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XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ]

"XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ], a transgender film, a multidisciplinary sensory experiment, an equation with several unknowns. An open and poetic work that upsets the senses and encourages reflection." Benjamin Minimum, Médiapart - 07-2019

Clotilde is a standout singer, flutist, composer, and lyricist who has already originated many projects across the jagged landscape of jazz, from standards to avant-garde. Yet music has proven to be an insufficient medium for her fertile imagination. For when Clotilde dreams, writes, or improvises, images always appear to illustrate her feelings, thoughts, and convictions. Her latest project, XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ], deploys a whole range of expressive forms, including music, film, and dance, to finally fulfill her artistic potential.

Clotilde grew up in a family of strong women, and XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ] is the result of her reflections on the feminine. This ambitious project has been in gestation since 2014, a time when questions of gender were becoming omnipresent in the spheres of politics, society, and religion. Such a vast subject might appear terrifying to tackle, but Clotilde has been fearless, pursuing a holistic approach through multiple media, to provide an all-encompassing perspective.

XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ] takes the form of seven portraits, involving seven films and seven original soundtracks, which combine to form a feminine archetype. Entitled Rhéa, Ruby, Juliette, Ishtar, Magda, Hannah, and Enk'aï, they embody in turn the child, the working woman, the mother, the artist, and the warrior woman, all heroines, both famous and anonymous.

Short texts by Maya Angelou, James Joyce, Gloria Steinem, and Paul Auster echo behind the androgynous bodies of the dancers (France, United States, China) seeking harmony between their masculine and their feminine halves, as they progress through landscapes stretching out in all their beauty, whether horizontally (Iceland) or vertically (the American city).

There are no songs, but murmurs and chants, cries and laughter, over resonating trumpet, oud, piano, brass, and didgeridoo. Clotilde adopts a universal language, opting for the neutrality of bodies, the impressionism of contexts, and the emotional over the analytical.

Combined with an immersive audiovisual installation, XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ] draws the spectator into its creator’s psyche, switching between dreamlike fantasizing (a child-like woman scrambling down the dunes), personal questionings (motherhood, the feeling of love), and a deep-rooted conscience (the figures of Simone de Beauvoir and Angela Davis). Clotilde’s investment in this project, which is also a personal quest, is total. She has directed and edited the films and created the musical pieces in collaboration with well-known composers, while the dancers move to the sound of her polymorphous singing. The sum total of issues tackled, and the combined expressive forms, is dizzying.

"I have dreamed that all these aspects of timeless, universal femininity will find a place in the tiniest corners of our retinas and ears, echoing the vibrant anima in each and every one of us." Clotilde

Cast and crew:
Written and directed by Clotilde
Produced by Tzig’Art
With the support of the French Ministry of the Women’s Rights, the SPEDIDAM, the SACEM, the French National Audiovisual Institute, the Simone de Beauvoir Centre

Cinematographer : Florent Bourgeais
Editor : Clotilde Rullaud
Additional editor : Violeta Fernandez
Compositing and calibration : Stéphane Jarreau / Donc Voilà
Visual identity : Bérangère Lallemant
Composers : Fred ‘Parker’ Aliotti, Emmanuel Bex, Grégory Dargent, Tristan Macé, Clotilde Rullaud, Alexandre Saada
Musicians : Fred ‘Parker’ Aliotti, Adèle B., Nicolas Beck, Boris Cacciaguerra, Médéric Collignon, Anne-Lise Clément, Yann Clery, Grégory Dargent, Angelique Debay, Justin Faulkner, Jean-Baptiste Goraieb, Etienne Gruel, Cyril Hernandez, Marie Kuchinski, Albin Lebosse, Jean-Louis Marchand, Antoine Paganotti, Vincent Posty, Laurent Salzard, Clotilde Rullaud, Alexandre Saada
Dancers : BANDALOOP, Marina Chojnowska, Keiko Sato, Shanghai Jin Xing Dance Theatre
Choreography in collaboration with the performers.
Painter : StayReo
Sound engineers : Jean-Paul Gonnod, Thomas Pégorier, Bruno Gueraçague / Tabaskko
Documentalist : Laurent Sternbach

Filmed in Iceland, San Francisco and Chicago (USA), Picardie and Montreuil (France)
℗ & © Tzig'Art and Clotilde - 2018
RHEA-PORTRAIT NUMBER 1 OF XXY:  150.439
RUBY-PORTRAIT NUMBER 2 OF XXY:   150.440
JULIETTE-PORTRAIT NUMBER 3 OF XXY: 150.441
ISHTAR -PORTRAIT NUMBER 4 OF XXY:  150.442
MAGDALENA-PORTRAIT NUMBER 5 OF XXY:  150.443
HANNAH-PORTRAIT NUMBER 6 OF XXY:  150.444
ENK’AÏ-PORTRAIT NUMBER 7 OF XXY:  150.445

