
it doesn't go without saying (& other gossips)
Rue Notre-Dame du Sommeil 81, 1000 Brussels
For the first time, Alix Eynaudi and Elizabeth Ward are working on a project together. So they have called upon dancer Ray Scheinecker. Their performance fantasizes about the legacy of American postmodern dance, and delves particularly deeply into the oeuvre and stories of choreographer and videographer Cathy Weis. In the work, they emphasize Paul Kotal's sound composition as an autonomous element: voices and vivid descriptions take the form of interviews and gossip, and they reflect together on archiving, accessibility, and collective memory. The feeling that something is being passed on even before it has been passed on.it doesn't go without saying (& other gossips) is a project by Alix Eynaudi and Elizabeth Ward, together with dancer Ray Scheinecker, that fabulates on the legacy of US postmodern dance — specifically through the work and stories of choreographer and videographer Cathy Weis. Her voice runs throughout the piece in stories, interviews and gossip, where the anecdote becomes a way of sensing l'air du temps: what it held, what it let fall. The piece unfolds as a series of intimate tributes, in the movement, in the sound, the lights, and in the clothing.The studio never quite leaves the stage. Something ferments in the retelling — slipping between devotion and decoration, between what was practiced and what is performed, between the body that learned and the body that remembers. Not a reconstruction. Not a recovery of something lost. A turbulence, still working.Each of the three performers carries a different distance from Cathy's work. Elizabeth has been close for three decades — a student, yes, but also someone who has lived with her, helped her move houses, danced for her, conversed with her across a long friendship. Alix came to this history as a European dancer, through the people who carried it across an ocean — learning from those who had learned from Cathy, amongst others — the chain long enough that something is always already being reinterpreted, remade. Ray arrives from a different generation and a different formation entirely — Austrian, urban dance, clownery — and brings with her a resonance with Cathy's work that is less about lineage than about something more oblique, more bodily, harder to name. Three distances. Three intimacies.Cathy's stories, images, and recordings traveled from New York to Vienna — and it was through that retelling that the piece found its shape: Paul Kotal's sound design and composition, a clothing collection by Isabelle Edi somewhere between the Addams Family and the supposed neutrality of jeans, t-shirt, and sports shoes, and a light design by Lukas Kötz — a set designer, here working with light alone.We never dance alone.For Cathy Weis, with love. • Alix Eynaudi dances, works, and writes at the cutting edge of craftsmanship and chaos, through which she embraces a (mostly) joyful chaos. She never works alone; every event, every investigation, every invitation is a pretext to spend time with like-minded individuals – a network of friendships shimmering beneath the surface, a wave of wonder and support. She is specialized in choreographic encounters. Her most recent works include Death by Landscape, a concert (2024), Institute of Rest(s) (2023–2025), and it doesn’t go without saying (2026). Her work has been presented at MACRO, Rome; Tanzquartier, Vienna; Kaaitheater, Brussels; far° festival, Nyon; Xing, Bologna; Biennale di Venezia, Venice; Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius; brut, Vienna; Volkskundemuseum, Vienna; Wiener Festwochen, Vienna; Wonderfruit festival, Thailand. She lives in Vienna. • Elizabeth Ward is an American dancer, choreographer, and occasional Outside Eye, based in Vienna. She began her training at the School of the Atlanta Ballet and earned a BA at Bennington College in Vermont, where she was taught by Cathy Weis and Dana Reitz. Her work has been shown in New York at Danspace, Movement Research at Judson Church, AUNTS, the Chocolate Factory, Dixon Place, and The Kitchen. Elizabeth has also performed for downtown choreographers such as Yvonne Meier, DD Dorvillier, Rebecca Brooks, Linda Austin, Miguel Gutierrez, Heather Kravas, and Cathy Weis. Since moving to Vienna, her work has been presented through brut, WUK, TQW, Wiener Festwochen, ImPulsTanz, and steirischer herbst.
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