En Atendant is rarely thrilling. It is slow and lacks obvious shape, choosing not to please its audience with clear climax and development. There are few major shifts of energy or scene as it remains calm and considered throughout, requiring patience from its viewers. Some certainly found it challenging, with many walking out, but it is not the most difficult work of Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker’s career. It is densely packed, despite its tranquil exterior, with a fascinating array of patterns and combinations and some simple, beautiful dancing.
This piece was created to be performed at dusk at the medieval Palais des Papes in Avignon and followed at dawn by its twin, Cesena, performed at Sadler’s Wells later this week. De Keersmaeker has reworked both pieces for the proscenium arch and more friendly hours. The stage is simply divided front and back and side to side. Only the front is lit; the back is all darkness from and into which the dancers emerge and recede. A line of earth is piled in a flat line across the front, connecting the two sides of the space. The choreography and the design complement one another as the dancers move from side to side through the designated dancing space in the middle, and wait casually at the edges to go again.
Despite her reliance on music and its forms, De Keersmaeker is happy to present elements separately. It is a while before any dancing actually occurs. En Atendant begins with a flute solo, “L(ÉLEK)ZEM”, which features one sustained rising pitch overlaid with breathy notes. The sound remains unbroken for an impressively long time but occasionally waivers as the flautist Michael Schmid gulps in air. The solo stands separately from the whole, linked only by a simple framing device as Schmid’s deliberately laboured breathing to begin the evening is echoed by Mark Lorimer at the end. Following Schmid is the singular voice of Annelies Van Gramberen singing music of the medieval Ars Subtilior style; and then Chrysa Parkinson begins the dancing. Again the movement occurs in isolation. Despite taking its structure and inspiration from a fairly literal relation to the score the dancing is often performed unaccompanied, except by the squeaking of the trainers across the floor.