This show belongs to the Adelaide Fringe 2022 season. This season is now over.

CANCELLED - Declivity - A male torso with hair covering his face and holding his face in his hands, with another pair of hands grabbing his wrists and a third pair of hands flexed against his elbows.

CANCELLED - Declivity

South Australia • World Premiere

‘This is what modern dance should be; striking, theatrical and human. Global Media Post on Limosani’s work. 

'It’s more than cutting edge, it cuts straight to the bone’ DB Magazine on Jaber’s work.

For Projekt Moxie's inaugural season, internationally renowned choreographers Lina Limosani and Daniel Jaber bring to the stage two contrasting new contemporary dance works that take inspiration from, and interrogate the life of literature icon Edgar Allen Poe.

Jaber's style provokes an intense post-modern aesthetic. Limosani's is a collision of contemporary dance and the physicalisation of character. Together with Literature Professor Dr Maggie Tonkin and four dance artists, ’Declivity’ promises to be a sophisticated, intense, and emotionally charged experience for its audience.

Please Note:

Saturday 19th March
15:30 - 18:00 session is a Masterclass in contemporary technique and choreographic tools with Lina Limosani and Daniel Jaber (Pre-Professional / Professional / Advanced). This is not a dance performance.
 
Sunday 20th March
16:45 - 18:15 session is an Open Class by Guest Artist. 

Presented by: Lina Limosani & Daniel Jaber - Projekt Moxie

Both Lina and Daniel have had substantial careers as performers with Garry Stewart's Australian Dance Theatre before embarking on international careers and establishing themselves as independent choreographers in Australia. They have performed for a number of companies and choreographed works nationally and internationally. Between them, commissions have included New Zealand Dance Company, Australian Dance Theatre, Houston Ballet, and The Australian Ballet, along with various youth companies and tertiary institutions. Their works have been described as having distinct choreographic and theatrical voices and they are marked among the most interesting of the crop of independent artists working in Australian dance.