LOVE IN WAR – FIRST PORTAL: THE ORACLE
Open rehearsal
CRA’P Presentations 2021
Saturday 13 November at 12h
CRA’P space
Respirar el Mahābhārata is a 12 years long performance, which consist of a personal vow to study, and tell, for twelve years, the greatest known initiatory story: The Mahabharata.
Between 2016 and 2028, every 12th of December, a new chapter is being released. The sixth event of Respirar el Mahabharata consists in the presentation of the Mahabharata’s Tarot, a bridge between the symbology of the Mahabharata’s and the Tarot, a bridge between the present moment and years of tradition and a bridge between personal and collective memory.
The event consists in a poetic installation, with a play and relax zone, that the visitor will be interacting with, until receiving a personal reading of the tarot of the Mahabharata.
Free pass. Limited places, early booking:
info@cra-p.org / 666763504
Michael Gadish have studied Hebrew philology BA in the University of Amsterdam and a certification program in sanskrit language and culture with Elena Sierra in the University of Barcelona. He collaborates as a writer in theater and contemporary dance projects since 2004. The search of the origins of language and the meeting between philosophy, art and the traditional with the contemporary has brought him to focus on story telling as a tool, combined with new scenic languages close to the performance arts as well as specializing in the roots of Indian traditional storrytelling: the Ramayana, Mahabharata and Purana, out of the feeling that they are an unending spring of wisdom and creativity. He collaborates with yoga training courses and organizes talks and workshops about Indian cosmogony which combines creativity with education. Since 2016 he is leading a 12 years performance based on the Mahabharata, where he commits to study during 12 years this great work and premiere each 12th of the 12th a new show based on a part of this story. Each 15 days he publishes a writing on the state of the process in the blog: www.respirarelmahabharata.com
Photos: Alba Montañez