Wim Vandekeybus (Herenthout, 30 June 1963) is a Belgian choreographer, director and photographer. His company Ultima Vez is located in Sint-Jans-Molenbeek (Brussels).[1]
Together with Jan Fabre, Alain Platel and Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Wim Vandekeybus has been responsible for the Flemish Wave in contemporary dance in the 80's.[2] He made over thirty international dance and theater productions and almost as many movies and video works.[3]
Breakthrough
After graduating high school, he briefly studied Psychology in KU Leuven in Leuven, Belgium. But later on, however, he decided to pursue a different path. After a workshop with Paul Peyskens he came in contact with theater. He followed through with various dance workshops (including tango and contemporary dance) and focused on film and photography.
After auditioning for Jan Fabre’s The Power of Theatrical Madness in 1985, Wim Vandekeybus spent two years travelling the world as one of the play’s two naked kings.[4] In 1986 he withdrew to Madrid for several months with a group of novice dancers to work on his first show and to launch his company Ultima Vez.[1]
His first show What the Body Does Not Remember premiered in June 1987 at the Toneelschuur in Haarlem (the Netherlands). The music driving the dancers was composed by Thierry De Mey and Peter Vermeersch. The performance won a Bessie Award in 1988 in New York.[5]
A residency in 1989 at the Centre National de Danse Contemporaine d'Angers resulted in Les porteuses de mauvaises nouvelles, which earned Vandekeybus a second Bessie Award.[5]
Vandekeybus' signature
Although Vandekeybus' signature resides first and foremost in the physical material, Ultima Vez’ early shows already reveal the rudimentary outlines of a narrative, for example in the opposition between men and women. How people react in unfamiliar situations or marginal positions has always fascinated Vandekeybus. He has often sought to collaborate with other artists but also to work with non-artists as well as with dancers and performers of all ages and from a range of backgrounds.[6]
Vandekeybus’ search for novelty and innovation is a constant in his work, but throughout his very different productions he has always remained true to the idiom of movement. Key elements of his oeuvre are tension and conflict, the body/mind dichotomy, risks and impulses as well as physicality, passion, intuition and instinct. However, each element is tackled differently in his shows.[7]
Performances
1987 What the Body Does Not Remember
1989 Les porteuses de mauvaises nouvelles
1990 The Weight of a Hand
1991 Immer das Selbe gelogen
1993 Her Body Doesn't Fit Her Soul
1994 Mountains Made of Barking
1995 Alle Grössen decken sich zu
1996 Bereft of a Blissful Union
1996 Exhaustion from Dreamt love
1997 7 for a Secret never to be told
1998 Body, body on the wall…
1998 The Day of Heaven and Hell
1999 In Spite of Wishing and Wanting
2000 Inasmuch as Life is borrowed…
2001 Scratching the Inner Fields
2002 ’s NACHTs
2002 Bericht aan de Bevolking
2002 it
2002 Blush
2003 Sonic Boom
2004 Viva!
2004 Rent a kid, no bullshit!
2005 Puur
2006 Bêt noir
2007 Spiegel
2007 Nachtschade
2007 MENSKE
2008 Lichtnacht
2009 Black Biist
2009 nieuwZwart
2010 Monkey Sandwich
2011 Radical Wrong
2011 IT 3.0
2001 Oedipus / bêt noir
2012 FEAR NOT
2012 booty Looting
2013 Spiritual Unity
2014 Talk to the Demon
2015 Speak low if you speak love …
2017 Mockumentary of a Contemporary Saviour
2018 Go Figure Out Yourself
2018 TrapTown
2019 Die Bakchen
2019 TRACES
Filmography
1990 Roseland
1992 La Mentira
1993 Elba and Federico
1994 Mountains Made of Barking
1996 Bereft of a Blissful Union
1996 Dust
1997 Body, Body on the wall…
1999 The Last Words
2000 Inasmuch
2001 Silver
2002 In Spite of Wishing and Wanting
2005 Blush
2007 Here After
2011 Monkey Sandwich
2015 Galloping Mind
Awards
In 1988 Wim Vandekeybus receives a Bessie Award for What the Body Does Not Remember[5]
In 1990 Wim Vandekeybus receives a Bessie Award for Les Porteuses de mauvaises nouvelles[5]
In 2007 Wim Vandekeybus receives the Choreography Media Honor of the Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles[8]