Theoretical Explorations

Between Abstraction and Affect: A Comparative Study of Yvonne Rainer’s Trio A and Pina Bausch’s Café Müller

Cheng Chen
ROR Chung-Ang University, South Korea
Xinhuan Zeng (Corresponding Author)
ROR Panorama Scholarly Group, Germany
Global Review of Humanities, Arts, and Society
Published:2025-12-05

Abstract

This study conducts a comparative analysis of two seminal works in twentieth-century contemporary dance—Yvonne Rainer’s Trio A (1966) and Pina Bausch’s Café Müller (1978)—in order to illuminate the divergent aesthetic logics and philosophical orientations of Postmodern Dance and Tanztheater. While emerging from distinct cultural and historical contexts, the two works collectively mark a decisive shift in dance’s conceptual, expressive, and ontological frameworks. Drawing on hermeneutic phenomenology and an expanded choreographic analysis model, the study examines each work through the interrelated dimensions of body politics, spatial composition, and temporal structure, supported by triangulated data from video documentation, archival materials, and critical reception. The analysis reveals that Trio A advances a radical reconceptualization of dance by rejecting theatricality, virtuosity, and emotional expressivity in favor of functional movement, structural neutrality, and egalitarian embodiment. In contrast, Café Müller mobilizes repetition, scenographic density, and emotionally charged physicality to articulate trauma, relational vulnerability, and embodied memory. Despite these differences, both works challenge conventional choreographic hierarchies and reposition the spectator as an active interpreter of meaning. The findings suggest that the aesthetic tension between abstraction and affect, neutrality and saturation, and conceptual inquiry and emotional dramaturgy constitutes a fundamental axis in contemporary dance discourse. By situating Trio A and Café Müller within broader philosophical and socio-cultural currents, the study demonstrates how each work expands the epistemic and expressive capacities of the moving body. Ultimately, this research underscores the enduring relevance of both choreographic traditions and argues that their dialectical interplay continues to inform the evolving terrain of performance practice, dance pedagogy, and embodied aesthetics in the twenty-first century.

Keywords:

Postmodern Dance; Tanztheater; Body Politics; Dance Philosophy; Trio A
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Journal Info

ISSN3052-539X
PublisherPanorama Scholarly Group

How to Cite

Chen, C., & Zeng, X. (2025). Between Abstraction and Affect: A Comparative Study of Yvonne Rainer’s Trio A and Pina Bausch’s Café Müller. Global Review of Humanities, Arts, and Society, 1(5), 37-42. https://doi.org/10.63802/grhas.V1.I5.173

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