Akira Kasai (dancer)

Akira Kasai
Born1943
Occupation(s)dancer, choreographer, teacher
Career
Dancesbutoh
Websitewww.akirakasai.com

Akira Kasai (1943)[1] is a Japanese butoh dancer and choreographer, who despite being significantly younger than mentors Kazuo Ohno and Tatsumi Hijikata, is considered to be pioneers of the art form along with them. Kasai trained in other forms of dance, but turned to butoh in the 1960s when he met and began to work with these two men. He started his own studio in 1971 but closed it in 1979 to move and study Eurythmy in Germany. He did not dance professionally at the time and for years after his return to Japan in 1986 he stayed off the stage stating that he felt too disconnected from Japanese society to perform. He returned to professional dance in 1994, with the work Saraphita and revived his studio Tenshi kan, now influenced by Eurythmy and other dance principles. He has since performed, choreographed and taught in Asia, the Americas and Europe, but his choreography is sufficiently different from most other butoh that its authenticity has been questioned.

  1. ^ "Artist Interview: A look into the choreographic art of Akira Kasai, fifty years after entering the world of Butoh". Tokyo: Performing Arts magazine. Retrieved May 1, 2015.