédéric Flamand has been teaching at the University of
Architecture in Venice since April 2004, running interdisciplinary creative
workshops centred on dance.
In September 2004, he was appointed General Director of the Ballet National
de Marseille and the citys École Nationale Supérieure
de Danse by, jointly, the Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication,
la Ville de Marseille and la Région Provence-Alpes-Côte
dAzur.
Frédéric Flamand is an Officier des Ordres des Arts et
Lettres de la République Française.
Frédéric Flamands works are performed on major international
stages:
Het Muziektheater- Amsterdam Opera, Edinburgh International Festival,
Lucent Danstheater / The Hague, Hebbel Theater / Berlin, South Bank
Centre / London, Théâtre National de Bretagne / Rennes,
Centro Cultural de Belem / Lisbon, Brooklyn Academy of Music / New York,
Lirio Hall / Tokyo, GREC Festival / Barcelona, Sao Paulo and Venice
Biennales, Festival de Marseille, Festival Roma Europa, Singapore Arts
Festival, Shanghai Opera House, Maison des Arts de Créteil, Biennale
de Lyon, Auditorium de Dijon, Budapest Opera House, Ataturk Centre Istanbul,
Grand Théâtre de Genève, Festival de Beiteiddine
Lebanon, Le Carreau Forbach, Leipzig Opera, Festival International
de danse de Cannes, Teatro Arriaga Bilbao, Arsenal de Metz, Festival
de Bregenz, Hippodrome de Douai, Festival de Cervantino Mexico,
Teatro Alfa Sao Paulo, Le Manège Maubeuge, Kampnagel
Hamburg, Odyssud Blagnac.