• At CPT we are committed to ensuring the best possible experience for all artists, audience members and other visitors to our space. We welcome customers and artists with disabilities and are pleased to assist you in your visit. 

    If you have any questions or enquiries, please do get in touch by phone at 020 7419 4841 or email at foh@cptheatre.co.uk.

  • Kimberley Harvey & Anne-Gaëlle Thiriot

    Image:

    Anne-Gaëlle Thiriot and Kimberley Harvey have been colleagues, Candoco Artists, co-leaders, collaborators and friends for over 15 years... .

    Kimberley Harvey works as a freelance contemporary dance artist. She performs, choreographs and teaches. She has had an association with Candoco Dance Company for over 20 years in a variety of roles. Kimberley has her own inclusive contemporary dance company, Subtle Kraft Co. Their work centres around relationships in their various forms, mainly working between live performance and film.

    Anne-Gaëlle dances, teaches and choreographs. Her works celebrate the female gaze, fleshiness, idiosyncrasies and communities. Graduated from Trinity Laban in London, she has been a performer and a co-creator with many companies in the UK (h2dance, Exit Map, Glyndebourne Opera, Annie Pui Ling Lok, etc.). An associate artist with Candoco Dance Company for 13 years, she met with Kimberley there. Now in Marseille, she works with Mathilde Monfreux, Andrew Graham, Fanny Soriano, and co-organises Le FIL’s trainings. She is a Feldenkrais practitioner.

  • Kimberley Harvey Anne Gaelle Thiriot  Website
  • Kimberley Harvey Anne Gaelle Thiriot  on Instagram
  • Kimberley Harvey Anne Gaelle Thiriot CPT shows

    WORK IN PROGRESS
    Sian O'Connor

    Team With No Name

    Thu 21 Mar at 6pm
    15 years expertise as: Award-winning dreamers Contemporary dance geeks Masters of the unspectacular Friends Kimberley and Anne-Gaëlle present: Team with No Name A fuchsia championship.

    Blog Posts by Kimberley Harvey Anne Gaelle Thiriot

    No posts found. Checkback later

    “Such a crucial part of the UK theatre ecology… Developing artists and audiences”

    The Guardian