Triple Bill: Lister/Weir/Horsman. Queensland Ballet

27 June 2025. The Playhouse, Queensland Performing Arts Centre, Brisbane

Queensland Ballet’s Triple Bill left me with mixed feelings. The opening work was Jack Lister’s Gemini, which in program notes is described as ‘A subterranean gathering harnessing both the earthly and the divine. A new world where myth and matter amass.’ To me it was an effort to bring to the fore the procedure of Gesamtkunstwerk where all the various elements that make up a show are given a strong presence and inform each other in some way. Musically we heard Dvorak’s Symphony No. 9 as a reimagined score by Louis Frere-Harvey. Lighting was interesting, although not hugely to my liking as it constantly cut out the movement created by the dancers. But music and lighting certainly had a strong presence.

A moment from Jack Lister’s Gemini. Queensland Ballet 2025. Photo: © David Kelly

But for me the choreography was an unimpressive addition to the whole. For some of the time there was no movement, just bodies standing in various groupings. When there was movement it was quite abrupt and geometric in look. At times it looked animalistic and at others it reminded me of a kind of calisthenics. It was all something of a disappointment.

The absolute standout was the second work on the program, Natalie Weir’s 4Seasons, a creation that was filled with fluid movement and curving shapes. There were some truly beautiful pas de deux sections—as we have come to expect from Weir. Some were quite acrobatic but always balletically acrobatic and I loved watching for how the male dancers held the females as they proceeded through the pas de deux. There were some spectacular solos too, especially from Ivan Surodeev as Summer and Joshua Ostermann as Winter (pictured below right).

It was also fulfilling to watch Weir’s use of the performing space throughout 4Seasons. Often a line of dancers across the space, or stretched vertically through the space, would break up with movements that flowed along those lines and seemingly reflected on interconnections between those engaged in a journey through life.

4Seasons was danced to Antonio Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons, with some sections recomposed by Max Richter. Its costumes were designed by Bruce McKinven and lighting came from Matthew Marshall.

The evening closed with Greg Horsman’s A Rhapsody in Motion. This is the third time I have watched Horsman’s Rhapsody and every time I have seen something new. On this occasion I was taken aback (pleasantly) by parts of the opening section in which Horsman explores a dancer’s engagement with the barre, that object with which every ballet dancer’s class begins and which Horsman sees ‘a seemingly simple tool that represents years of discipline and dedication’. I loved those moments when the dancers found an occasion to use the barre in ways that don’t usually happen. (I don’t remember a class where I was held upside down at the barre!)

Using the barre in unusual ways in Greg Horsman’s A Rhapsody in Motion. Photo: © David Kelly

I also enjoyed immensely the movement from barre to eventual performance complete with changed costumes (Zoe Griffiths) and with some exciting dancing from across the cast. A Rhapsody in Motion is a fast-paced production that opens new areas of interest at each viewing.

Queensland Ballet continues to go from strength to strength with displays of remarkable dancing.

Michelle Potter, 28 June 2025

Featured image: Libby-Rose Niederer in a moment from Greg Horsman’s Rhapsody in Motion. Queensland Ballet, 2025. Photo: © David Kelly

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