kainkollektiv

Language
Design Design
Performance
RETURN OF THE KINGSDAUGHTERS

RETURN OF THE KINGSDAUGHTERS

An installative radio play performance by kainkollektiv the cosmic sisters

In RETURN OF THE KINGSDAUGHTERS kainkollektiv die cosmic sisters open a sound space in the form of a walk-in radio play that aims to bring to the ear the stories and songs of those forgotten/erased “king’s daughters” that our white, male-dominated history of civilization has constantly made disappear since the time of antiquity.

In an entirely acoustic-musical composed soundscape, the voices, narratives, personal accounts soundscapes of cultures erased by Western colonial history appear in an (afro)futuristic docu-fictional counter-journey through times and spaces.

Between pop opera, indigenous chants electro, artists* from South Africa (ANNALYZER), Cameroon (ALIMA), Iran (9T ANTIOPE aka Sara Bigdeli Shamloo Nima Aghiani) Canada/Germany (Vanessa Chartrand Rodrigue) – the cosmic “sisters of Medea” – develop together “Songs of Future Care” and invite the listening audience to join them in a 3D soundspace, to liquefy their own (cultural/national) echo-chambers and to get to the bottom of the sonic question in an acoustic evocation of ghosts and the dead, which always appears on the horizon at the beginning as well as in the continuation of the colonial heritage: WHO OWNS HISTORY? Whose memory counts?

In cooperation with the Heinrich Böll Foundation. Supported by the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia, the Kunststiftung NRW, the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the Fonds Darstellende Künste with funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media within the framework of NEUSTART KULTUR and the City of Bochum.

Performance
THESMOPHORIA. THE NEW ANCIENT THEATRE

THESMOPHORIA. THE NEW ANCIENT THEATRE

A post-antique theatre feast

Under the title THESMOPHORIA. THE NEW ANCIENT THEATRE, kainkollektiv, together with an ensemble of international artists, invites you not only to reconstruct this festival in a 30-hour durational performance, but to reinvent it for our current situation. Following the story of Demeter, the goddess of earth and fertility, and her daughter Persephone, who was abducted by Hades and taken to the underworld and the world of the dead, we embark on a search for what this mythical story can tell us about ourselves and our current global situation. And along the way, we will share, learn and try out lost gestures and rituals together, which should allow us not only to imagine visions for a “good life together” in the near future, but also to test them out and celebrate them together.

In performances, dance, music, film, rituals and joint workshops – the so-called Schools of Care – these visions come to life and can be negotiated with one another. The audience is not only invited to watch and listen, but also to actively participate, experience and stay where there is a desire and interest to do so. If you like, you can spend the full 30 hours with us and the ensemble in the theater, share time and space together, eat, even spend the night in the theater. However, it is also possible to leave the Thesmophoria – and come back at a later date and thus meet the 30 hours with your own rhythm.

To make this possible, we would like to communicate a number of tips and recommendations in advance of the performances to help you prepare for your visit to THESMOPHORIA in the best possible way.

Notes
The performance THESMOPHORIA cordially invites all those who are interested and curious to try out the “art of assembly” in the reinvention of an ancient theater festival and, in times of increasing social polarization, to dare to experiment with sharing time, space and rituals between art and care: WELCOME ALL TO THE NEW ANCIENT THEATER!

Entry / Exit
30h Durational Performance for watching and listening and active participation. The 30h symbolize three days of 10h each. Below you will find the various entry points to the performance. It is of course possible to exit at any time.

DAY 1: The first 10 hours (Friday, 27.09.24 17h to Saturday, 28.09.24 03h)
1st entry: Arrival and Demeter’s search, 17h
2nd entry: Evening and night over Eleusis, 21h

DAY 2: The second 10 hours (Saturday, 28.09.24 03h to Saturday, 28.09.24 13h)
3rd entry, memories of the lost world, 10h

The third 10 hours (Saturday, 28.09.24 13h to Saturday, 28.09.24 23h)
4th entry: Rebirth. The ancient world was never white, 17h
5th entry: RETURN OF THE KING’S DAUGHTERS, 21h

Meals
During the Thesmophoria there will be communal meals (Friday dinner, Saturday breakfast, Saturday dinner), which are part of the production. You are also welcome to bring your own food.

Languages
The Thesmophoria is a multilingual event due to its international ensemble. Wherever necessary, there will be translations into German and English.

Overnight stay in the Ringlokschuppen
For overnight stays in the theater, we provide simple sleeping facilities in the form of a giant beanbag (140x180cm) and a thin blanket. We recommend that you bring a sleeping mat, a sleeping bag and a small pillow, as well as the usual bathroom items. There is a dressing room with a shower that can be used. Unfortunately, the dressing room and shower are not barrier-free.

Accessibility
Barrier-free access to entrance, box office, foyer and stages on the ground floor
barrier-free WC on the ground floor
Free parking spaces directly behind the building

Tickets are available at the Ringlokschuppen: Link

THESMOPHORIA is also coming to Berlin! On November 1st and 2nd we are bringing the theater festival to the tak Theater Aufbau Kreuzberg. Tickets are available at tak: Link

If you have any further questions about the event and accessibility, please contact us at the following email address: info@kainkollektiv.de

A project by and with: Alexander Steindorf, Amal Omran, Anelisa Stuurman, Bianca Künzel, Catherine Jodoin, Edith Voges Nana Tchuinang, Fabian Lettow, Hannah Busch, Immanuel Bartz, Julie Ilner, Kristina-Maria Peters, Lefteris Papageorgiou, Lydia Polyzoi, Mariette Nancy Nko, Meret Mundwiler, Michael Wolke, Mirjam Schmuck, Nils Voges, Panos Strofalis, Patrick Dollas, Pélagie Alima, Phaedra Pisimisi, Ria Papadopoulou, Richard Behrens, Sara Bigdeli Shamloo, Shams Kassab, Silvia Dierkes, Vanessa Chartrand-Rodrigue and others.

