The Art of Butoh from Japan to Australia

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About Yumi

Born in Japan, Yumi is an established Butoh dancer, choreographer and creator of Butoh Cabaret works. After touring with the seminal Japanese Butoh company DaiRakudakan, Yumi moved to Melbourne in 1993. She has been creating her distinctive style of works for 30 years and her creations are renowned for provoking visceral emotions and engaging with cultural identities with a sense of humor. Yumi’s works have been seen in numerous festivals in dance, theatre and film productions throughout Australia, Japan, Europe, New Zealand, South East Asia and South America and have received several Australian Green Room awards. Her major production credits include DasSHOKU Butoh cabaret series (1999-), EnTrance (2009-2012) and PopUp Tearoom series (2015-) and her recent solo work Buried TeaBowl-OKUNI (2022-).

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Photograph credits from the top:Garth Oriander(EnTrance), Albert Comper, John Pryke, Jeff Busby(DasSHOKU Hora!!)

Through her unique experience of living both in Japan and Australia, she has created a new genre, Butoh Cabaret, which explores cultural identities through narratives and abstraction. Her works have received critical acclaim and garnered her and her collaborators several Australian Green Room awards. Her own production’s credits include Fleeting Moments (1998), Tokyo DasSHOKU Girl (1999-2003), DasSHOKU Cultivations!! Osaka (2003), DasSHOKU Hora!! (Melbourne 2005 and Sydney Opera House 2006) and DasSHOKU SHAKE! (2012), which won Melbourne Fringe Festival Awards and Innovation in Green Room Awards.

As an independent artist, she has collaborated with various Australian leading companies from diverse cultures and genres such as Finucane and Smith, BighART, Marrugeku, Weave Movement Theatre, Back to Back Theatre and The Rabble. As a choreographer, Yumi has worked with many socially engaged theatre projects in Australia, including communities of First Nations, refugees and culturally diverse people and also inclusive companies. She is a recipient of the fellowship from Australian Council (2015-16) and a winner of the Green Room Geoffrey Milne Memorial Award (2017). 

Yumi is a key figure of the international contemporary Butoh scene and artistic director of ButohOUT! festival in Melbourne since 2017, teaching and activating local and international Butoh communities. Through her innovative work with international collaborations, Yumi has challenged traditional notions of what Butoh is and how it can be performed, and has helped to broaden its scope both locally and abroad. Yumi's commitment to exploring new forms of expression and collaboration has kept Butoh relevant and exciting in the 21st century. 

Yumi ‘s recent works focus on Dance, Tea and Spirit, combining through Jujutsu Project, the notion of Japanese shamanism.

LINKS for ButohOUT!

LINKS for Jujutsu Project

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“UMIUMARE GIVES OUR CITY AN EXTRAORDINARY, HILARIOUS AND ACTUALLY BEAUTIFUL GIFT.” 

— THE AGE 2012

Excerpt of works by Yumi Umiumare

Awards


Major Work Highlights

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MAJOR WORK HIGHLIGHTS

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Yumi’s CV (summary)

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Yumi’s CV (1990-2017)


Selected Reviews



Article Reviews

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