  • Tzg'Art
    Executive Producer
  • Clotilde Rullaud
    Producer
  • Clotilde Rullaud
    Director
  • Clotilde Rullaud
    Writer
  • Florent Bourgeais
    Cinematographer
  • Clotilde Rullaud
    Editor
  • Violeta Fernandez
    Editor
  • Stéphane Jarreau
    Colorist and Compositor
  • Clotilde Rullaud
    Composer
  • Fred ‘Parker’ Aliotti
    Composer
  • Emmanuel Bex
    Composer
  • Adèle Blanchin
    Composer
  • Grégory Dargent
    Composer
  • Tristan Macé
    Composer
  • Alexandre Saada
    Composer
  • BANDALOOP
    Dancer
  • Marina Chojnowska
    Dancer
  • Keiko Sato
    Dancer
  • Shanghai Jin Xing Dance Theatre
    Dancer
  • Stayreo
    Street artist and painter
  • Clotilde Rullaud
    Musicians
  • Fred ‘Parker’ Aliotti
    Musicians
  • Adèle Blanchin
    Musicians
  • Nicolas Beck
    Musicians
  • Boris Cacciaguerra
    Musicians
  • Médéric Collignon
    Musicians
  • Anne-Lise Clément
    Musicians
  • Yann Clery
    Musicians
  • Grégory Dargent
    Musicians
  • Angelique Debay
    Musicians
  • Justin Faulkner
    Musicians
  • Jean-Baptiste Goraieb
    Musicians
  • Etienne Gruel
    Musicians
  • Cyril Hernandez
    Musicians
  • Marie Kuchinski
    Musicians
  • Albin Lebosse
    Musicians
  • Jean-Louis Marchand
    Musicians
  • Antoine Paganotti
    Musicians
  • Vincent Posty
    Musicians
  • Laurent Salzard
    Musicians
  • Alexandre Saada
    Musicians
  • Jean-Paul Gonnod
    Mixing engineer
  • Thomas Pégorier
    Mastering engineer
  • Bruno Gueracague
    Mastering engineer
  • Laurent Sternbach
    Documentalist
  • Bérangère Lallemant
    Titles animation
  • Project Title (Original Language):
    XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ]
  • Project Type:
    Experimental, Music Video, Short
  • Genres:
    art, non-narrative, conceptual, abstract, feminin, dance, experimental, music video
  • Runtime:
    32 minutes 17 seconds
  • Completion Date:
    June 1, 2018
  • Production Budget:
    90,000 EUR
  • Country of Origin:
    France
  • Shooting Format:
    HDCAM
  • Aspect Ratio:
    16:9
  • Film Color:
    Color
  • First-time Filmmaker:
    Yes
  • Student Project:
    No
  • Arts Triangle Festival - AWARD for Best Emerging Vision
    Dallas
    United States
    September 22, 2018
    AWARD for BEST EMERGING VISION
  • Biennale de la danse « Danse connectée »
    Lyon
    France
    September 20, 2018
  • Intermediaciones Muestra de videoarte y video experimental
    Medellín
    Colombia
    October 19, 2018
    Official Selection
  • Berlin Motion Picture Festival - FINALIST for BEST EXPERIMENTAL SHORT
    Berlin
    Germany
    December 15, 2018
    FINALIST for BEST EXPERIMENTAL SHORT
  • Berlin Feminist Film week
    Berlin
    Germany
    March 10, 2019
    Germany Premiere
    Official Selection
  • Paris Short Film Festival - AWARD for Best Music Video
    Paris
    France
    May 9, 2019
    AWARD for BEST MUSIC VIDEO
  • Festival Jazz sous les pommiers
    Coutances
    France
    February 25, 2019
  • New York University Paris
    Paris
    France
    March 13, 2019
  • Festival Les Suds
    Arles
    France
  • Nuit Blanche
    Paris
    France
  • Santa Cruz Film Festival
    Santa Cruz
    United States
  • Festival International de la Danse, Ouagadougou
    Ouagadougou
    Burkina Faso
    January 25, 2020
Director Biography - Clotilde Rullaud