Supported by the Fonds Darstellende Künste with funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media, the Kunststiftung NRW, the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia and the City of Bochum.

A project by kainkollektiv in co-production with Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, FFT Düsseldorf and tak Berlin.

Keine Angst. Sagte die Angst

Keine Angst. Sagte die Angst

UFO – Junge Oper Urban – For all from 6 years

When it gets dark in the evening, there it is, the fear. Ahri can think of an infinite number of things that scare her: Big monsters. Small spiders. Fight in the schoolyard. News of war and violence… In general, life is becoming more and more worrying and the fear ever greater. She never leaves her side. It can’t stay like this, says Ahri. There must be light in the darkness! She plucks up all her courage and addresses her fear. And look her in the eye. Could it be that fear itself is afraid? That perhaps she doesn’t want to be so big, but simply wants to be hugged? In the play developed by Mirjam Schmuck and Anna Korsun, the girl and her fear go through life together more and more undaunted, learn to get along with each other and make some unexpected discoveries along the way.

Duration approx. 1 hour

(c) Daniel Senzek
(c) Daniel Senzek
(c) Daniel Senzek
(c) Daniel Senzek
(c) Linda Sollacher

A production of UFO – Junge Oper Urban & kainkollektiv.

From & With: kainkollektiv (Mirjam Schmuck & Fabian Lettow), Anna Korsun, Heili Schwarz-Schütte, Linda Sollacher, Chorong Kim, Maria Portela Larisch, Juliette Serrié, Henrique Almeida

Performance

DIE WAND

a (movement) choir project with women
after Marlen Haushofer

One morning in the mountains, a woman finds herself cut off from civilization by an invisible wall. The rest of life seems petrified, inaccessible. Only some animals and nature within her suddenly so shrunken world keep her company.

DIE WAND by Marlen Haushofer has long since become a classic that has not lost its relevance today. The ambivalent situation of the main character’s isolation, which means security and threat in equal measure, unfolds a broad spectrum of references ranging from feminist self-empowerment to the current world political situation. Last but not least, DIE WAND conjures up a time after patriarchal, capitalist society.

In an exploration of the novel, the directing team and an ensemble of eleven women have developed a chorus of movement and language that creates a contemporary overwriting of the text. On the border between the individual and the collective, the performers confront their personal “walls.” What leads to the rupture between us and the rest of the world, and what events changed everything from one day to the next? The performers talk about crossing or bumping into geographical and personal boundaries. Of the isolation that can accompany a diagnosis or the loss of a loved one. Some long to break through the wall, others have already left it behind.

(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe
(c) Sebastian Hoppe

From and With: kainkollektiv (Mirjam Schmuck & Fabian Lettow), Catherine Jodoin, Loxo Harazim, Tommaso Tezzele, Silvia Dierkes, Lena Iversen, Andreas Rösler, Franziska Baumann, Maria Buchmüller, Anni D., Katja Firker, Nina Houshmand, Ida Kranz, Natalia Obkhodskaia, Ute Schellenberg, Thembisile Vilakazi, Barbara Walz-Schneider, Caroline Woderich

A production by kainkollektiv. This production was created at the Bürger:Bühne at the Staatsschauspiel Dresden.

Performance
Black Eurydice // Schwarze Eurydike // Eurydice Noire

Black Eurydice // Schwarze Eurydike // Eurydice Noire

A Counter-Opera

“When Eurydice comes out of the underground, her eyes are blinded by the glare of the sun so much that for a moment, of which she cannot say how long it lasts, she can see nothing but BLACK. A black however that contains everything: all the colors, all the contours, all the events that now pass before her inner eye like a film that runs in fast motion. Just as it is commonly said to happen at the moment of death, when one’s entire life passes by in a fraction of a second right before the gaze breaks for the last time. This is exactly how Eurydice sees everything before her eyes now once again. Only that this moment is not her death, but her rebirth…” (Excerpt from the text of the play)

BLACK EURYDICE, a transnational music theatre production by kainkollektiv, is about the relationship between the European foundation/invention of opera and what was systematically excluded with this foundation: the position of women & the colonial history that began at the same time (around 1600). On the basis of Europe’s first modern opera – Monteverdi’s “Orfeo” (Mantua 1607) – kainkollektiv not only gets to the (under)ground of the aforementioned exclusions, but also designs an (afro-)futuristic, feminist & postcolonial COUNTER-OPERA OF EURYDICE. In “BLACK EURYDICE” five non-European, contemporary women composers – from Iran, Cameroon, South Africa and Canada – have combined Monteverdi’s baroque music from “Orfeo”, considered the first modern opera in Europe, with visionary, contemporary, post-classical and even electronic compositions. A collective feminist composition has created together with kainkollektiv and other European and non-European performers a completely new, multi-voiced vision of the future of music theatre – also and not least as a new questioning of the patriarchal heritage of the cultural institutions of theatre/opera and as an imagination of a different history of its future.

(c) Daniela del Pomar
(c) Daniela del Pomar
(c) Daniela del Pomar
(c) Daniela del Pomar
(c) Daniela del Pomar
(c) Caram Kapp

This is in parts visualised in the form of a COMIC OPERA – as a digitally painted and live-performed version of a feminist, docu-fictional “superheroine” story. kainkollektiv’s “superheroine” BLACK EURYDICE, however, is less interested in “saving the world” like her male hero counterparts. Rather, it is about her vision of a transformation of different world experiences.

