THAT`S IT
Concept, choreography and performance: Sabine Molenaar Music: Emilian Gatsov Light design: Filip Timmerman Dramaturgy: Gina Șerbćnescu Production: Sandman Coproduced by: Workspace Brussels Supported by: 4Culture Association (Bucharest), Ultima Vez, workspacebrussels (Belgium), Jardin d’Europe, Culture Programme of the European Union, Joji inc Thanks to: Workspace Brussels, Artpotheek, Festival Cement
Where do dreams end and reality begin?
In her new solo performance, THAT’S IT, Sabine Molenaar drifts among layers of reality, claws her way back from nightmare dreamscapes and morphs to creatures hidden in the darkest recess of our minds in a dream that transforms body, time and space. Across dreamscapes, stories and images pass by without logic, a roller coaster of memories and associations. With each morphing movement Molenaar seduces the viewer until they come face to face with their greatest fear: that nothing is what it seems. In spirals of discomfort she keeps the viewer in a state of non-control mirrored in her performance, opening the gateway to other worlds of perception where but one burning question exists: where do dreams end and reality begin?
Sabine Molenaar (1985, the Netherlands) moved to Amsterdam in 2003 to study Modern Theatre Dance for 4 years at the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten. In 2006 she worked with Ann van den Broek for the performance `E19 the way to San José' and from 2006 until 2008 she was co-founder of the dutch company 'Instant Collective'. In 2008 she came to Brussels and worked for over 2 years with company 'Peeping Tom', touring internationally with the performance `32 rue Vandenbranden'. After she had worked with ia JOJI inc and Speedblattle Collective. In 2012 she created her first solo, That`s it, under the umbrella of her new company Sandman. That's it won the first price in ACT festival in Bilbao and the price for 'Strongest female talent' at Theater Aan Zee' in Oostende, Belgium and is touring internationally. In March 2015 her second piece, Touch me!, will première in the Netherlands.
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