It is likely the house will be dismantled piece by piece with a large crane and a scaffold to support the remaining structure is the culmination of a 10 days intensive body workshop and residency hosted at HH Art Spaces and supported by Japan Foundation with 6 artists coming from different practices in performance and visual art, led by Berlin based Japanese Butoh dancer Yuko Kaseki. In this interaction, the artists occupy the various rooms and spaces of the site, an old indo-Portuguese house, and respond to each other’s diverse bodies, the environment, the architecture and personal memory.

The impulse of the collaboration was to explore and respond to the landscape of Goa, during the relentless and saturating monsoons, the lush green environment of the towns, which though beautiful, is harshly juxtaposed against the visuality of garbage strewn along the hillsides and small streams and starkly contrasting habitations.

Dismantling personal and habitual movement, they abstract, deconstruct and reconstruct these responses through improvisation with space, site, and found objects, embodying a range of physicalities and aesthetic possibilities. It seeks to answer the question: What could be rebuilt from the rubble left behind?

It is likely the house will be dismantled piece by piece with a large crane and a scaffold to support the remaining structure’ will have its debut at HH Art Spaces in Goa with Yuko Kaseki, Nikhil Chopra (Goa), Madhavi Gore (Goa), Romain Loustau (Paris/Goa), Venuri Perera (Colombo), Shivani Gupta (Mumbai/Goa) and Sajan Mani (Kerela). The performance will be taken to Khoj with Yuko and two of the 6 artists Nikhil Chopra and Romain Loustau.

For more information about HH Art Space, please visit their website here.