“The immensely multi-layered, sensually overwhelming music theatre production ‘Black Eurydice’ is a postcolonial, multi-perspectival, feminist counter-draft to the patriarchal, Eurocentric cultural heritage. In around 90 minutes, ‘Black Eurydice’ tells with fabulous playful energy about overcoming the female and non-white silencing in a current parallel universe. However, it is above all an aesthetically highly vivid, blackly ironic musical theatre comic with exciting glimpses of the future.” (Elisabeth Einecke-Klövekorn, Bonn, 17 October 2022)

What other stories can we tell ourselves about the (yesterday’s/tomorrow’s) world that are capable of countering the (colonial) principle of exploitation and destruction that has prevailed for hundreds of years and into our turbo-capitalist present? Perhaps the one that Eurydice brings with her from the underworld, into which she descends silently in Monteverdi’s composition: from the underground, from her shadowy existence, from which we liberate her in BLACK EURYDICE and let her step into the light again. As a polyphonic figure of female experience in a polyphonic interdisciplinary and transnational ensemble of women artists who tell of what happened to Eurydice – from the time of her first forced silencing to our present, in which women’s rights – for example those laid down in the “Istanbul Convention” – are once again being seriously questioned and suspended worldwide. Or as Claudia Hötzendorfer writes in her review of the production in the Rheinische Post: “The message of kainkollektiv from the underworld is clear: society needs a feminine view of the past in order to endure the present and arm itself for the future.”

Languages: German, English & French, with English and German surtitles

From and with: Anelisa Stuurman, Anna Homann, Antje Kuhfeld, Bianca Kunzel, Catherine Jodoin, Edith Voges Nana Tchuninang, Fabian Lettow, Hannah Busch, Henning Streck, Immanuel Bartz, Kerstin Pohle, Melissa Muller, Mirjam Schmuck, Nima Aghiani, Pélagie Alima, Richard Behrens, Sarah Bigdeli Shamloo, Silvia Dierkes, Vanessa Chartrand-Rodrigue, Zdravka Ivandija Kirigin

Funded by the Hauptstadtkulturfonds, the Kunststiftung NRW, the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia and the City of Bochum. A project by kainkollektiv in co-production with tak Berlin and FFT Düsseldorf. A project by kainkollektiv in coproduction with tak Berlin and FFT Düsseldorf.

Performance
KASSIA & THE NEW CONVENT(ION)
illustration for the KASSIA archive

KASSIA & THE NEW CONVENT(ION)

a performative archive

The composer, poet and Byzantine abbess KASSIA is considered the first European composer whose works have survived to this day. KASSIA was born in Constantinople in the year 810. She is an enigmatic personality not only as a musician, but also as a writer. More than 250 of her texts have been preserved in the form of epigrams. Moreover, Kassia appeared as a political figure in her time, rhetorically opposing the emperor Theophilos in his search for a bride. Finally, she founded a women’s monastery on the seventh hill of Constantinople, today’s Istanbul. KASSIA is a kind of early feminist and cosmopolitan role model.
For more than one and a half years, programmers have been working together with media and performance artists to program an online archive on Kassia that aims to open up the possibilities of digital empowerment spaces for the issues of women’s rights (Istanbul Convention) and new queer feminist practices and narratives. The starting point of the joint venture, which has been supported by many different contributors, has been a digital conference on KASSIA in 2021.
As the last part of the multidimensional project around KASSIA, consisting of an opera performance and the digital KASSIA conference, the performative archive KASSIA was finally opened in 2022. The archive portraits the different parts of the project in a bundled form and links them interactively. The KASSIA archive aims to make the Kassia cosmos accessible, whereby all media developed in the previous project parts – music, texts, performances, lectures, images, portraits, etc. – have become components of this digital space. Visitors are invited to experience contributions from over 40 international musicians, poets, activists, and scholars, and to leave their own traces in Kassia’s new digital monastery.

www.kassia-archive.org

illustration for the KASSIA archive with the text

A project by kainkollektiv, MIREVI (HSD), sputnic visual arts (et al.), illustrations: Verena Herbst

From and With: Agata Siniarska, Agnieszka Różyńska, Alexander Giesbrecht, Alexander Lingas, Alice-Mary M. Talbot, Amal Omran, Anna-Maria Holtmann, Anna Majewska, Anna Pekaniec, Annalyzer / Anelisa Stuurman, Anthi Karra, Artur Gerz, Aylin Vartanyan, Ayşenur Aydın, Barbara Harbach, Ben Fischer, Betül Elarslan, Beyza Keskin, Burak Özdemir, Burcu Kalpaklıoğlu, Burcu Özdemir, Cecily Hennessy, Christine Yohannes, Çiğdem Haliloğlu, Daniel Glomberg, David Nowottnik, Dominika Bremer, Ebru Nihan, Egana Djabbarova, Fabian Lettow, Füsun Ertuğ, Gülşin Ketenci, H. Muallâ Görkey, Hannah Busch, Hans-Martin Dederding, Hatice Zehra Selman, Hazal Halavut, İremnur Çelebi, Işıl Başak Arabacı, Ivana Druzetic-Vogel, Iza Gawęcka, İzel Zümrüt Durmaz, Jale Karabekir, Kaan Tanhan, Karin Karakaşlı, Katarzyna Słoboda, Katarzyna Żeglicka, Katia Savrami, Kerstin Pohle, Klara Diedrichs, Kübra Gümüşay, Kurt Sherry, Lee Cockshott, Liz James, Łucja Iwanczewska, Lydia Ziemke, Maja Lee Langvad, Malte Jehmlich, Marta Jalowska, Melissa Müller, Meral Akkent, Merve S. Öztürk, Milan Vukašinović, Mirjam Claaßen, Mirjam Schmuck, Mithu Sanyal, Monika Kwaśniewska-Mikuła, Muaz Semih Güven, Narîn Yukler, Niki Tsironi, Niklas Tluk, Nils Voges, Nisa Nur Arslan, Ömer Kaan İşleyen, Patrick Kruse, Patrycija Kowanska, Paulina Kramarz, Rümeysa Çamdereli, Sara Bigdeli Shamloo, Selin Su Bağcı, Serkan Yıldırım, Serra Akcan, Suna Kafadar, Sarah Plochl, Tang Siu Wa, Thomas Arentzen, Tuğçe Aydın, Vanessa Chartrand-Rodrigue, Verena Herbst, Wanda Künzel, Yeşim Koçak, Young-Won Song, Yunus Margaz, Zeynep Kübra Alkazak, Zuzanna Berendt

In cooperation with the Heinrich Böll Foundation and the Istanbul Gender Museum.

