Lorena Nogal Brings Picasso-Inspired Dance *PICASSa* to Encamp
Spain's 2024 National Dance Award winner performs her transformative piece exploring Picasso's artistic periods through movement and mobile tech.
Key Points
- Explores Picasso's rose, blue, black periods through body movement, emotion, and symbolism.
- Integrates mobile devices to critique image manipulation and perception.
- Nogal's 20-year career with La Veronal; recent award-winning solo *Elogi de la fissura*.
- Performance: Saturday 8:30pm at Ràdio Andorra, Encamp, addressing dance sector challenges.
**Lorena Nogal, recipient of Spain's 2024 National Dance Award, will perform her piece *PICASSa* in Encamp this Saturday as part of the local cultural cycle.**
The dancer and choreographer Lorena Nogal takes to the stage at 8:30pm on Ràdio Andorra in Encamp with *PICASSa*, a work that explores Pablo Picasso's key artistic phases—the rose, blue, and black periods—through movement, emotion, and symbolism. Nogal describes the performance as a journey of destruction, rupture, and transformation, placing the body in an unconventional space to dialogue with its surroundings. Fragmentation serves as both an artistic tool and a psychological and philosophical device, creating three distinct moments that trigger change without literal representation. Instead, the body navigates emotional states and tensions, opening fresh interpretations.
A standout element is the integration of mobile devices, particularly in the rose period, to highlight image manipulation and distortion. Nogal notes how people both consume and create content, often producing warped visuals. By shifting everyday images into new contexts, the piece redefines them as art, prompting reflection on perception, identity, and creative responsibility.
Reflecting on her roots, Nogal recalls her childhood desire to dance sevillanas, an energetic flamenco-rooted impulse that persists in the work despite her family's lack of dance background. She credits their unwavering support as a vital gift. Professionally, she has spent nearly 20 years with La Veronal, the company led by Marcos Morau, whom she calls a confidant and creative partner. A career turning point came with *Elogi de la fissura*, her first piece as both director and performer, where she confronted strengths and vulnerabilities to forge a more mature artistic voice.
Nogal's drive stems from sharing her experiences to inspire others, though she laments the sector's precarity and the pressure to constantly self-promote. "Often there is no space for silence," she says, adding that settling for less is not an option for her.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: