Sahara begins with art’s essential desire to create a new world out of nothingness. The desert, marked by an extreme monotony of time and space, is presented as a site of possibility where another world can emerge using only oneself as material. In this work, dance unfolds not through external devices, but as an act of realizing forms that did not previously exist, using only the self as its instrument.
The desert may appear empty, yet it is in fact filled with ineradicable images, fantasies, and shadows. Through this duality, the work explores the point where physical reality and the inner world intersect, unfolding a fluid sense of time on stage in which waiting and tension, stillness and alertness, constantly alternate. The music composed for the piece breathes alongside the dance, guiding a temporality that is at once radically loose and acutely sensitive.
In this work, the dancers no longer remain mere interpreters of a strict choreographic structure. Deprived of any given model, each dancer generates movement through immediate judgment and decision. In this way, Sahara moves away from dance as regulated representation, and instead reveals itself through presence and decisive action in the immediacy of the moment.
Symbolic landscapes such as the desert, cave, and savannah function as metaphors that reveal both the fundamental emptiness of life and the tenderness embedded within it. Sahara is a work that contemplates simplicity and void, image and sensation, and the mystery of existence itself, delicately calling forth the deepest impulses and the sense of love within the human interior.