Jan 29—Feb 01, 2026
Noli Timere
Rebecca Lazier & Janet Echelman / from USA & Canada
A visually stunning fusion of soaring aerial dance and modern circus.
Noli Timere is a soaring aerial performance featuring eight extraordinary, multidisciplinary performers moving over and within a custom designed net sculpture, suspended up to 25 feet in the air. Conceived by Guggenheim Award-winning choreographer Rebecca Lazier in partnership with world-renowned sculptor Janet Echelman, Noli Timere presents a seamless, symbiotic interaction between movement and sculpture in which both are continually reshaped and transformed by one another. Created with original music by acclaimed Quebecoise composer Jorane, Noli Timere fuses contemporary dance and avant-garde circus with art installation and advanced engineering to question how we navigate an unstable world.
The culmination of a 5-year collaboration, Noli Timere, Latin for ‘be not afraid’, uniquely renders interconnectedness visible and tangible–demonstrating, like the Butterfly Effect, how a change in one element generates cascading reverberations throughout a whole system. Noli Timere offers a mesmerizing kinesthetic metaphor and meditation upon the challenges of global interconnection.
Info
Venue
Emerson Cutler Majestic Theatre
219 Tremont St, Boston, MA 02116
“So much of this project is downright thrilling. Everything from its sheer scale and bold artistic leap to the extraordinary opportunity it creates for dance and circus arts.”
— Randy Glynn, Artistic Director, Live Art Dance
“The nets become a ninth dancer of sorts, morphing from a billowing ocean to a curving helix, from a swing to a seesaw to a trampoline, forcing the dancers to work together to navigate its ever-changing form.”
— Times Union
“Rebecca Lazier’s Noli Timere is a beautiful exploration of structure, light, and kinetic energy. Janet Echelman’s sculptural nets shimmer and react with their own life force.
— Cathy Gordon, Luminato Festival
“Noli Timere is a beautiful, stirring piece… a multidisciplinary marvel of magic, majesty, and miraculous moments.”
— The Scholar’s Take
“The results are massive, kinetic works wherein the movement of any one element affects all the others.”
— The Boston Globe on Janet’s sculptures