Rebellion of the Body
Tatsumi Hijikata

Friday 6 January 2006, 19.00

Tatsumi Hijikata (1928–86) was an originator and the most significant choreographer of Butoh, an experimental and influential Japanese dance form. Debuting as a dancer at the age of twenty-four, he was influenced early on by the Bauhaus-related German dance movement Neue Tanz, as well as the work of writers Jean Genet and Yukio Mishima. His work during the 1960s expressed the eroticism of male dancers and mixed violence with sensationalism. Interested in decay and the dark side of history, Hijikata believed in the power of images to evoke movements and used gestures to investigate memory.

In conjunction with her exhibition in the Level 2 Gallery, Catherine Sullivan selects a programme of very rarely seen films documenting Hijikata's work. Sullivan shares with Hijikata an interest in the interplay between image and movement, and in how various texts and devices can be employed to generate and determine the behaviour of performers.

Tate Modern  Starr Auditorium
£4, booking recommended
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or call 020 7887 8888.
Book tickets online

Access for wheelchairs and pushchairs  Hearing loop available  

This event is related to the Level 2 Gallery Catherine Sullivan exhibition