Funded by the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia in the Medienkunstfonds and by the City of Bochum.

Performance
KASSIA & THE NEW ISTANBUL CONVENT(ION)

KASSIA & THE NEW ISTANBUL CONVENT(ION)

A DIGITAL CONFERENCE SERIES

The composer, poet & Byzantine abbess KASSIA, who lived in Constantinople in the 9th century, is considered as the first European female composer whose musical works have been conveyed to our times and still play an important role in the history of music today. Kassia was an extremely emancipated woman in her time. She dared to challenge Emperor Theophilos of Constantinople during the “bride search” organised for him with theological acumen. She did not want to marry and used her fortune to found a convent for women in Constantinople instead. In her self-determined lifestyle, Kassia appears as a kind of role model.

kainkollektiv and the Turkish-German composer Burak Özdemir together with his magnificent baroque orchestra Musica Sequenza have taken Kassia as the starting point for a (post-)feminist opera – the SONGS OF CARE(VOLUTION) – in co-operation with the Gender Museum Istanbul between NRW, Berlin and Istanbul.

The performance, however, was integrated into an analogue and digital conference series that brought together scientists, activists and artists from Germany, Poland, Turkey, Sweden, Cameroon, South Africa, the USA and other countries in 2021. The project makes an explicit contribution to the current feminist debates: also as a clear sign of solidarity and resilience in the light of the rejection of the Istanbul Convention on women’s rights by the governments in Poland and Turkey.

From September to October 2021 the digital conference series with international speakers and in cooperation with the Gender Museum Istanbul under the direction by Meral Akkent, Zuzanna Berendt and Anna Majewska from the curatorial collective Pracownia Kuratorska from Krakow, universities from Germany, Poland and Turkey and in particular with the Heinrich Böll Foundation, the Goethe Institute Krakow & the Goethe Institute Istanbul, took place in five online sessions.

All components of the Kassia project reflect and comment upon the current feminist debates and discourses in different countries, which are currently taking the form of huge demonstrations and women’s strikes, but also of smaller initiatives between science, activism, care work and art, and link them to the themes and the art and care work of Kassia. The aim of the NEW ISTANBUL CONVENT(ION) in reference to Kassia’s medieval women’s monastery is a hybrid, digital-analogue format between science, art and activism, in which new narratives of a (post-)feminist future can be spun and designed. With artists, activists, academics and students from Poland, Germany, Turkey and in alliance with accomplices worldwide from the already existing international networks of all co-operation partners, the KASSIA project creates a dialogue that opens up for transnational, transdisciplinary and queer-feminist future vision of which Kassia is the patron.

(c) illustration: Verena Herbst

From and With: Agata Siniarska, Agnieszka Różyńska, Alexander Lingas, Alice-Mary M. Talbot, Amal Omran, Anna Majewska, Anna Pekaniec, Annalyzer / Anelisa Stuurman, Anthi Karra, Artur Gerz, Aylin Vartanyan, Barbara Harbach, Ben Fischer, Burak Özdemir, Burcu Kalpaklıoğlu, Burcu Özdemir, Cecily Hennessy, Christine Yohannes, Dominika Bremer, Ebru Nihan, Egana Djabbarova, Fabian Lettow, Füsun Ertuğ, Gülşin Ketenci, H. Muallâ Görkey, Hannah Busch, Hans-Martin Dederding, Hazal Halavut, Iza Gawęcka, Jale Karabekir, Karin Karakaşlı, Katarzyna Słoboda, Katarzyna Żeglicka, Katia Savrami, Kerstin Pohle, Klara Diedrichs, Kübra Gümüşay, Kurt Sherry, Lee Cockshott, Liz James, Łucja Iwanczewska, Lydia Ziemke, Maja Lee Langvad, Malte Jehmlich, Marta Jalowska, Melissa Müller, Meral Akkent, Merve S. Öztürk, Milan Vukašinović, Mirjam Claaßen, Mirjam Schmuck, Mithu Sanyal, Monika Kwaśniewska-Mikuła, Narîn Yukler, Niki Tsironi, Niklas Tluk, Nils Voges, Patrycija Kowanska, Paulina Kramarz, Rümeysa Çamdereli, Sara Bigdeli Shamloo, Serra Akcan, Suna Kafadar, Sarah Plochl, Tang Siu Wa, Thomas Arentzen, Tuğçe Aydın, Vanessa Chartrand-Rodrigue, Verena Herbst, Wanda Künzel, Yeşim Koçak, Young-Won Song, Zuzanna Berendt


A co-production of kainkollektiv, Burak Özdemir, the Gender Museum Istanbul, Pracownia Kuratorska and the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

Supported by the Kunststiftung NRW, the Heinrich Böll Foundation, the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia, the Fonds Darstellende Künste with funds from the Federal Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media, the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the City of Bochum.

