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Double Goer dance review: Exploring the notion of duality

Thought-provoking work that examines themes and revels in visual creativity

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Double Goer dance review: Exploring the notion of duality

The title of this duet, from New-Zealand’s Foster Group led by choreographer Sarah Foster-Sproull, is the literal English translation of ‘doppelgänger’. Various lore surrounds the notion of seeing your double, such as it heralding imminent death or echoing a lost state of twinship. Both of these ideas, along with a more general sense of the unearthly or other-worldly, permeate this fascinating and hypnotic piece, which examines the intimate relationship of two similar souls in all its beauty and ugliness. 

Picture: Jocelyn Janon

Dancers Tamsyn Russell and Rose Philpott begin gnarled together as one, naked from the waist up, almost like conjoined twins; an idea made more visceral by Andrew Foster’s score of amniotic sounds. After they separate, passages of mirroring follow, first gently harmonious, then growing into something more warrior-like as they take up more space around them, flinging their limbs and spreading their stances. There’s a Polynesian feel to the choreography sometimes, and an underlying sense of myth that holds the piece together even in its more exploratory sections. 

Picture: Jocelyn Janon

It’s these curious explorations, though, that make for some of the most striking choreography. Foster-Sproull’s eye for an image is mesmerising: both performers use their long hair brilliantly, at one point draping it forwards over folded arms so that their torsos become faces, with breasts forming bulbous sea-creature eyes. It’s a startling and ingenious piece of dance, thought-provoking as much in its visual creativity as in its ideas of female solidarity and competition.

Double Goer, Assembly @ Dance Base, until 27 August, 2.25pm. 

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