ENCORE – violet

Yuni Hong Charpe

  • World Premiere
  • Sound/Music
  • Other/Unclassifiable
  • France

The second work (world premiere) of the trilogy is about violence. It looks into the 1923 massacre of Korean people in Kanagawa, Tokyo and surrounding areas, through an imaginary dialogue with a second-generation Korean-Japanese boy who allegedly raped and killed a Japanese girl in Tokyo in 1958 and was hanged in 1962. The idea of the third work to be shared after the last performance.

Venue

BankART KAIKO
KITANAKA BRICK & WHITE 1F, 5-57-2 Kitanakadori, Naka-ku, Yokohama 231-0003

Date and Time

12.6 Fri 20:00
12.7 Sat 15:30

Running Time

TBD

Performance Language

Japanese

Translation/Subtitles

English

Accessibility

  • Wheelchair Accessible
  • Multi-Purpose Restroom

Tickets

General ¥2,500
YPAM Registrant ¥1,000

Available at ArtSticker

Artist Information

Yuni Hong Charpe

Yuni Hong Charpe is a visual/performance artist. Born in Tokyo, Japan, as a third-generation Zainichi Korean, Yuni moved to France in 2005 and acquired French nationality. Graduated from the École Nationale Supérieure d'Arts de Paris-Cergy in 2015, Yuni currently splits time between France and Japan. An Asian Cultural Council Fellow and Arts Commission Yokohama Fellow in 2023.

https://www.yunihong.net/

Staff, Cast and Credits

Text, direction, and performance: Yuni Hong Charpe
Music and performance: Phasma
Translation and surtitles: Kei Ota

Graphic design: Tezzo Suzuki

Stage manager: Miki Kanai
Lighting: Ryoya Fudetani
Sound: Semmei Kai (WHITELIGHT.Ltd.)
Video: Edith Grove Co.,Ltd.
Construction: Stage Work URAK Co., Ltd.

Commissioned and produced by Yokohama International Performing Arts Meeting
Supported by Asian Cultural Council and EU–Japan Fest Japan Committee
Studio offered by CND, Centre national de la danse
Cooperation: Arts Commission Yokohama and Kinosaki International Art Center

Special Thanks: Yokohama – Tomoyuki Arai, Atsushi Watanabe (Art Studio I'm Here), Rick Yamakawa, Megumi Kamimura, Sanghae Kwon, Asa Ito; Seoul – Ikuko Toda, Hong-i Lee, Chingja Yang; Kinosaki – Cho-hyang Song, Jiyoung Lee, Akihito Hirano

Organized by Yokohama International Performing Arts Meeting Executive Committee