Charlotte Dauphin and Marie-Agnès Gillot have teamed with musician Mirwais for Barre, an 11-minute music film set to his track “Unisex.” The result is a stark, hypnotic collaboration—part choreography, part sculptural study—that unfolds like an abstract ritual where sculpture breathes and dance speaks.
A Dialogue Between Sculpture and Movement

In Barre, French filmmaker Charlotte Dauphin builds a visual and emotional exchange between the static and the animate. Instead of traditional choreography, the film moves through a sequence of gestures and pauses that feel ritualistic. At its center is Marie-Agnès Gillot, whose presence carries the emotional weight of the piece. Her performance transforms stillness into something sentient, grounding Dauphin’s images in physical intensity.
Gillot works in restraint and release, shifting between sculptural poses and deeply human expression. Even in minimal movement, she channels inner states that feel volatile beneath the surface. Though Barre marks her first collaboration with Dauphin, the synergy between them is immediate. They have since worked together on The Future of Statues at the Musée de l’Orangerie, and their next film, Melpomene, is already underway, featuring Gillot alongside Andie MacDowell, Marisa Berenson and Pascal Greggory.
A Cinematic Language That Blends Disciplines

The film is built on sharp, contrasting images. At times, Gillot sits on a concrete floor in a vivid red gown, set against pale stone architecture and a towering bronze sculpture. The sculpture’s rigidity becomes the counterpoint to her impending movement, setting up a tension between the living body and inert form. The scene captures the film’s central idea: performance as a moment suspended between stillness and release.
Dauphin alternates between wide architectural shots and tactile, intimate close-ups. The minimal frames highlight her interest in materiality and scale, while the tighter compositions emphasize breath, texture and gesture. Through these shifts, her hybrid filmmaking language emerges—one that moves fluently between dance, sculpture, cinema and performance art.
Performance as Invocation

Barre isn’t simply documenting movement; it treats performance as a summoning. The silence between gestures becomes communicative, suggesting a world where meaning is generated through presence, weight and breath rather than narrative. The result is a stripped-back yet symbolic work that invites viewers into a space where movement becomes metaphor.
