Wu Kuo-chu (Chinese: 伍國柱; pinyin: Wǔ Gúozhù; 18 August 1970 – 6 January 2006) was a Taiwanese choreographer.
Wu Kuo-chu | |
---|---|
伍國柱 | |
Born | |
Died | 6 January 2006 Taipei, Taiwan | (aged 35)
Alma mater | Taipei National University of the Arts Folkwang Hochschule |
Occupation | Choreographer |
Life
editWu was born in Kaohsiung in 1970. After studying and working at the Taipei National University of the Arts,[1] He attended the dance academy Folkwang Hochschule in Essen, Germany, which influenced most of his future work. During this period he gained fame in Germany for his choreographies and in 2002 he received the dance prize from the foundation Josef und Else Classen Stiftung. In June 2004 his first work Fuge was performed on the occasion of the Folkwang Tanzabend. He created many choreographies with the Taiwanese company Cloud Gate Dance Theater,[2] which he went with on a tour to Hong Kong and Taiwan. He also choreographed for the Wuppertaler Opernhaus and for the Folkwang Hochschule.
In 2004, Wu became dance director at the Staatstheater Kassel,[3] with his own company, composed by dancers of Folkwang.
Wu died of leukemia in Taipei on 6 January 2006.[4]
In June 2006 Malou Airaudo, a former dancer in Pina Bausch's company, premiered Windschatten, a work she choreographed as homage to Wu Kuo-chu.
Works
edit- Tantalus
- Fuge
- Oculus
References
edit- ^ "An Exclusive Discount Offer to HKAAA members 10% off for Cloud Gate 2 "Oculus"An Exclusive Discount Offer to HKAAA members 10% off for Cloud Gate 2 "Oculus"". Hong Kong Arts Administrators Association. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- ^ Baker, Diane (23 March 2007). "Death comes to all". Taipei Times. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- ^ Lee, Edmund (7 October 2013). "Arts preview: Oculus is a moving tribute to the late Wu Kuo-chu". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- ^ Baker, Diane (17 April 2014). "Cloud Gate 2 grows up". Taipei Times. Retrieved 10 December 2015.