For Juana ficción, the Spanish-Swiss avant-gardiste who goes by the moniker La Ribot circles around the 16th-century would-be queen Juana I de Castilla. The powerful men in Juana I’s life—her father the king; her son—made themselves more powerful at her expense, exiling her to a distant castle for 47 years for supposed madness so they could rule in her place. La Ribot is also a queen; her kingdom is the absurd. “I’m eccentric,” the 62-year-old dance-trained performance artist told El País a few years ago, when the Venice Biennale bestowed on her the Golden Lion award for lifetime achievement. “What occurs at the center has never interested me.” Though the actor Juan Loriente will be on hand to represent the villainous men, and the adventurous conductor-composer Asier Puga will approximate the cancioneros of the Spanish court with his Zaragoza chamber orchestra and a small choir, La Ribot will likely render the gloomy, forgotten queen with her usual unguarded, comical, and affecting indirection. —Apollinaire Scherr
The Arts Intel Report
A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler
For the World Traveler
A Cultural Compass
For the World Traveler
La Ribot and Asier Puga: Juana ficción
When
Sept 5–8, 2024