Awe and wonder

DanceX
Week ONE
Wednesday 8th October, 2025
Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne
Royal New Zealand Ballet
Te Ao Mārama
The Australian Ballet and The Australian Ballet School
Allegro Brillante by George Balanchine, The Balanchine Trust©
Restless Dance Theatre
Seeing Through Darkness
The Australian Ballet and Lucy GueriN
Ground Control
Dancenorth Australia
Wayfinder (excerpt)
Ground Control, my response to week one of DanceX, drawn up especially for Fjord Review.
Moss Te Ururangi Patterson describes his choreographic process as coming from an interest in having a conversation with other elements. As he describes pushing himself under the waves, and a feeling of meditative, buoyancy as he floated in space, the impression of light beneath the water was paramount. And it is light which features in his work, Te Ao Mārama, performed by members of Royal New Zealand Ballet, who surge forward, with their arms overhead. Te Ao Mārama was originally created as part of Lightscapes 2023, to celebrate the company’s 70th anniversary, but equally the opening night of part one of DanceX at Arts Centre Melbourne seems an ideal position to commence: in a conversation with coming into the light, into consciousness, of becoming aware of something within that was perhaps previously undetected or unrecognised.
To Patterson, the movement within Te Ao Mārama is also having “a conversation with the oro, or the vibrations that are in [a] space…. [exploring] the idea of a wānanga, finding ways to connect”[i]. Something which is typified when the dancers are held in shafts of light and elsewhere when they encircle a central figure, and lay their palms around his face. Rotating the kaleidoscope, and beginning as if already mid swing, the light, bright pirouettes of The Australian Ballet and The Australian Ballet School’s Allegro Brillante by George Balanchine follows. Swept along by Tchaikovsky’s Piano Concerto No. 3, the contrast between Te Ao Mārama and Allegro Brillante reminds me of why I love short stories and the vibrational crossover between each tale. Both lyrical and precise, yet in a distinct manner. Both what such a night needs.
Light or rather the sense of ballet’s illusion of lightness is also at the forefront of Lucy Guerin’s Ground Control, presented by The Australian Ballet. From holding balances for Balanchine, in costumes now by Kate Davis, the dancers are ready to respond to gravity. As Henry Berlin and Adam Elmes crawl to the side, Mio Bayly balancing atop their backs, the focus shifts to Samara Merrick. Wearing headwear that reminds me of one-part Esther Williams swimming cap to one-part chain mail worthy of Joan of Arc, Merrick, at the foot of the stage, puts on her pointe shoes. The quiet, familiar ritual, a pause before a radical shift. Ground Control, created for The Australian Ballet, and which premiered recently on their National Tour, explores how “for dancers, the ground or the floor or the earth is almost like [their] control centre, [as they] are always responding to gravity, … always connected to the earth”[ii]. To move with lightness, fluidity, and freedom, as Guerin describes, takes terrific strength. Merrick pushes away the floor and, together with Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto for Choir, Movement IV, ‘This work, which I began with hope’, with its Russian Orthodox leanings, launches into the stratosphere. A wisp of magenta-hued, transparent fabric falls from high above and cloaks her form, and later Elmes’s too, in the exquisite aerial transformation, making visible Guerin’s “idea of the physical body meeting thought”.
Restless Dance Theatre’s Seeing Through Darkness, inspired by the “flowering and imperfect expression”[iii] within the paintings and drawings of Georges Rouault addresses light and its trace elements in a different way again. Initially playfully reminiscent of the cut-out silhouettes of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers dancing on a record player illuminated so that their shadows, projected on the walls, danced about the room, Seeing Through Darkness uses moving lights on a curved track to alter the dancers’ projected shadows and the colours they cast. And where Guerin invited me to yield and resist, now the opportunity to query, as Rouault did: “what do we leave behind?” Writ large on the tall screens which frame the stage and make of it a record, the silhouettes in a spectrum of colours overlap and flow. As the lights move, scale follows suit, and so the cast is not only multiplied, but towering in full magnificence.
Restless Dance Theatre, Australia’s leading dance company working with neurodiverse and disabled artists, accentuate not only the physical form the way Rouault did, but love. And it is love which continues to chime with collective joy in an excerpt from Dancenorth Australia’s Wayfinder, choreographed by Amber Haines and Kyle Page. Featuring the artwork of Hiromi Tango, a colourful, knitted embodiment of unbridled ebullience, the dancers scoop up the many squiggly threads by the handful, further activating their presence and melding colour ways. A timely reminder to “transcend the words that [seek to] define us” and be lead, instead, by “the stars, the waves, and the sun”[iv], for that is where the authentic is situated.
A fitting close, last stop: awe and wonder.
[i] Moss Te Ururangi Patterson (transcribed from interview), Royal New Zealand Ballet’s YouTube channel, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfoW3jr6WOw, accessed 9th October, 2025.
[ii] Lucy Guerin (transcribed from interview), The Australian Ballet’s YouTube channel, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22fNLjEd-sU, accessed 9th October, 2025.
[iii] Georges Rouault describing his paintings, quoted by Restless Dance Theatre, Seeing Through Darkness media kit, https://restlessdance.org/show/seeing-through-darkness/, accessed 9th October, 2025.
[iv] Dancenorth, Wayfinder synopsis, DanceX foldout programme, The Australian Ballet, 2025.
Image credit: Dancenorth Australia’s Wayfinder, by Amber Haines
