Steven Cohen

People Will People You

MC93 – Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
novembernov 24 - december – dec 24
1/3

In English, surtitled in French

Prices 8€ to 25€
Subscribers 8€ to 18€

MC93 – Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
MC93 – Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis
9, boulevard Lénine
93000 Bobigny
01 41 60 72 72

Metro Ligne 5 Station Bobigny – Pablo Picasso then walk 5 minutes 

Tramway T1 Station Hôtel-de-ville de Bobigny – Maison de la Culture

Bus 146, 148, 303, 615, 620 Bobigny Station - Pablo Picasso

Bus 134, 234, 251, 322, 301 Hôtel-de-ville Station

Vélib’ Stations Bobigny – Pablo-Picasso et Jean-Jaurès – Place de la Libération

Want to go

Tuesday november 24

20h

Wednesday november 25

20h

Friday november 27

20h

Saturday november 28

18h

Thursday december 3

20h30

Friday december 4

20h30

Saturday december 5

18h

Choreography, set design, costumes and performance Steven Cohen. Lighting Yvan Labasse. Video direction Baptiste Evrard. Costume design Clive Rundle. Props Vincent Gadras

Production and management Samuel Mateu. 

La MC93—Maison de la Culture de Seine-Saint-Denis, le CND Centre national de la Danse, and le Festival d’Automne à Paris present this production as a co-production as part of Plan D by le CND Centre national de la Danse.

 

Production Steven Cohen company
Coproduction Théâtre National de Bretagne ; Festival Euro-scene (Leipzig)
The Steven Cohen company is supported by DRAC Nouvelle-Aquitaine.
With the support of Fondation d’entreprise Hermès

With the support of

People Will People You explores the construction, projection and weakening of identity under society’s watchful gaze. Revisiting the spectacular images which have shaped his public image, or figure, Steven Cohen questions the normative effect of the gaze and the fabrication of roles assigned to us.

Seldom working with the spoken word, Cohen has always preferred to use the body as a means of expression and element of his scenography. This time, however, the artist takes speech as a medium for continuing to exist, and resist. In doing so, he creates an encounter where every person, whether artist or spectator, becomes both witness and actor. With his interest in the question of ageing, he embraces slowness, pain, and fragility, transforming his presence into an act of resistance against the invisibilisation of these different bodies. In keeping with his deep-rooted political convictions, Steven Cohen revisits his actions in public and the violence with which they have been met, but also evokes Gaza and Sudan at the same time. In doing so, he aligns his own vulnerability with that of bodies which have come under threat across the globe. He maps out a space in which the emergence of new forms of thought and action become possible, in stark contrast to the runaway virtual world around us. In this performance, Steven Cohen gives himself over to a ritual which becomes an invitation to a shared transformation, in which art and life become one and the same thing.

In the same place