Resisting Extinction
Various Wellington outdoor locations, Wellington
22/02/2023 - 26/02/2023
Production Details
Concept: Olive Bieringa
Direction & choreography: Olive Bieringa & Otto Ramstad
Writers: Olive Bieringa and Laressa Dickey
Costume design: Kristine Gjems
BODYCARTOGRAPHY PROJECT
https://bodycartography.org/
Hikoi with us to Wellingtons wild places to experience a thrilling dance through this ecological crisis. This site-specific work unfolds as a series of three experiences: weather walk is a one-on-one performance journey. We will transform our small talk about the weather. the missing is an invisible performance that flickers on the periphery of our consciousness where a critically endangered multi-species being haunts the landscape. dying and decomposing meditations – practicing for potential climate realities.
It is suggested for audiences 12+.
Resisting Extinction offers practices for living and dying together on a damaged earth. Resisting Extinction invites us to not only look forward but to look around and notice what we are losing. Together our bodies live inside this ecological crisis. This ecological crisis is an identity crisis. Everything is shifting. Recognizing grief as a legitimate response to this multi-species mass extinction is a vital step to expanding our understanding of what it means to be alive in this swiftly transforming moment. We can’t rely on models that perpetuate this crisis. We need to practice embodied knowing to repair our relational field. We must hone our skills. to improvise, to play, to experiment, to be receptive, to be in the unknown and trust we have the resources in our bodies to negotiate, survive, and thrive.
Olive Bieringa and Otto Ramstad have been collaborating as BodyCartography Project creating dance for public spaces, theaters, cinemas and museums such as the Oslo International Theatre Festival, PS122 and DTW in NYC, The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Lyon Opera Ballet, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and Te Papa Tongarewa, their first intangible dance acquisition. In 2003 they presented their award winning work Lagoon for Whairepo Lagoon for the NZ Fringe Festival.
BODYCARTOGRAPHY PROJECT
Van departure times:
Wednesday: 6:30PM
Thursday – Sunday: 3:00PM and 6:30PM
Duration: 2 hours plus travel time
Resisting Extinction is free to attend but has limited capacity so requires booking in advance. To book your ticket, please email bookings.performancearcade@gmail.com and include the event name, time and date of the event, and names of attendees. You will be emailed your ticket to present upon entry to the event. Places are strictly limited so if you can no longer attend the event, please contact us immediately so another willing participant can experience this unrepeatable piece of performance art.
Van departs from Wellington Waterfront at the end of Taranaki Street, in between Mac’s Brewbar and Circa Theatre.
Co-creating performers:
Sigrid Marie Kittelsaa Vesaas, Ornilia Ubisse, Hanna Filomen Mjåvatn, Kristina Gjems, Otto Ramstad, Olive Bieringa, Nina Wollny, Daniel Persson, Oliver Connew, Uma Ramstad, Laressa Dickey, Kosta Bogoievski, Josie Archer, Rachel Ruckstuhl-Mann, Olivia McGregor, Amit Noy
Wellington performers:
Otto Ramstad, Olive Bieringa, Oliver Connew, Uma Ramstad, Kosta Bogoievski, Josie Archer, Rachel Ruckstuhl-Mann, Olivia McGregor, Amit Noy
Made possible with support from the Public Art Fund, Wellington City Council, Norwegian Arts Council, and Ministry of Culture and Heritage.
Dance , Contemporary dance , Experimental dance , Outdoor , Performance installation ,
2 hours + Travel time
The feel of rimu needles in my hair; the taste of gorse flowers; the pull of gravity on a slope
Review by Lyne Pringle 26th Feb 2023
Resisting Extinction, is part of the Performance Arcade on Wellington’s waterfront.
Underlying the work of BODYCARTOGRAPHY PROJECT is a decades long inquiry into embodied practices leading to ecological conversations.
Olive Bieringa and Otto Ramstad head a company of corporeal adventurers who invite the audience into a two hour long deep dive into the ecosystem of inner city Central Park. A previous iteration was forged in Norway and will emerge in Estonia later in the year.
Gurgling through the gully is a stream, that was once a place where people dumped their garbage. Since the middle of last century the park has been restored by the city council and hundreds of volunteers. In recent years Volunteer Wellington in collaboration with the Friends’ of Central Park, have hosted corporate groups from high flying, carbon guilty companies such as Z Energy and ANZ bank. They have been tasked with attacking invasive species and planting natives such as totara, rimu and manuka.