Clotilde is a multidisciplinary creator who employs a range of artforms to generate new poetic languages. She combines music, song, dance, and the visual arts to make singular performance pieces, concerts, and films. Her kaleidoscopic visions liberate imaginations, depictions, and emotions. Clotilde orchestrates these interlinked structures by throwing off conventions, giving way to emergences that she calls “hazardous synchronicities.”
Her creative pathway is a metabolic thing which draws on the vibrant substance of life: a pulse; an encounter; a way of exploring the world and of feeling alive inside; of grasping the pluralistic nature of artistic languages—chromatic archipelagos proffered for inspiration. She tirelessly collects connections, encounters, and surprises, inviting artists to step into her pieces and trace out their own journeys. “I enjoy plunging myself into that which is different to me, into that zone of discomfort which forces us to greater awareness.”
From Dada and the surrealists, she cherishes the unexpectedness of revelations, their accidental synchronisms. Clotilde’s performance pieces alternately enchant, move, and destabilize: they speak to the unconscious, that fragile, indeterminate zone that sometimes overturns under certain impulses.
Having entered the conservatoire at the age of five to learn the flute, Clotilde began to explore the performing arts through music, theater, and dance. She very soon set herself the task of augmenting her own music, of staking out her own borders beyond genres, of marking out new territories in which to bring her visions to fruition, taking the road of the subconscious and of dreams to directly “strike at the audience’s emotional structure.” Aged twenty, she staged her first two multidisciplinary shows combining music, storytelling, and dance: Sur la route des Tziganes and Monsieur Jazz.
Clotilde explores the infinitely flexible possibilities of the voice through advanced vocal techniques such as bone vibration. An insatiable wanderer, she has spent time in Ireland, Lebanon, the Balkans, the United States, and Burkina-Faso. Each of her peregrinations provides for fertile exchanges culminating in the poetry of things revealed.
“I aspire to take people out of themselves: to grab someone’s hand and make off. Some moments will of course be pleasanter than others, but in the end, both of us will be more alive.”
An international multidisciplinary creator, artistic director, vocalist, flutist, producer, and cultural connector, Clotilde is above all an explorer: of her own dreams, of synesthetic languages, of bodies, of music, and of writings, which she employs in the pursuance of her essential themes.

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Random synchronicities: n. f. pl. neologism
A non-illustrative dialogue between different artistic disciplines, expressed independently yet simultaneously. The art of the poetry of things revealed.

Clotilde revisits the accidental synchronisms that are so well known in the film world—which Cocteau already transposed to the stage through the intercession of Roland Petit, the choreographer of the mimodrama: Le Jeune Homme et la Mort. She works at cultivating “the planned accident” through being present in the moment as a creative impulse.

In her polyphonic works, each artistic discipline plays its own score. Infused with the same thematic thrust, yet independent in their creative paths, each discipline elevates the other to a vibration that they would have not attained separately, so avoiding the pitfalls of illustration. When these scores meet, there arise accidental synchronisms susceptible to fresh perceptions, laying the foundations of a possible symbolic revolution.

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Clotilde’s travels
2021: XXY, polyphonic poetry for five musicians, five dancers, and one film; an extension of Clotilde’s reflections on the Feminine. In it she invokes a shifting of the gaze with a view to deconstructing the system of gender-related oppressions in favor of a human ideal existing fully in the fluidity of its polarities: the feminine and the masculine. Produced with the support of the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations, the Ile de France region, the Ile de France Cultural Office, the Val de Marne Department, the Paris Cultural Office, the Royaumont Foundation, the Théâtre de Vanves, Le Comptoir in Fontenay, and the National Choreography Center in Créteil.

2019: Pieces of a Song, duo with the New York pianist Chris McCarthy; a repertoire of original compositions woven from the rage and ecstasy of the texts of the Beat Generation poet, Diane di Prima. Produced with the support of the French American Jazz Exchange.

2018: XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ], experimental filmed work that tackles the question of femininities in an open, poetic way, combining dance, music, song, and the visual arts. Shown in over thirty festivals worldwide, XXY [ɛks/ɛks/wʌɪ] has received five awards and nominations. Produced with the support of the Secretariat of Women’s Rights, the SACEM, and the SPEDIDAM.

2016: A Woman’s Journey, first album of the duo Madeleine & Salomon with the pianist Alexandre Saada; a vibrant homage to the American women “protest singers.” The album received sixteen awards, six of which were for the best album (in France and the USA). On stage, the collection of songs is enriched by the projection of dreamlike film sequences. Produced with the support of the FCM.

2011: In Extremis, first album as composer, a quartet without bass with Olivier Hutman on the piano, Dano Haider on the seven-string guitar, and Antoine Paganotti on drums. An eclectic overlaying of textures and materials, evocative of surrealist collages, yet rooted in Clotilde’s influences: jazz, classical, world pop, and improvisation. Ranked among the top five albums of 2011 by The Sunday Times (UK) and 2013 by the NPR Annual Jazz Critics Poll (USA)—debut album category. Produced with the support of the ADAMI and the SPPF.

2007: Live aux 7 Lézards, live album of covers of pop and jazz songs in a duo with the guitarist, Hugo Lippi. Jazz Magazine called the album a “little marvel […] riskily youthful, spontaneous, free...”. Produced with the support of Paris city hall.

2002: Sur la route des Tziganes and Monsieur Jazz, multidisciplinary family shows for seven performers, in which Clotilde sang, narrated, and danced.

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