Performance
KASSIA – SONGS OF CARE(VOLUTION)
photo of the performance KASSIA - you see the actress Amal Omran on the stage

KASSIA – SONGS OF CARE(VOLUTION)

EINE CYBORG OPER

von kainkollektiv, Burak Özdemir & Musica Sequenza, Gendermuseum Istanbul, Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, tak Theater Aufbau Kreuzberg Berlin & Kampnagel Hamburg

Die Komponistin, Dichterin & byzantinische Äbtissin KASSIA, die im 9. Jahrhundert in Konstantinopel lebte, gilt als erste europäische Komponistin, deren musikalische Werke überliefert worden sind und bis heute eine wichtige musikgeschichtliche Rolle spielen. Zudem gründete Kassia auf einem der sieben Hügel Istanbuls ein Frauenkloster, nachdem sie einen Heiratsantrag des Kaisers Theophilos zurückgewiesen hatte. Kassia erscheint damit als eine Art urfeministisches Role Model. Diese „Powerfrau“ nehmen kainkollektiv und der türkisch-deutsche Komponist Burak Özdemir zusammen mit seinem grandiosen Barockorchester Musica Sequenza als Ausgangspunkt für eine (post-)feministische Oper – den SONGS OF CARE(VOLUTION) –, die in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Gendermuseum Istanbul sowie Wissenschaftler*innen, Aktivist*innen und Künstler*innen aus Deutschland, Polen, der Türkei und weiteren Ländern zwischen NRW, Berlin und Istanbul entstanden ist.

Grundlage für die von kainkollektiv inszenierte Performance-Oper bildet die vielschichtige Neu-Komposition der Werke Kassias durch Burak Özdemir und sein Orchester Musica Sequenza, in der die extrem alten, kulturelle und geographische (Klang-)Grenzen überschreitenden Werke Kassias mit alten (und elektronischen) Instrumenten auf eine zeitgenössische Weise völlig neu interpretiert und für unsere Gegenwart zugänglich gemacht werden. Zusammen mit der guatemaltekischen Sopranistin Diana Ramirez, der südkoreanischen Tänzerin Young-Won Song & der kanadischen Tänzerin Catherine Jodoin sowie der syrischen Schauspielerin Amal Omran entsteht zwischen Musik, Oper, Text, Tanz, Film und Performance ein schillerndes Porträt der Künstlerin Kassia ebenso wie der west-östlichen Grenzlandschaften Europas, aus denen sich ihre musikalischen Einflüsse speisten und die aktuell wieder tief in die Krise patriarchaler und nationaler Politiken geraten sind. In einer Zeit, in der die Regierungen in Polen und der Türkei die Istanbul Kovention für Frauenrechte in Europa verlassen, geht es darum, das Vermächtnis Kassias als „erster feminstischer Künstlerin“ neu zu befragen und für die Zukunft auszuloten.

Im Aufgreifen, Übermalen und Weiterspinnen der Kompositionen, Dichtungen sowie der Biografie von KASSIA werden das Musiktheater und die Künstlichkeit der Oper, die selbst eine Art Cyborg-Gattung des Theaters ist und Cyborg-Künstler*innen mit außergewöhnlichen Stimmen und Körpern hervorbringt, zum produktiven Raum der Erforschung hybrider, mithin queerer, cyborghafter Existenzen und ihrer unterschiedlichen Verkoppelungen – über Zeiten, Räume, Sprachen und Klangwelten hinweg, von Byzanz bis in die (europäische) Gegenwart und Zukunft. Denn die neue CYBORG OPERAS Serie von kainkollektiv, die sich hier mit KASSIA fortsetzt, verfolgt das Erzeugen eines Repertoires an theatralen Gesten, narrativen Dramaturgien und insbesondere Liedern, Arien, Gesängen, Lauten und Schreien – jenen SONGS OF CARE –, die neben allen singulären Ausdrucksformen auch stets die Stelle markieren, an der die Einzelnen mit ihren Umwelten verbunden sind und sich neue, mithin kosmische Konfigurationen ergeben – so wie es in den kosmologisch-theologischen Entwürfen und Kompositionen Kassias schon vor mehr als 1.000 Jahren zum Ausdruck gekommen ist und deren Wiederentdeckung darum heute mehr denn je lohnen: Wie klingt eigentlich (post-)feministische Oper?

Susu/Kassia:
I have questions: To write or not to write? To sing or not to sing? Questions that can be heard in our ears. How and why to write poems, plays, songs in revolutionary times? In times of crisis? In times of oppression? Why poems, what songs, when women are silenced? When children are silenced? When animals, plants, stones, dreams are silenced? When does silence begin? When do we escape the silence? When is silence stone, sand, gold, breath?
For silence, like darkness, just is. But how can it be conveyed?
When? It takes time, times, all times. A time to fight. A time to write. And a time in between that combines the two. [Auszug aus dem Stücktext von kainkollektiv]

photo of the performance KASSIA - you see a two women on the stage
©Robin Junicke
photo of the performance KASSIA - you see the orchestra on the stage
©Robin Junicke
photo of the performance KASSIA - you see a three women on the stage
©Robin Junicke
photo of the performance KASSIA - you see the actress Amal Omran on the stage
©Robin Junicke

Von und mit: Alexander De Tey, Amal Omran, Annie Gard, Ana Mikulić, Burak Özdemir, Burcu Özdemir, Catherine Joidon, Chang Yoo, Diana Ramirez, Elisabeth Champollion, Emine Schmuck, Fabian Lettow, Hannah Busch, Jochen Röth, Linda Mantcheva, Melissa Müller, Mirjam Schmuck, Norbert Wahren, Pedro Doria, Sebastian Flaig, Theo Small, Tung-Han Hu, Young-Won Song und Zdravka Ivandija Kirigin u.v.m.

Koproduzent*innen und Gastspiele: kainkollektiv, Burak Özdemir/Musica Sequenza Orchestra, Gender Museum Istanbul, Pracownia Kuratorska, Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, kampnagel Hamburg, tak Theater Aufbau Kreuzberg und Theater im Ballsaal Bonn.

