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Four Compositions on
Francis Alÿs' Children's Games

World Premiere: 12.09.2025, Astrup Fearnley, Oslo

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Children flying kites in Afghanistan, playing knucklebones in Nepal. Snail races in Belgium, orange dances in Denmark. 

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Since 1999, Francis Alÿs has recorded children at play around the world. Children’s ability to transcend harsh, even implicitly violent environments through imagination forms a thread that connects Alÿs’ films, which otherwise depict games and contexts that are uniquely their own. 

 

In this concert, four composers respond with new works for the Cikada Ensemble, diving into the rhythms, logics, and emotional stakes of play, as serious as it is fleeting, as politically specific as it is universal.

The Composers

Kim Myhr sees children's as acts of total presence - not light distractions but intense and absorbing moments. His music invites adult listeners to reconnect with the immediacy, rawness, and wonder of childhood.

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Pierre Slinckx's #29 builds on a haunting image: children climbing and hurling themselves down dusty slopes of mining waste in Lubumbashi inside of discarded tires. Like small Sisyphus figures, they repeat the ascent - a cycle that echoes both the persistence of colonisation and the hidden costs of extractivism. Slinckx responds with a fractured echo of "Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star"-childhood innocence thrown into stark relief by the weight of the landscape.

Aleksandra Gryka hears play as quiet resistance, as connection. Her music lingers where body, environment and imagination blur. Each film inspires a distinct constellation of instruments, echoing the fleeting emotional textures in Alÿs' images.

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Angélica Castelló's Juglariceando lets the musicians play - quite literally. Using a score built like a card game, she invites unpredictability, accidents and surprises.

Can music sound like play feels?

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