BLACK COUNTRY TOURING

Big Ideas In Small Spaces

Performing Arts Projects around the Black Country.

Weaving Paths through time - April/May 2007

Weaving Paths (through time) was an exciting partnership project between Black Country Touring, Wolverhampton Arts and Museums Service and the Sonia Sabri Company.

Sonia Sabri Dance company rehearsing at Bantock House, Wolverhampton

Sonia and Ursula from Sonia Sabri Dance Company rehearsing in the Drawing Room

Ursula and the Audience at Bantock House, Wolverhampton

Ursula performing with the Audience at Bantock House, Wolverhampton

For the first three-weeks in May 2007 the Sonia Sabri Company were resident at Bantock House in Wolverhampton, creating extracts in response to the house and gardens, using Kathak (north Indian) dance and South Asian music, which was contrasted by western instrumentation.

During the residency the company could be seen and heard throughout the house creating new work. The team focused on creating work in a new area of the house over the period, which meant new performances were added to the event every week. The final day of performances showed all the work that had been created during the entire residency.

The first piece was set in the Drawing Room. The professional dancers choreographed a piece that drew upon the formalities of the room. The dancers told stories of possible conflicts and drama that could have disturbed the general staid atmosphere in the room. During the piece members of the public were given slips of paper with instructions, this meant that when the piece ended and the dancers all exited the room it left the audience were positioned and posed as if in a Tapestry of gentry life.

Sonia Sabri and the University of Wolverhampton students in the Arts and Crafts Room

Contact Improvisation meets Kathak in the Arts and Crafts Room, Bantock House

The Sonia Sabri Company in the Billiard Room, Bantock House

Using the billiard table and ball as percussive instruments during the residency

In the Arts & Crafts Room and Staircase a lecturer and students from the University of Wolverhampton with skills in contact improvisation co-created a piece with Sonia Sabri. The piece starts with the lightness of childhood play and builds into a turbulent transition into adulthood. The dancers are accompanied by frenetic strings and a deep resonating voice, the musical team was made up of both professional and community musicians.

The audience are then taken upstairs to the newly refurbished Billiard Room where power, competition and masculinity are portrayed through the rhythm of clattering billiard balls and stamping feet.

The kathakaars in the Dutch Garden

Dancers from the Sonia Sabri Company pose with Kathakaars (trainee Kathak dancers) in the Dutch Garden, Bantock House

Shikidim and Sonia Sabri Company in the Dutch garden

Dancers from Sonia Sabri Company and Shikidim (a local belly dancing troupe) using the geometry of the Dutch Garden.

We were finally led outside to the beautiful Dutch Garden where Shikidim (a local belly-dancing troupe) began a dance, accompanied by Gulfam Sabri and two female singers singing a classical Turkish song. Sonia Sabri then danced a traditional Kathak solo inspired by the formality, geometry and splendour of the garden. The garden piece culminates with Sonia and the dancers and Shikidim joined by the young Kathakaars (trainee Kathak dancers) who are dressed in beautiful embroidered and opulent costumes and. Together they all animate the space through leaps and twirls.

Sonia Sabri in traditional Kathak attire performing traditional Kathak in the Dutch Garden

Sonia Sabri performing Kathak in the Dutch Garden, Bantock House

Sonia Sabri used the geometry and angles of the Dutch garden to choreograph a new Kathak performance

Some audience quotes:

“I was amazed how it all turned out… and very beautifully presented. The stories were great...and I loved the bit at the start with the pieces of paper.”

“The piece in the stairs was very powerful, especially with the haunting picture of the girl in the background.”

“It was good to see a real mixture of people in the audience as well. The buzz all round was very positive.”

Participant quotes:

“The students are in absolute awe of Sonia, her work ethics and the informal environment she created for them to approach the work comfortably. It was a great experience for them.”

“The experience was like nothing else I’ve ever done before. I felt valued as a musician by all involved and felt included in the creative process.”

“The house will never be the same again.” – Helen Steatham, Bantock House Curator Manager.


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