Gefördert von der Kunststiftung NRW, dem Ministerium für Kultur und Wissenschaft des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen, der Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, vom Fonds Darstellende Künste aus Mitteln der Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien, dem NRW KULTURsekretariat, der Stadt Bochum


OVERDOSE

THE UNFINISHED SHOW OF PAIN AND JOY

An empty stage populated by a group of people: A writer, a composer, a painter, a narrator, ancient figures and contemporary performers in a continuous loop of corona interruption. In the centre of the vast space is the oracle, an empty, transparent box that they all encircle, enter and question together. Three travellers appear, preoccupied with their own concerns and emerging from their own personal isolation. Can the oracle help them? Can it give them answers to their questions? And will it show them who they really are? Or is the oracle itself long dead, closed, a faded myth from the stories of Greek antiquity with which European theatre once began?

Seven performers, three languages and a few pains and joys later that are shared here – boat people project, Collective Ma’louba and kainkollektiv have created a fragmented, constantly (self-)interrupting theatre journey in filmic form that tells of voiceless singers, torn actors and performing non-performers – a swan song to the theatre in pandemic times and at the same time a new questioning of the ancient oracle about its continuation, about the theatre of the future!

The project was developed over a period of 12 months in collaboration between the three collectives and a diverse group of theatre makers from Syria and Germany.

A polyphonic streaming performance in Arabic, English and German.

The online premiere was available to watch for free on the official YouTube channel of vier.ruhr on 9 April 2021 at 8 pm.

(c) Franziska Götzen
(c) Franziska Götzen
(c) Franziska Götzen
(c) Franziska Götzen
(c) Franziska Götzen
(c) Franziska Götzen
(c) Franziska Götzen

From and With: Waseem Alsharqi, Immanuel Bartz, Reimar de la Chevallerie, Florian Lauss, Bayan Layla, Fabian Lettow, Amer Okdeh, Amal Omran, Mirjam Schmuck, Omar Mohamad, Birte Müchler, Nina de la Chevallerie

Funded by: Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of NRW, the German Federal Cultural Foundation. As part of NEUE WEGE by the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia in cooperation with the NRW KULTURsekretariat and with funds from the Federal Theatre Prize.

Performance
WE TRAVEL THE SPACE WAYS
photo from the digital performance WE TRAVEL THE SPACE WAYS - you see Nicolas Fionel Moumbounou

WE TRAVEL THE SPACE WAYS

A digital travelling performance in search of the “future of man” by kainkollektiv & parts of the “Is this a human?” ensemble 2020/21 (Cameroon, Madagascar, Congo, France, Belgium, Germany a. o.)

The recording of the premiere on 16 October can still be viewed on YouTube.

The starting point of the online performance project is the eponymous question of another kainkollektiv production: ‘Est-ce un humain? / Ist das ein Mensch? / Is this a human?’, whose rehearsals at the Ringlokschuppen Ruhr in Mülheim were abruptly interrupted in March 2020 due to the pandemic…

“Suddenly the sun had disappeared. A total solar eclipse. A corona. Glowing black. Deep in the west, where the sun is dusty. Everything dark. Everything gone. Everyone gone. Image interference. Blackout. Total dematerialisation. Victory of anti-matter over matter. Crisis of all earths.

In the beginning there was only ONE. A single black infinitude. So cold and dark for so very long that even the burning light was imperceptible…!“ (Text excerpt from WE TRAVEL THE SPACE WAYS)

Now kainkollektiv is coming together again with parts of the ensemble to stay in touch across continents and negotiate the ‘state of things’ locally and globally with this work-in-progress format. They are opening up a digital space to which all those who are not afraid to dance across abysses are invited. Certainties are to be abandoned and the abyss of histories that inevitably separate us from each other and at the same time connect us is to find its way into the reality of our lives.

In ‘We Travel the Space Ways’, we experiment with (digital) live editing in order to cut together places, stories, traces and positionings in an aesthetic-media form, but also in a social and political strategy, which – in both a positive and negative sense – prove to be incisive for local-global coexistence on earth.

How can different realities between analogue and digital, documentary & fiction, art, care & activism, media, places, locations & actors/agents be cut together and networks be designed in real time? And how can we remain physically separated, yet together and in solidarity? The team embarks on a journey into digital space to find answers to these questions – somewhere between the virtual movements of a (street) dance ritual and the alien songs of a space opera. In the future of the dawning age that we call the Anthropocene, what will that actually have been: a human being? And who will WE have been (in the future)?

Duration about one hour, followed by a discussion, moderated by poetress, educational consultant and Blacktivist Melanelle B. C. Hémêfa.

photo from the digital performance WE TRAVEL THE SPACE WAYS - you see Mariette Nancy Nko
(c) kainkollektiv

From and With: kainkollektiv (Mirjam Schmuck, Fabian Lettow), Njara Rasolomanana, Pélagie Alima, Mariette Nancy Nko, Nicolas Moumbounou, Nils Voges (sputnic), Zora Snake Company

In cooperation with the Nationaltheater Mannheim and the Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim.

Performance
Est – Ce un Humain / Ist das ein Mensch / Is This A Human
photo of the workshop in Cameroon for IS THIS A HUMAN? - women stands on a car

Est – Ce un Humain / Ist das ein Mensch / Is This A Human

A cyborg opera

In the storms of the present, somewhere between pandemic, climate crisis and the virus of racism, Noah’s old ark has flown apart and become stranded on its mission to bring creation safely through the planetary deluge. Only her helmsman and the band of the ark, which, as with the sinking of the Titanic, does not stop playing and continues to fuel the journey/fantasies even after the shipwreck, are still there. But the rest of the crew, the last ambassadors of the earthly/human species shortly before its collapse, were lost on the way, scattered to the winds and are no longer to be seen. In a great performance ritual somewhere between street dance theater and space opera, the band and their helmsman set about re-establishing contact with those scattered across the globe, getting the ark afloat again and reassembling the crew on it.

The IST DAS EIN MENSCH project, a multi-year collaboration between kainkollektiv, the Zora Snake Compagnie (Cameroon) and Njara Rasolomanana (Madagascar), was launched in 2018. The pandemic halted the final rehearsal process in the Ringlokschuppen and drove the ensemble apart during the lockdown. Now some of the artists are returning to the Ringlokschuppen to continue their search for a planetary HOMECOMING at the other end of the pandemic, with their comrades-in-arms scattered at the other ends of the world.

