Mette Edvardsen


Mette Edvardsen is a choreographer, dancer and performance artist from Norway, but who lives and works in Brussels, Belgium.

Collaboration with les ballets C de la B

Since 1996, Mette Edvardsen has her home base in Brussels, Belgium, where she started working as a dancer and performer for the choreographers Hans Van den Broeck and Christine De Smedt when they were still connected to les ballets C de la B. She was a performer in Eat, eat, eat, Au Progrès, La sortie and 9 X 9. She also assisted director / choreographer Hans Van den Broeck on Lac des singes. These productions toured internationally. She also contributed to 1, 2, 3 / Propositions of les ballets C de la B.

Own artistic work

Since 2002 Mette Edvardsen has developed her own work. Although some of her works explore other media or formats - such as videos, books and texts - her interest always lies in their relationship with performing arts as a practice and situation. Whatever the chosen medium is, Mette Edvardsen consistently examines the boundaries of language, time and space. Her first production, Private Collection, was a performance about how we organize, collect and organize things. She explored concepts like presence/absence, transformation and disappearance. In the later trilogy consisting of Black, No Title and We to Be, she examined the possibilities and limitations of language in the real and imaginary space. She looked at what is not, to provoke thoughts and fantasies. In oslo, a solo and anagram, she extends the concept of the solo into the entire theatre space, where thoughts, words, things and actions multiply.
Mette Edvardsen's pieces operate in an interim time and interim space. They play out in the interval, in the blank space that occurs between two words, between a performance and a score, between a book and a listener, between a live and a recorded action, coffee & cigarette ). In her work, she uses repetition as a strategy, as a way of making things visible, of activating them. She is more interested in the interest of the audience in things than in the things themselves. She is also interested in how situations leave traces in memory, and how memory becomes an active part of reading something. Her work is both profound and witty, sober and rich in detail. By using a playful approach to thoughts and references Mette Edvardsen examines how language can be used to form pictures in the heads of the audience.
Mette Edvardsen performs her work worldwide. A retrospective overview of her work was presented in 2015 at the Black Box Theater in Oslo, Norway. With her book every now and then she was laureate of the Prix Fernand Baudin 2009, a prize awarded by a specialized jury to books from the Brussels-Capital Region and Wallonia, which demonstrate an outstanding quality both in their conception and in their production. In 2013 she was the chairman of the jury that awarded the Prix Fernand Baudin, and together with graphic designer Joris Kritis she was responsible for the catalogue published on the occasion the award ceremony that year. In 2016, Mette Edvardsen received for her project We to be, the Norwegian Ibsen Award, a prestigious award awarded annually since 1986 to a Norwegian theater author by the municipality of Skien.

Manyone and Athome

In 2013, Mette Edvardsen created, together with the artists Sarah Vanhee, Alma Söderberg and Juan Dominguez, Manyone, a supportive structure that helps them organize their work in both a sustainable and tailor-made way to their individual practice. The organization originated from a sense of solidarity and the desire to connect and support each other as artists. Manyone is not a label, but a collaboration structure that respects the individual autonomy of the four artists involved. They develop and finance their work independently. The organization receives structural funding from the Flemish government based on the Kunstendecreet. In addition to Manyone, Mette Edvardsen also has her own structure for the production of her work: Athome.

Other collaborations

In 2002-2003, Mette Edvardsen produced, in collaboration with Heine Avdal, Liv Hanne Haugen and Lawrence Malstaf, the production Sauna in Exile, a performance / installation that takes the sauna, the cliché of Norwegian identity, as point of departure. With Heine Avdal, she again collaborated in 2008 as an performer in you are here . In 2003, she danced in Common Senses by Thomas Hauert, a Swiss choreographer who resides in Brussels. This choreography is part of the production 5. In 2004, she worked as a dancer / choreographer together with her colleagues Christine De Smedt and Mårten Spångberg on Schreibstück - 11. Version Christine De Smedt, Ghent , a performance of a dance score by the German choreographer Thomas Lehmen. With Christine De Smedt, Mette Edvardsen collaborated again in 2010 when they created the mass choreography The Long Piece created for the Ostend festival Dansand! - edition II. With Mårten Spångberg, she collaborated again in 2017 as a dancer in his production Gerhard Richter, une pièce pour le théâtre for the Brussels Kunstenfestivaldesarts.
In 2004 Mette Edvardsen also participated in Act 1 PRELUDE from The Invisible Dances by Bock & Vincenzi. In 2005, she was part of DOCUMENT 4 and Music and Words on the DOCUMENT 4 Project by the Canadian choreographer Lynda Gaudreau. In 2008, she made for the first edition of the Dansand! Festival the production Easy Pieces with the Australian artist Paul Gazzola, with whom she already collaborated on La sortie. In 2011, she mentored Joanna Bailie and Christoph Ragg as a movement coach on the creation of C.O. JOURNEY #2. In 2012, she also collaborated with visual artist Manon de Boer. One of the three parts of her video one, two, many is a spoken monologue by Mette Edvardsen. A year later, she participated as a performer in the production This place . In 2014, she participated, together with the theorist and performance artist Bojana Cvejic, in the sixth episode of Bauer Hour, a monthly event by the American choreographer / dancer Eleanor Bauer at the Kaaitheater in Brussels. on the website of the Kaaitheater The performance Penelope Sleeps is a collaboration with composer and performer Matteo Fargion. The small ensemble production is induced by the relationship between dream and action, voice and language, body and music, suggesting alternative scenarios for the Ancient Greek female role figure of Penelope.

Work as a researcher and teacher

Mette Edvardsen is a research fellow at the Kunsthøgskolen in Oslo, ; Kunstakademiet i Tromsø ; Luca School of Arts, Ghent ; eXplore dance festival, Bucharest ; Reykjavik Dance Festival 2015 and the Kunstenfestivaldesarts, Brussels. In 2016, she participated at the Brussels Kaaitheater also in The Permeable Stage, a 10-hour research event by choreographer / dancer Mette Ingvartsen dedicated to investigating the politics of sexuality and its proximal relations to privacy and the public sphere.

Productions

Own work:
With others: