Temple du présent: Solo for an octopus
Temple du présent: Solo for an octopus
How can we understand an animal whose intelligence differs radically from our own? How can we enter into a relationship with nature without appropriating it? And who is actually looking at whom here? In Temple du présent, an octopus takes centre stage as the protagonist of the performance.
As part of Brandhaarden 2026, a viewing of this special performance will be shown: a video recording that offers the audience the opportunity to experience this exceptional theatrical encounter.
Festival Brandhaarden
location The Bookshop
Free program
Eight arms, three hearts, a maximally flexible physique, a decentral nervous system, the ability to communicate via colour and texture – but above all, a great deal of curiosity and openness towards encounters with human beings. The octopus appears to be not just strange and interesting, but in fact interested in everything that occurs in and around its own habitat.
The octopus often serves as a projection surface of human fears or is found as a monster that dwells in myths and adventure stories. It is a popular appetizer in Mediterranean cuisine and frequently used in experiments. In recent years, it has increasingly been sentimentalised as a mascot and oracle for football fans or as a symbol for multi-tasking.-|-“Temple du présent” is an opportunity for spectators to experience quite a different encounter with an octopus. Placed in an aquarium on the theatre’s stage, the animal turns into the performance’s protagonist, and its behaviour is one of the main drivers of this performance’s dramaturgy and communication processes. The octopus’ willingness or refusal to interact with the human being standing next to the aquarium become determining factors. Enhanced by cameras and with a musical accompaniment of voices and compositions, the animal changes from the object of observation into its subject, right before the eyes of the audience. Its gaze casts a fundamental question over the human being, this animal that seems to have lost its instruction manual.
The octopus on stage comes from a fish market in southern France and was destined to be eaten. After the performances, it will return to its original habitat at a nature reserve in southern France.
Credits
Concept and direction Stefan Kaegi
In collaboration with one octopus, Judith Zagury and Nathalie Küttel (ShanjuLab)
Scientific consultation Prof. Graziano Fiorito (Dept. of Biology and Marine Organisms, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Naples), Marcel Gyger
Dramaturgy Katja Hagedorn
Music live Stéphane Vecchione
Technics and equipment Théâtre Vidy-Lausanne
Light: Pierre Nicolas MoulinVideo Oliver Vuillamy
Producer Anouk Luthier
Production Théâtre Vidy-Lausanne, ShanjuLab Gimel (Laboratoire de recherche théâtrale sur la présence animale), République Éphémère *et Théâtre Saint-Gervais, Genève
Coproduction
Berliner Festspiele, Centre Pompidou – Paris, Rimini Apparat