Challenging traditions of dance and performance art to inspire change

Through my dance practice, I consider the representation of gender, digital futures, memory and displacement.

Testimonials

I strongly think that Nebahat Erpolat is one of the most interesting voices of the current Australian landscape.
— Angela Conquet, independent dance curator, arts leader, researcher
Nebahat’s practice has a unique and deeply considered quality that is unlike the styles seen in the current trends in dance. She is rigorously challenging the body with a primitive yet complex physicality and pushing parameters of time and space. I was struck by the deep physical and intellectual investigation proposed by Nebahat’s work.
— Melanie Lane, choreographer
I was struck by the work’s choreographic and conceptual rigour. I found it captivating, multi-layered and rich in its exploration.
— Prue Lang, choreographer
Dancers
 

Work with me

Collaborate on a project, host one of my works in a festival or gallery space, or enlist me for workshops and events.
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Dance performance

Dance Works

Nebahat is an award-winning choreographer and nominee for two Green Room awards.

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Live Art

Nebahat’s bold experimental live dance works push boundaries of what live performance is through the spatial, personal and physical limits of her performances.

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Video

Work: Emptying The Bucket, Recipient of 2017 Melbourne Fringe Festival Dance Award. 
Performed at the Meat Market Melbourne. 
Dramaturg 
Stephane Hisler 
Dancers 
Emma Riches, Josh Twee, Harrison Ritchie Jones & Sheridan Gerrard.
Sound Design & Edit 
Korhan Erel, Gunsel Isik & Nebahat Erpolat

 

About Nebahat

Nebahat is an award winning choreographer who draws research material from her personal lived experiences as an Australian Kurdish-Turkish dance maker, performer, writer and curator.  Her works tend to engage critically on social issues, popular culture, digital futures and ecological environment, layering complex stories to present immersive dance works. 
For the past 20 years, she has presented in diverse settings such as, public spaces, ancient sites, theatres, galleries, museums, nightclubs and universities, where the context of the work has an impact on the work’s relationship to the viewer.  
Often focusing on the trappings of memory, land, identity and power, evoking the distancing of traditional art forms, engaging audiences to re-think critically about dance and live performance by exploring universal themes and stories, connecting diverse communities.

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