Site icon My View by Robyn Sassen and other writers

Forever and a hurricane of lace

Advertisements
COLONIAL allegory and magic: A scene from Maqoma’s Genesis. Photograph courtesy of The Baxter Theatre.

THERE IS AFRICAN contemporary dance theatre and then there is Gregory Maqoma, a choreographer who has the courage to flip the form and slash it into multiple yummy pieces that only he can serve. You will be in awe. Maqoma’s Genesis: The Beginning and End of Time, is a dance opera which performs at the Joburg Theatre until 21 March 2026.

Maqoma’s work has a tendency to leave you trembling in anguish. It’s an experience you might not be able to rationally find the vocabulary to describe. How could it be possible to say so much with just music and movement? Maybe Genesis will lead you to the source of the hurricane of emotions typical of this choreographer. Maybe it will lead you deeper. 

Maqoma has a way of pulling at your heart with an image that should be relatively ‘normal’, but, gosh, the cultural motifs paired with live music slow cooked in the pulses of the dancers, give you no choice but to weep. 

The multi-layered set evokes an altarpiece but serves as pragmatic platforms for live musicians. White drapes fall, doubling up as a surtitle surface, lending English readership to an isiXhosa and Arabic script.

But then there are the costumes. If Maqoma’s use of lace in his work Cion triggered you emotionally, bring tissues for Genesis. You may be reduced to a pile of mush in the face of the relentless beauty in the wise and astounding use of lace.

This production’s look and feel is very grounded in text: the drapery, the scrolls, the colours feel like you are in a world of words embodied. Imagine yourself walking in paths and walkways that are the gaps between sentences. And that text is diverse, reaching from the Bible to the work of Karthika Naïr and that of Nhlanhla Mahlangu, for instance. It’s a script which palpably smashes the idea of revolution against colonialism and subjugation. The production emphasises the tendency of the human race to heal and renew the body, the spirit and the collective. 

The heightened contrast of western Opera and African folklore genres is a tonic. The talented cast carries you into sonic highs and lows, reverberations and screeches with textures and tones, with celebratory passion.

The production does feel a little like a box-checking exercise in terms of the wide range of genres that feature, however. It’s a very big show that sits well on the proscenium and opens its heart at you.

Exit mobile version