One Night Only: Julien Creuzet and Ana Pi at ICA VCU This Friday

by | Oct 9, 2025 | ART, CULTURE, PERFORMING ARTS

Editor’s Note: For further context, read our article HERE.

Julien Creuzet with Ana Pi: Your Source at the Feet of the Green Peaks
Friday, October 10 from 5 to 7 PM
Institute for Contemporary Art at VCU
Free admission with RSVP HERE

When French-Caribbean artist Julien Creuzet speaks, his words move like tides circling, swelling, pulling you in. “It started maybe two years ago,” he told us, “with an idea to make a French representation in Venice. But what does it mean to represent a nation when you are from the French Caribbean? If I go to Venice, I want to begin on the opposite island in Martinique. Because that is the earth. That is the source.”

That word, source, anchors his exhibition now at the ICA, Attila cataract your source at the feet of the green peaks will end up in the great sea blue abyss we drowned in the tidal tears of the moon. It’s a dreamlike environment of sculpture, video, and sound that collapses the distance between the Caribbean and Virginia, between myth and debris, between what’s lost and what remains. “A source for drinking water, a source of imagination, a source of emotion,” Creuzet said. “It’s about what we need to live, to feel, to imagine.”

In those gallery spaces, classical monuments drift upside-down through digital seas. Figures of Western art history are submerged and made buoyant again “heavy monuments plunged into the ocean,” as we previously described, “where they float, inverted … full of wonder and open-endedness.” Creuzet lets their meanings dissolve and recombine, like coral growing on old marble.

Friday’s one-night performance with Brazilian choreographer Ana Pi, Your Source at the Feet of the Green Peaks, brings that same sense of drifting into real space and time. “What does water mean? What does salt water mean? What does sweet water mean?” he asked. “It can begin a huge conversation with many ramifications.”

Sound has always been central to Creuzet’s work. In the ICA installation, a two-hour soundscape of his voice, singing poetry in Creole, French, and English, loops through the space like a tide, merging with Pi’s choreography in what curator Amber Esseiva once called “the pulse of the show.” Onstage, that pulse will quicken; the music and movement will move together, a kind of living current.

Creuzet talks about beauty the way others might talk about faith. “A friend found a seashell at the beach,” he said, “and I told her it was plastic. But it was still beautiful. The sand, the water, the ocean, they had transformed it. It’s not a seashell, but it became one. That’s what I love,  how something can be beautiful and terrible at once. How transformation itself creates meaning.”

For Richmond, that tension between trauma and beauty, between what history takes and what imagination returns, feels close to home. Creuzet acknowledges the weight of place without turning it into a slogan. “It’s important for everybody to question history,” he said. “Your own history, your collective history. Sometimes it’s traumatic. Sometimes it’s beautiful. But we can’t just put history in a box and forget the box. We have to open it again through poetry, through beauty.”

Friday night’s performance will likely feel the same way the exhibition does, part ritual, part dream. Creuzet and Pi build worlds where sound, movement, and image blur together until language is almost irrelevant. “I don’t make work to fight,” he said. “I make work to share, a live experience, a moment with the public. And maybe that moment can start to activate something in you.”

He smiled as we finished talking, his voice gentle but insistent: “It’s about sharing. About beauty, about emotion, about dreaming. About finding the source again.”


Support RVA Magazine. Support Independent Media in Richmond.

At a time when media ownership is increasingly concentrated among corporations and the wealthy, RVA Magazine has remained one of Richmond’s few independent voices. Since 2005, the magazine has provided grassroots coverage of the city’s artists, musicians, and communities, documenting the culture that defines Richmond beyond the headlines.But we can’t do this without you. A small donation, even as little as $2, one-time or recurring, helps us continue to produce honest, local coverage free from outside interference. Every dollar makes a difference. Your support keeps us going and keeps RVA’s creative spirit alive. Thank you for standing with independent media. DONATE HERE.

We’ve got merch HERE
Subscribe to the Substack HERE
And Reddit HERE
And YouTube HERE

R. Anthony Harris

R. Anthony Harris

In 2005, I created RVA Magazine, and I'm still at the helm as its publisher. From day one, it’s been about pushing the “RVA” identity, celebrating the raw creativity and grit of this city. Along the way, we’ve hosted events, published stacks of issues, and, most importantly, connected with a hell of a lot of remarkable people who make this place what it is. Catch me at @majormajor____




more in art

Review | ‘As You Like It’ is Just How I Like It

If you’ve been reading these reviews for a while, you’ll notice I love me some context. Especially surrounding William Shakespeare’s plays. One of my favorite things about the existence of Richmond Shakespeare is that they’ve forced me to go back to the English Lit...

IllumiNATION Tells America’s Story on a Monumental Scale

Editor’s Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with the Virginia Museum of History & Culture on coverage related to America’s 250th anniversary, including Richmond SailFest and IllumiNation. It's hard to impress people with just a building. Yet standing in front of the...

Blöthar: “GWAR Didn’t Change. The World Freakin Changed.”

Richmond metal band GWAR says the Secret Service contacted the group following a recent performance at the Vans Warped Tour in Washington, D.C., that featured the mock execution of a Donald Trump effigy. Video of the performance, which showed band members...

Review | ‘Come From Away’ is the Best We’ve Ever Been

Do you remember the rollerblading guy with the American flag kit on September 12th? We will never forget the 11th for the horrors, but do you remember the 12th? The 13th? If you do, I don’t even have to say which year. If you don’t, let me tell you a little bit about...

Before Richmond Was an Arts City, There Was Best Products

Imagine pulling into a suburban shopping center to buy a toaster and finding a department store that appeared to be falling apart with corners breaking away, walls peeling open like a giant cardboard box, or facades seemingly collapsing under their own weight. For...

Review | ‘I Love You Because’ Is Pure Joy 🏳️‍🌈

It could be said that Shakespeare invented the rom-com. It could also be said that Jane Austen improved it a couple of centuries later. Between the two of them, meet-cutes, notices of love or rejection arriving at exactly the wrong time, and breathless affirmations of...

Stay Hungry pt. 1 | Band on the Road

Editor's Note: Writer's Block is a space for Virginia writers to share personal essays, fiction, memoir, and works that fall somewhere in between. In Stay Hungry, Richmond local Eric Kalata looks back on a cross-country tour and the restless optimism of...

Local, Latino and A New Richmond Cosmos

Tucked into the alley behind 2512 West Main Street, a fever dream of the cosmos has taken shape across a brick wall. The mural is the collaborative work of four Latino artists working in and around Richmond: Visibly Hidden, Monolith, Mars, and Sol. A distant Earth...