Tarantella
Maybe you enjoyed this summer's exhibition at the Stammbar? This time Marijn Cela takes us into his world, the world of dance. Tarantella? No, it's not a tarantula nor is it a southern dish, but it is a folkloric dance from the south of Italy. Ever seen The Godfather? Then you might remember the tarantella during the wedding party scene with the typical rousing rhythm of the music, the quick steps and the spinning movements. The dance is also linked to tarantism, an ancient folk belief in which a possessed woman can be freed and reborn only through music and dance…. But the traditional dance is in danger: the youth is moving away from southern Italy - to the richer North or abroad, villages are deserted and the culture is in danger of being lost. https://vimeo.com/679239879?ref=fb-share&fbclid=IwAR0VCVpbUEy0RERpjDk1YiML77Vinyd1JGLdwwixbzGxBwjtjC9FfOLyVKo In this performance Marijn Celea goes back to his Italian roots. It is a quest in which
Embroid’harry at spit it out
When embroidery gets into fetishism, it is at spit it out that it happens.It is in his store that Kriss welcomes the works of Harry de Bruxelles. An idea of exhibition which assembles portraits and embroidery in which he excels. A very singular way to break the codes of the fetish world and to make appear the people who are behind. The "work of lady" of yesterday becomes work of man today. And distills messages whose force creates a fascinating contrast with the delicacy of the realization. www.instagram.com/embroidharry/ From a photo, Harry embroiders the back of a man, giving birth to a phantasmagorical tattoo, for others they are angel wings or BDSM ropes… Throughout the works and the needle, the commitment, insolence and freedom emerge. As well as the political dimension of an activity long considered as flat and boring. "Embroidery is the reclaiming of time and beauty, but without the act