There is probably no view like that of the sea that comes close to explaining the difficult concept of eternity. Observing its seemingly infinite blue surface, we come to understand how fleeting we are—how small and limited—like the proverbial drops in an ocean. The sea is a place of wonder, dreams, and promises, with an overwhelming allure that conveys a deep sense of serenity. It hypnotizes us, absorbs us, and can fill us with spiritual awe.
Across the Mediterranean Sea, great stories have been told and written by all the peoples who live along its shores—stories inspired by discoveries, conquests, and adopted homelands. All of this carries to us the echo of infinite hopes, unbearable tragedies, and extraordinary encounters.
Those waves have crossed history; they have always been occasions for departures, meetings, and abandonments.
Wars and knowledge have traversed it forever.
Watching the flow of a dancer’s movement, we sometimes rediscover that natural, uninterrupted motion of marine surfaces. And two people dancing always pass through different states of mind—contrasting emotions, closeness and distance.
It is from these suggestions that Philippe Kratz built a duet for the Centro Coreografico Nazionale / Aterballetto, which he considers his first home. He worked there for years as both dancer and choreographer before embarking on an international career as a choreographer—one that led him this very year to his debut at La Scala.
He is the author of one of the most precious works in Aterballetto’s repertoire, the duet O. And by now, many are the choreographies he has signed, in Italy and abroad.
Coreografia di Philippe Kratz
Sound designer Tommaso Michelini
Una produzione Fondazione Nazionale della Danza / Aterballetto
Durata: 10 minuti / due danzatori






