Skip to main content

NUR GARABLI

Replay

NUR GARABLI

Replay

28 August 2024 | 17.00
Villa Ca' Erizzo Luca ,
Bassano del Grappa
Visualizza sul Google Maps

Condividi questo evento


The dancer and activist Nur Garabli presents her creation for Replay, the European project bringing together gaming and dance. 

Replay logo

ATTENTION! SHOW CANCELED DUE TO EXTRA-EUROPEAN TRANSFER PROBLEMS

Co-production - National premiere

The source of inspiration for this work is bringing the past with the future in the current present. Practicing traditional folklore through digital media. Gathering the participants through the Palestinian Dabke and its music. The common rhythm and harmony create a space of celebration, individuality and vulnerability. Bouncing, shaking and grooving together, holding space one for another, releasing energy and moving it in a circle tribal shape. This is an individual but yet collective invitation to dream and manifest oneness, to merge with time, gender, language and ethnicity.

Nur Garabli was born and educated in Jaffa, Occupied Palestine on 1996. Nur is an Artivist, Choreographer and Dancer, She practices contemporary Palestinian dabke and brings to this practice social, political, on-stage and off-stage expressions. Nur has a B.Ed. in dance and education from the School of Dance Arts, Kibbutzim College. She is the co-founder of “Moving Together” project, together with the artist, Yasmeen Godder, where she teaches Palestinian dabke & brings together women of all ages, communities, and cultures. Garabli has curated and functioned as the artistic director of the “Moving Together” festival in March 2022 and 2023 together with Godder; she continues working to promote local art and culture within the Palestinian-Arab community in her homeland.

 

   EN Co funded by the EU POS

Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.