Four theaters – namely Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, FFT Düsseldorf, Kampnagel Hamburg and tak Theater Aufbau Kreuzberg Berlin – are streaming the production together and sending the ark on another journey.

photo of the performance of IS THIS A HUMAN? at Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim
(c) Stephan Gagla
photo of the workshop in Cameroon for IS THIS A HUMAN? - musicians with masks on the street
(c) Michael Wolke
photo of the performance of IS THIS A HUMAN? at Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim - you see Kerstin Pohle, Michael Bohn and Calvin Yugye
(c) Stephan Gagla
photo of the performance of IS THIS A HUMAN? at Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim - you see Kerstin Pole and SNAKE
(c) Stephan Gagla
photo of the performance of IS THIS A HUMAN? at Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim - you see the stage
(c) Stephan Gagla
photo of the workshop in Cameroon for IS THIS A HUMAN? - performer with masks
(c) Michael Wolke
photo of the performance of IS THIS A HUMAN? at Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim - you see SNAKE on stage
(c) Stephan Gagla
photo of the performance of IS THIS A HUMAN? at Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, Mülheim - you see Edith Voges Nana Tchuinang
(c) Stephan Gagla

From and With: Abdoulaye Abdoul Oumate, Alexandra Tivig, Armin Leoni, Calvin Yugye, Catherine Jodoin, Edith Voges Nana Tchuninang, Fabian Lettow,Fanny Clementine Abega, Florian Lauss, Hannah Busch, Jonas Wiese, Mariette Nancy Nko, Michael Bohn, Michael Wolke, Mirjam Schmuck,Marie Siekmann,Nicolas Fionel Moumbounou, Kerstin Pohle, Nils Voges, Njara Rasolomanana, Patrick Ravelomanantsoa, Pélagie Alima, Phillip Bille, Rasmus Nordholt, Valery Ebouele, Wilfried Lekemo Nakeu, Zora Snake

A co-production of Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, FFT Düsseldorf, tak Berlin and Kampnagel Hamburg.

Supported by the TURN Fund of the German Federal Cultural Foundation, by the Ministry of Culture and Science of North Rhine-Westphalia, by the Goethe Institute Cameroon, the Goethe Center Madagascar, as part of the IKF funding of the Goethe Institute, the Kunststiftung NRW and the NRW KULTURsekretariat. Die digitale Version ist gefördert vom Sonderförderung Digitale Performance und Livestream der Kunststiftung NRW.

Sturm!

The winds seem to be favorable when, in 1607, three ships set sail from London to make the perilous crossing across the Atlantic to America’s “New World” to found the first colony in transatlantic colonial history at Jamestown, Virginia. But one of the three ships, the “Sea Venture”, gets caught in a storm and sinks. Parts of the crew save themselves on one of the islands that will later be called Bermuda. The castaways reach Jamestown ten months late, but conditions there are catastrophic, diseases are rampant, many do not survive the winter.

Shakespeare is said to have met some of the returnees in the sailors’ taverns of London’s West End; they tell him about the confusion of the “New World. Their “colonial sailor’s yarn” inspires Shakespeare to write his last play THE TEMPEST, which he publishes in 1611, a few years before his death.

(c) Brinkmöller-Beck

THE STORM is considered a comedy with a happy ending and Shakespeare’s most personal play. It tells the story of the magician Prospero, the rightful Duke of Milan, who loses his dukedom due to an intrigue of his brother, has to flee, gets caught in a storm at sea and is stranded on an island. There he lives together with the magical creatures that serve him. When his scheming brother also arrives on the island by his hand, a confusion unfolds, at the end of which an intrigue is resolved and all conflicts seem to be pacified. In Prospero’s epilogue, which he addresses directly to the audience and with which he literally departs, one has thought to recognize Shakespeare’s own farewell speech from the theater. With Prospero the magician, Shakespeare the theatrical magician also departs from the world (theatrical) stage.

But perhaps this departure can also be discussed and problematized in terms of globalization as we understand it today, with the violent exploitation of the earth and the living beings it inhabits. Shakespeare’s play is aware of this connection very early on. But how far-reaching the title he chose, “The Tempest”, aims into the heart of the dynamics of globalization, can only be fully appreciated today – in a time of turbo-capitalism and climate change, in which pandemics, financial storms and tsunamis rage across the planet and thus sweep away entire islands (economically as well as geographically) like the island on which Prospero founded his empire.

In STURM! the Bochum-based kainkollektiv, together with the PRINCE REGENT THEATRE and a team of three actors, wants to retell Shakespeare’s famous last play once again and in a completely new way.

(c) Brinkmöller-Beck

From and With: Alexander Steindorf, Edith Voges Nana Tchuinang, Rasmus Nordholt, Mirjam Schmuck, Fabian Lettow

Supported by the Foundation of Sparkasse Bochum for the Promotion of Culture and Science.

Performance

Kainsolo

A virtual dis-dance

In kainsolo, which can be heard as “no solo” and read as “kains solo”, the three dancers set in motion a choreographic-performative constellation that plays around the numbers 1, 2 and 3 (solo, duo, trio) both artistically and politically. The German-Jewish philosopher Hannah Arendt formulated in her Denk-Tagebuch that there is no 1 in the human world, human life always begins with the 2, no one can live alone. But with the first post-Paradise story in the Old Testament, this 2 is the occasion for a fundamental crime. Kain has slain his brother Abel (KAbel, the android resurrector of Abel, a ghost from the future) and subsequently made himself the first ruler and (city) founder. He is the founder of the white man’s theater, as it still reigns everywhere today – even in the White House. But he is getting on in years, at the end of his tether both internally and externally, a defective ruler looking for an exit from his rule. He wants his brother back, but he has completely forgotten how to do it: talk to the dead, apologize, get out, break up. He dances a solo like a dance of death, but he no longer knows how to do it: die. In search of a reunion with their dead brother/son, the three come together once again today: In a virtual field between reality and digitality, in which reality itself is already infected with a virus of disappearance, a provisional ritual with an open outcome begins. A ritual that makes the cracks in reality itself visible.