The mega flora is a combination of mature pines and gums where, these days, kaka hang out and swoop from like high flying raucous boguns.
Rachel Ruckstuhl-Mann elegantly welcomes us with a mihi, shared breath and karakia.
Each member of the intimate audience is paired with a ‘dancer’ from the company and taken on a individually unique ‘weather walk’ through the park.
My guide is Maria Lothe, a Norwegian who has been involved in this project from the beginning, she has deep blue eyes like a crystal clear mountain lake.
Surrendering to the experience and discarding any judgement or previous knowledge yields: a slide over the carbon guilt of a long haul flight from Norway; discussion of current threats and ‘who takes the blame?’ questions as we paint our faces with mud; mimicking a cow fart; monsters and the troll under our bridges; the covertness of ‘cruising’ culture – discarded condoms abound; the unfurling of a punga; the smell of decomposing fronds as I am buried beneath them; the feel of rimu needles in my hair; the taste of gorse flowers; the pull of gravity on a slope whilst emulating the soaring of a karearea; a Norwegian moose song; the stomp of a hoof; picking up rubbish and the story of a bird with a broken neck. She transforms into the wounded creature embodying such beauty and horror in her death throes that grief wells up in my throat as I re-join the group.
After a brief description of how this place came into being and the changes in fauna over time. We, freshly minted eco-investigators, are invited to amble for twenty minutes and delve deeper into the environment. Again each member of the posse has a unique experience.
Slumped, stoic, perched, muddy and hidden ‘dancers’ can be found amidst the foliage, writhing, squawking, groaning. Interaction is a matter of choice. Some of these creatures seem to be in death throes but this is open to interpretation. Above them a fan tail flits and one baths in the stream as I wipe mud from my face and disrobe from the punga fronds draped over my shoulders.
Olive Bieringa takes charge of the group and leads us into the final part of the experience. Following a discussion of ‘dying choices’: drowning, hypothermia or dehydration, the group decides on drowning. With a tinge of trepidation we make our way up the hill to an open meadow with fur rugs laid out. It’s a gorgeous vista under moody skies and a burgeoning rain shower. We are invited to make ourselves comfortable and embark on a ‘practice’ to investigate our death of choice and subsequent decomposition. The rain falls.
A flight of kakas, orange armpits flashing, herald Bieringa’s strong articulate voice as she delivers an intricate informed text about the process of drowning. It is an horrifically beautiful thought experiment – it is astounding how these states can nestle so closely with each other. She pragmatically explains how water floods the lungs, how immediately the 100 trillion microbes in our gut turn on us to begin the process of decomposition once we’re dead. Rigor mortis sets in, dropping into the depths of the ocean face down, head and arms drooping from the spine, then rising again bloated, buffeted by waves, pecked by feeders, then dropping again as our skin slides off into the seaweed forest with red algae and psychedelic slugs where a vivid colony starts to scavenge our carcass. Bones remain after eighteen months but even they are broken down as worms bore into them in search of fat.
As we are invited to return to our present environment, the generous, hard-working dance artists move gently through the meadow to congregate. They are: Oliver Connew, Maria Lothe, Kosta Bogoievski, Rachel Ruckstuhl-Mann, Olivia McGregor, Amit Noy, Josie Archer and Otto Ramstad. Uma Ramstad sings, for her generation, Adrianne Lenker’s haunting anthem Change in a sweet voice with the company joining on the chorus.
Would you live forever, never die
While everything around passes?
Would you smile forever, never cry
While everything you know passes?
Wind stirs the trees, the rain clears, people are soothed by the sounds. Tea is served, hands are washed.
On the way out I ask some audience members how they found Resisting Extinction. They have never experienced anything like this before, they are still processing it. One woman, navigating awkward stairs, says she was a bit afraid beforehand, not knowing what to expect, but she found the experience enriching, provocative.
Bieringa and Ramstad are deeply committed to their practice, to conversations, to inviting participants to connect more fully with their bodies to face dis-ease and the pains of our time. Its gruelling, honourable work as they grapple with the question of how this ‘practice’ can lead to action. It’s a good question.
As we leave, the gorgeous kakas continue to chortle. They are the result of the Zealandia halo, legions of predator trappers, armies of native tree planters in gullies all across the city and a council team committed to working with their community. Here in Whanganui-a-Tara we are bucking the trend of bio-diversity loss.
There is hope.
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