THE ARTS CENTER
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School Matinee Performance

Beytna - Cie Omar Rajeh | Maqamat

Presented with the support of Dance Reflections by Van Cleef & Arpels

Thursday, Jan 30 @ 11am, 2025

The Red Theater, The Arts Center

  • Four dancer/choreographers and four musicians meet onstage over a banquet of food

    Beytna is an invitation to the home of the other, to the artist's profession and choreographic  construction. It is an invitation that confirms diversity, touches on forms and situations of the past, and searches for a new rhythm, pattern, and logic. In Beytna, four dancer/choreographers and four musicians with different artistic experiences and ideas, coming from different continents, cultures, and countries, meet onstage over a banquet of food. They talk, drink, laugh, dance, and prepare food together. This simple meeting becomes the starting point of a more complex choreographic and conceptual performance as the conversation between them develops.

    “Every weekend, on Sundays, I used to go to my grandfather's house where the whole family would gather to have lunch, drink and dance. My grandfather was a very welcoming man and he always wanted to invite friends and visitors coming from different places to share the food with us. For him, these moments of sharing and meeting were the most important moments of life. I never questioned this until after his death, when I lost such moments. These few hours between 1 and 5 in the afternoon were his escape. It was a sacred ritual with his family, guests, and friends. The table would be full of people, and everyone would raise their glasses for health, happiness, pleasure, love, and friendship.”

    - Omar Rajeh

     

    Every weekend, on Sundays, I used to go to my grandfather's house where the whole family would gather to have lunch, drink and dance. My grandfather was a very welcoming man and he always wanted to invite friends and visitors coming from different places to share the food with us. For him, these moments of sharing and meeting were the most important moments of life. I never questioned this until after his death, when I lost such moments. These few hours between 1 and 5 in the afternoon were his escape. It was a sacred ritual with his family, guests, and friends. The table would be full of people, and everyone would raise their glasses for health, happiness, pleasure, love, and friendship.