
Credits
Artistic Direction, Concept, Performance: Lois Alexander
Sound Design: Sea Novaa, with additional tracks from KMRU, Tzusing, and Marian Anderson
Stage Design, Lighting: Nina Kay
Text: Lois Alexander, with additional text from Just Us: An American Conversation by Claudia Rankine
Cinematography: Diara Sow
Dramaturgical Advice: Jasco Viefhues
Video Edit: Jasco Viefhues
Costume: Sarah Seini
Production Management: Nick Germeys
Production Assistance: Ben Mohai
Acknowledgements: Mateusz Szymanówka
Research Development: Rote Fabrik, Zürich
Co-production: Sophiensaele
Premiere Information
Premiere: Sophiensaele, October 2022
Past performances: Move! Festval, Krefeld
Support
Supported by: Berlin Senate for Culture and Social Cohesion
About
Yeye pays homage to Yemayá, the goddess of the sea and motherhood in the Yoruba pantheon. In her latest performance work, created for the camera and now adapted to stage, choreographer and performer Lois Alexander explores the afterlife of slavery and the reverberations of our present time.
In the novel Beloved, writer Toni Morrison, opens up reflections on love, trauma and memory when a mother is driven to commit the most unspeakable act. Influenced by Morrison’s writing style and drawing on her research into representations of Black mothers in mythology and religion, Lois creates her own language of blending personal narrative, historicity and spirituality. Looking specifically at icons such as the Black Madonna, Lois investigates the processes of syncretization, the blending of different religious views, and unveils their implications. Multi-layered tensions become palpable through the touching of, sensing with, and remembering through different materials, such as textile and sound.
Yeye incorporates these senses into an embodied patchwork to ways of attending to healing, and uses performance to practice strategies of refusal and resistance.Yeye is a deep reckoning of a modern era that is entangled with colonial histories, mothers and the ocean. What are the temporalities of a racialized body, one that is marked by visible and invisible wounds? What can be healing? Yeye explores memory, traces and notions of a motherland, moving through different levels of video, text and performance.