At the Ringlokschuppen in Mülheim, Merighi and Mercy – former dancers of the Pina Bausch Company – will dance via stream together with Zora Snake, the multi-award-winning dancer and festival organizer, in a projection that reaches us directly from Cameroon. We would have actually been on stage there with “kainsolo”. But time separates us, separates the bodies and spaces from each other and makes visible the rifts that have existed for much longer and across which we want to try a first dis-dance, on uncertain ground. How can you dance together over the Internet and across continents? How to relate/react to each other when there are 4,000 kilometers between the performers? And what is there to say, to report, to thematize when the bodies appearing in the live video stream in the specifically charged contexts of their respective spaces, countries, continents appear separately from each other and at the same time together in the digital space of the Internet? How can we travel together virtually along the “spaceways” that Sun Ra already sang and philosophized about in the 1970s in an Afrofuturistic way, when the present itself is virtualized, dematerialized, withdrawn and attacked in the face of an invisible and warlike “theater of viruses” (Heiner Müller)?

From and With: Pascal Merighi, Thusnelda Mercy, Zora Snake, Rasmus Nordholt-Frieling, Pascal Gehrke, Nils Voges, Mirjam Schmuck, Fabian Lettow

A coproduction of kainkollektiv, merighi I mercy & Zora Snake with Ringlokschuppen Ruhr uand the MODAPERF festival Cameroon.

Supported by the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia and the Fonds Darstellende Künste with funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media.

GAIA

a Cyborg Opera

On June 27, 2020, the new production GAIA by kainkollektiv will celebrate its premiere. After the pandemic did not allow the originally planned premiere at the Ruhrfestspiele Recklinghausen, it was rethought – together with sputnik – and creatively rescheduled to create an online version with live moments.

(c) kainkollektiv

“My name is Gaia, mother-goddess of the earth. My name is Demeter, mother-goddess of fertility. And I am Isis, mother-goddess of species. We are not saints, but earth-bound ones. Not spiritual principles but principles made flesh, not heavenly evasions but earthly entanglements. We have come to take back what has always been ours. But take heed, we are not given to joking.” (Excerpt on BITCH MOTHER MANIFESTO)

Gaia in mythology is the primordial Mother Earth, the all-encompassing feminine principle that connects all things that are. Gaia creates and destroys. Gaia gives birth and multiplies.

The 10 female artists from Canada, Cameroon, Iran, Croatia, France and Germany create a space of possibility in GAIA. . A space in which art and children can exist together. In this space they expose themselves with their questions, doubts, strengths and search movements.

A story is told in the near future. A mysterious phenomenon is appearing all over the world: Children fall into a deep sleep. Nobody can explain the reason. In this setting, a group of mothers emerges who interpret this phenomenon in their own unique way. What they have in common: they are (non-) mothers and artists who are fed up with the state of the world. The current crisis makes them reflect on individual choices and life circumstances.

Fictional portraits are drawn that are projections of the artists themselves. Of who they are, of what they (don’t) want to be, of how they feel they are seen, and of how they (don’t) want to be seen. What does it mean to be an artist and a mother?

(c) kainkollektiv
(c) kainkollektiv
(c) Nils Voges

Due to the crisis, the women are tied to their homes, but still connected through the Internet, and so they prepare a fantastic revolution that their BITCH MOTHER MANIFESTO is based on. In the process, they rediscover the arts that have accompanied their lives for so long. Exploring their mystical origins and realizing the transformative power that art can have. In the scenography of their kitchens, bathrooms, beds and living rooms, the women transform themselves into mythical, hybrid, hermaphroditic figures/cyborgs – a new planetary species – that may even have the abilities to awaken the sleeping children and lead them into a future vision of a new world program: GAIA.

In English, French and German.

From and With: Silvia Dierkes, Catherine Jodoin, Edith Voges Nana Tchuninang, Vanessa Chartrand-Rodrigue, Mirjam Schmuck, Sabrina Bohl, Sara Bigdeli Shamloo, Kerstin Pohle, Bianca Künzel, Zdravka Ivandija Kirigin, Hannah Busch

A project of kainkollektiv in coproduction with Ruhrfestspielen Recklinghausen and tak Berlin.

Funded by the Performing Arts Fund, funded by the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media, the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia, the North Rhine-Westphalia State Office for the Independent Performing Arts, and the Regionalverband Ruhr.

Performance
photo of the digital performance Dekameron - you see Mirjam Schmuck and Fabian Lettow with rabbit masks

Decameron

The Dark Side of the Zoom.

kainkollektiv embarks on a virtual journey in search of its lost ensemble, scattered to the winds by the virus of the present. A cinematic déjà vu that leads through the European landscapes and far beyond, zooming deeper and deeper into the dark heart of Europe – into the backside of the European Dream, which, as we all know, has been giving birth to monsters for a long time. What will our homecoming look like, when one day we will return from the home office to reality? To which reality? How, where and when will we all meet again?

‚Dekameron. The Dark Side of the Zoom‘ on the YouTube channel of vier.ruhr.

From and With: kainkollektiv (Mirjam Schmuck & Fabian Lettow), Nils Voges, Silvia Dierkes, Łukasz Stawarczyk, Pélagie Alima, Zora Snake, Sara Bigdeli Shamloo, Rasmus Nordholt-Frieling

Funded within the framework of NEUE WEGE by the Ministry of Culture and Science of the State of NRW in cooperation with the NRW KULTURsekretariat.