Germaine acogny biography meaning
Germaine Acogny
Senegalese dancer and choreographer
Germaine Acogny | |
---|---|
Born | Allahé, Benin |
Nationality | Senegalese |
Occupation(s) | Dancer and choreographer |
Yearsactive | s to present |
Spouse | Helmut Vogt |
Career | |
Currentgroup | Jant-Bi |
Dances | African Dance |
Germaine Acogny (born ) is a Senegalese dancer and choreographer. She is responsible for developing "African Dance", as well as the creation of several dance schools in both France and Senegal. She has been decorated by both countries, including being an Officer of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France, and a Knight of the National Order of the Lion.
Early life
Born in Benin in to a Senegalese civil servant, Germaine Acogny was also a descendant of the Yoruba people through her grandmother. When she was 10, the family moved to Dakar, Senegal, where she spent the remainder of her childhood. After showing a natural ability in dancing, she decided to pursue this as a career, moving to France in the s to study modern dance and ballet at the École Simon-Siégel in Paris.[2]
Dance career
Upon her return to Senegal, she began to teach dance locally, both privately and as part of the local secondary education system. During this period she developed a new style, which she would later call the "African dance". After choreographing dance to the poem Femme Noir, Femme Nu, she came to the attention of the author - PresidentLéopold Sédar Senghor of Senegal. After realising they had similar aspirations for African identity and culture, he sent her to work with choreographer Maurice Béjart in Brussels, Belgium. With the assistance of Senghor and Béjart, she founded Mudra Afrique, a school of dance in [3]
While Béjart initially set the curriculum, which included Acogny's modern dance techniques. He eventually recruited more dance teachers from the United States and attempted to take over Acogny's portion of the curriculum; she confronted him and demanded she was made the sole director of the school instead. He agreed, and she combined the work of the foreign teachers with her own within the school. She continued to develop the African dance as an ongoing hybrid between modern western styles and traditional African techniques. In , she wrote and published Danse Africaine (African Dance), which set the standard for Senegalese dance. She left Mudra Afrique in [3]
Three years later, she founded Studio Ecole Ballet Theatre in Toulouse, France, alongside her husband Helmut Vogt. She returned to Senegal to in , and opened the dance school l'Ecole des Sables there three years later. She involved the local villagers in the performances, with the studio set in the open air overlooking the ocean. Around the same time as the new school opened, she began collaborating with overseas choreographers such as Susanne Linke and Kota Yamasaki to with on her company Jant-Bi to develop three hour dances for evening performances. Between and , she was the Artistic Director of the Dance section of the Paris-based Afrique en Creation.[3]
On February 17, , she received the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement by the Venice Dance Biennale.[5]
Awards
Notes
References
- Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku; Gates, Henry Louis (). Dictionary of African Biography. Vol.6. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN.