Bernadette Rae talks to Black Grace's Zoe Watkins about the evolution of the company's latest production
In three years with Black Grace, dancer Zoe Watkins has performed in North America, Hawaii, Guam, Switzerland, Korea and, in March this year, a 12-centre tour of Germany. Included in the German performances was a 35-minute version of artistic director Neil Ieremia's new creation, Waka, a work that explores the idea of a raft as a metaphor for hope. The piece was also performed in May at the Busan International Dance Festival in Korea, alongside repertoire piece Amata.
A full-length version debuts in four North Island centres, through August.
Set to a mix of New Zealand music by Porirua harpist Natalia Mann, Salmonella Dub and Fat Freddy's Drop, the work is inspired in part by Bill Viola's frightening video installation, titled The Raft, in which a group of people waiting at a bus stop are suddenly blasted by high-pressure waves of water and struggle for endless minutes against the torrent. It also responds to the painting The Arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand by Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie and to Theodore Gericault's famous The Raft of the Medusa, which depicts all the terror of a shipwreck.
"In the beginning Neil kept a lot of those concepts close to his chest," says Watkins of Black Grace's collaborative creative process, which included a five-week development period before the German tour, and another five weeks post-Korea to expand the work.