AMINA KHAYYAM DANCE COMPANY

Nominated for National Dance Awards 2022  (Best Independent Dance Company)

 

Haven't we all been called a refugee, migrant, foreigner at some time in our cultural history?

 

"As a hymn to how we ought to change for our migrants this was elegiac" Fringe Review 2022

5 - 10 AUGUST | 12.30pm | DANCEBASE  

Critically acclaimed, Kathak artist Amina Khayyam uses the cyclic phenomenon of south Asian classical dance, where there is no beginning or end, to tell contemporary stories of migrants and refugees tarnished by media and politicians for cheap exploitation, spreading fear for those risking their lives to make a better future.  Amina’s Kathak incorporates Nritta (pure dance) and Nritya (expression of narrative), using costume, movement, space and music to capture the first beat of that cyclic time and nest it until it becomes the one again – to suggest both the refugees and name callers are of the same cycle. 

ONE follows AKDC’s highly successful Edinburgh Fringe runs of Yerma (2015), Slut (2017 Summerhall), Catch The Bird Who Won’t Fly (2021- Summerhall/ Digital).

Created, arranged, and performed by Amina Khayyam

Kathak compositions collaboration with Debasish Mukerjee

Musicians: Debasish Mukherjee (tabla), Iain McHugh (cello), Sohini Alam (vocals)  Jane Chan (paranth).  Projection: Louis Rhoades-Brown   

Creatively produced by in association with zeroculture/The Artta, made at Brunel Arts with financial support from the Arts Council of England.

(click name for bios)

" a company who clearly care very deeply about the tale they tell" 

- Joyce McMillan | The Scotsman  

On making of ONE 

“Since the ice age, our pre-historic ancestors - homo erectus, hominds,  Neanderthals Denisovans and who ever –  have been crossing continents to find better habitual climates so that we, homo sapiens, got chance to evolve to what we are now. Today we are doing no different – displaced by climate change, war, political extortion and many other reasons – many of us are following that same human trait – cross continents to survive or better ourselves.   Yet, ‘migrants’, ‘foreigners’, ‘refugees’ are words tarnished ‘dirty’ and ‘negative’ by the media and harboured by politicians for political gain. 

I have approached the making of ONE to emphasise and subscribe to the fundamental principle of Indian philosophy and classical arts that there is no beginning or end but just a cyclic phenomenon where the obsession with territory has no significance.  I delve into the wealth and power of Kathak exploring technique such as nritta: abstract rhythmic mathematic based compositions (tukras, tihais, lari) and nritya: expression through narrative (gatnikas - a rhythmic character composition), satvika and ang abhinaya (emotional body movement) and aharya abhinaya (use of costume and stage), to portray the journey of migrants and refugees within that cyclic phenomenon all of us are all journeying” Amina Khayyam