ecH2osystem: from the river to the stage | Telling the story of the river thanks to the circus

Designer and creative director Geneviève Dupéré, a long-time collaborator with the Finzi Pasca company, invited Montrealers to Parc du Fort in Pointe-aux-Trembles on Thursday evening to present an excerpt from an upcoming show centered on the river. Told through a maritime acrobatic device she designed.




The huge circular structure lit by fires, first placed flat in the grass, is hoisted vertically by a crane, a few meters from the river. In its center, we recognize a German wheel – a wheel with two rings – fixed to the rest of the structure which weighs more than 680 kg!

Two circus performers climb inside the O-shaped structure, which flattens out and soars to the sound of waves, seagulls and boat horns. Some 60 feet in the air, they will perform several acrobatic figures, whether using ropes, straps or even a trapeze.

During their fifteen-minute performance, we will hear the testimony of fishermen, excerpts from communications from the Canadian Coast Guard, or the voice of a pilot from the Montreal Expresswhich transports… the German wheel (at the heart of the structure) to the Port of Montreal!

In total, the designer recorded 30,000 hours of maritime noises, voices and testimonies.

This unusual artistic project, carried out as a researcher, Geneviève Dupéré has been working on it for five years, motivated by her passion for the beauty and complexity of the river, which she has traveled up and down in recent years. On board merchant vessels, research vessels, fishing vessels, trailers, but also boats and barges.

The maritime aerobatic device in question, built at the Groupe Océan shipyard in Rimouski, was designed in parallel with his travels and encounters.


PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

Genevieve Dupere

The ring represents a scientific device called a rosette, which is a carousel of bottles used to sample the water of the St. Lawrence, but it also evokes a ship’s propeller, a commander’s wheel, a diving decompression chamber, a scientific laboratory, a snow crab cage…

Geneviève Dupéré, designer

The maritime acrobatic maneuvers performed by the two circus artists are very similar to what crews do on the deck of a ship, the artist-researcher tells us. “We deploy scientific instruments, we send people outside the hulls, we do the rigging, we go down to small engine rooms, we climb a ladder, that’s what we reproduce. »

Documentary circus

The complete show, which will be presented at Parc du Fort in Pointe-aux-Trembles next year, will tell the story of the river in several chapters: piloting ships, crab fishing, shrimp fishing, the water cycle in our cities, etc. One could almost speak of a documentary circus. He will then tour the coastal towns of Quebec.

The device is really a pretext to talk about the river. To tell people about the omnipresence of this ecosystem in our lives.

Geneviève Dupéré, designer

The scientific project of Geneviève Dupéré and her crew, as she calls it, was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and by the Canada Council for the Arts through its social innovation fund. “I didn’t design a circus device, she insists, but a maritime acrobatic device that allows us to reach people by going from the river to the stage. »

An aerial scene that moves freely in the air thanks to the maneuvers of a crane operator, who pulls the device in all directions and even over the river.

  • The huge circular structure lit by fires, first placed flat in the grass, is hoisted vertically by a crane, a few meters from the river.

    PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

    The huge circular structure lit by fires, first placed flat in the grass, is hoisted vertically by a crane, a few meters from the river.

  • In its center, we recognize a German wheel – a wheel with two rings – fixed to the rest of the structure which weighs more than 680 kg!

    PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

    In its center, we recognize a German wheel – a wheel with two rings – fixed to the rest of the structure which weighs more than 680 kg!

  • Two circus performers climb inside the O-shaped structure, which flattens out and soars to the sound of waves, seagulls and boat horns.

    PHOTO JOSIE DESMARAIS, THE PRESS

    Two circus performers climb inside the O-shaped structure, which flattens out and soars to the sound of waves, seagulls and boat horns.

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Geneviève Dupéré, who is a researcher at the research center of the National Circus School of Montreal, had immersed herself for the first time in the maritime universe in the creation Avudo, directed by Daniele Finzi Pasca. A multimedia show created in 2017, which told the story of Montreal through its river.

This project, for which she was responsible for the historical and artistic content, confirmed her passion for the river.

“Obviously with this project, I spent three years studying the historic St. Lawrence. It made me want to go deeper into the subject, she tells us. There is so much knowledge and know-how about water that I want to pass on. We are talking about about 300 collaborators in the project ecH2osystem. People who help me showcase the excesses of the St. Lawrence. »

This project at the confluence of arts and science, Geneviève Dupéré really considers it from the point of view of the St. Lawrence. “It’s a show written and directed by the river,” she concludes.


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