Performing Arts Research and Training Studios


P.A.R.T.S. is an international school for contemporary dance that is located in Vorst, one of the 19 municipalities located in the Brussels-Capital Region of Belgium.

History

The school was founded in 1995 by the Belgian choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker and Bernard Foccroulle, then director of the national opera De Munt. They initiated P.A.R.T.S. to fill the gap in professional training for contemporary dance. Their intention was to provide a pedagogical anchoring for contemporary dance in Belgium, which had started in the early 1980s and had seen a quick and strong development since then. At that time, there were only a few institutions in Europe that resolutely focused on these new artistic developments.
"At that time, contemporary Belgian dance was already internationally well-respected. But there was no longer a school to pass along that experience. That's why De Keersmaeker decided to set up P.A.R.T.S.”, said deputy director Theo Van Rompay in an interview in 2012. In 1988, Maurice Béjart's dance school Mudra in Brussels had closed. In 1992, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker became the choreographer-in-residence at the national opera De Munt and one of her ambitions was to answer the lack in educational possibilities for contemporary dance. Prior to the start of P.A.R.T.S. in 1995, Rosas, the dance company of Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, and De Munt had already been organizing a dance course for students from different countries for a couple of years. With P.A.R.T.S., they wanted to give that dance education a permanent character.
Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker expressed the philosophy, ambition and spirit of P.A.R.T.S. as follows: “I cannot teach anyone to dance. One learns to dance oneself. But perhaps I can give them a desire, an experience, create a space for challenges.”
In 2000, deputy director Theo Van Rompuy summarized the objectives of the school as follows: “Firstly, there is the basic need to provide training for contemporary dance. Secondly, we want to create an instrument to pass on the knowledge and information resulting from the turbulent development of Belgian dance. The intention is always to connect with living practice at home and abroad. To this end, we confront the young dancer during the training with work by William Forsythe, Pina Bausch, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, Wim Vandekeybus, Meg Stuart and Pierre Droulers, as a landmark. It is all strong material that is obviously proven on the stage, and precisely because of this, the student will benefit from it, but he must also position himself, in relation to or in conflict with it. It is never the intention to form followers of any kind according to a particular model, but to train physically and technically good dancers and choreographers who develop their own language, their own voice.”
The first generation of P.A.R.T.S. students graduated in 1998, a group of dancers and choreographers who immediately found work in the main dance companies or attracted public and critical attention with their own creations.
When P.A.R.T.S. existed 20 years in 2015, the school announced that approximately 860 students, teachers and staff had been involved with the school since its start in 1995. P.A.R.T.S. and HES-SO/Manufacture, the High School of Performing Arts that is part of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland, are 2013-2017 partner institutions for higher education in contemporary dance.

Pedagogical curriculum

Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker was inspired by Mudra, where she had been a student herself, and which had moved with Béjart to Switzerland. "Mudra was accommodated in an enormous hangar where also the Ballet of the 20th Century rehearsed. The idea of the choreographer was to train dancers who would have a look at other disciplines. Among the teachers, there were great people like Fernand Schirren and Alfons Goris. It was a gathering place for young people from all over the world, a meeting place for different generations of dancers and choreographers. There was both rigor and anarchy. It was a crucial place for me." As Mudra shared its housing with the Ballet of the 20th century, today P.A.R.T.S. shares its accommodation with Rosas and Ictus, the contemporary music ensemble. Mudra teacher Fernand Schirren even became one of the teachers at P.A.R.T.S.. And like Mudra, P.A.R.T.S. has become a meeting place for different generations of dancers and choreographers from all over the world.
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker designed the pedagogical curriculum of P.A.R.T.S.. Originally, the program lasted three years. This changed in 2000, when some changes were made and the program was extended, with the option to specialize as a dancer or as a choreographer. The pedagogical curriculum currently consists of two independent parts. The first part is the Training Cycle which lasts three years and forms the basis of the course. The second part is the subsequent Research Studios, which lasts two years.
The program consists of a foundation that links technical training with attention to body awareness, theatrical and musical education, as well as theoretical concepts. The research section emphasizes the own creative work. Creation is one of the essential goals of P.A.R.T.S.. Therein it distinguishes itself for example from classical ballet training, that, according deputy director Theo Van Rompuy, is focused more on technique. "Ballet has a different finality. The movement language in dance is much looser. It is a good exercise for the body. But technique is not decisive for us. We are looking for dancers who exhale the spirit of an artist. We are not looking for executors of someone else's ideas. We are looking for people who have ideas themselves."Our ambitions for and vision on the education of young dancers are still the same as ten years ago. We do not educate dancers or choreographers, but more dancemakers.The distinction between thought and execution has disappeared. In the school there is much more emphasis today on the production and organization of the performances that our students create."
During the program, much attention is paid to the repertoire of Rosas, the dance company of Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker. Each year students learn one complete Rosas choreography. In addition, the repertoire of other contemporary choreographers is addressed, such as Pina Bausch, William Forsythe and Trisha Brown.

International renown

P.A.R.T.S. has achieved international renown with its students and teachers from more than twenty countries, mainly Europe and the United States.
However, at its founding in 1995, the influential French critic Jean-Marc Adolphe claimed that the idea for the school was not good and that it would only be a training college for Rosas. Six years later, he revised his opinion. Together with Alain Crombecque, director of the Festival d’Automne, he invited the school for a one-month stay at the Théâtre de la Bastille and the Théâtre du Rond-Point in Paris. According to Alain Crombecque they considered the activity carried out by P.A.R.T.S. since 1995 in Brussels as exemplary, and they considered it important to testify about it in France. This initiative was repeated during the 2010 edition of the Festival d’Automne.
The P.A.R.T.S. students regularly present their work to the audience. They do not only do this at the P.A.R.T.S. studios in Brussels, but also at wide range of theatres and art centres in Belgium and abroad.
In 2010, P.A.R.T.S. received the Silver Lion for Dance at the 7th International Festival of Contemporary Dance of the Venice Biennale. The jury awarded P.A.R.T.S. the prize for its study program. The motivation of the Silver Lion award reads as follows: “Instituted rather recently, the P.A.R.T.S acquired immediate recognition throughout Europe as a center of pedagogical innovation, with a complete and intensive program of studies in which the most advanced techniques of contemporary dance dialogue with other artistic disciplines, in particular with theatre and music. A laboratory of movement which focuses not only on the development of the dancer’s skills, but on his search for artistic identity as well.”

Some renowned alumni

Some well-known alumni who graduated from P.A.R.T.S., are:
Since 1998, P.A.R.T.S. receives grants from the Ministry of Education of the Flemish Community of Belgium. From 2002, this is arranged through contractual agreements that are renewed five-yearly. The school currently receives additional funding from the netwerk Departures and Arrivals, that is co-financed by the European Commission. Between 2001 and 2014 the school received additional funding from the DÉPARTS, that was also co-financed by the European Commission.

Book publications about P.A.R.T.S.

This book was conceived on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of P.A.R.T.S..
This book was conceived on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of P.A.R.T.S.. It comprises portraits of 50 P.A.R.T.S. students and an overview of the 860 students, teachers and staff who together have built out the school.