Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker receives the Praemium Imperiale in Tokyo

Published on 23.10.2025, 14:06

On the 22nd of October 2025, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker received the Praemium Imperiale, also known as the Nobel Prize for the Arts.

Her Imperial Highness Princess Hitachi presented the Praemium Imperiale 2025 medals to all laureates in Tokyo: Marina Abramović (Sculpture), Peter Doig (Painting), Eduardo Souto de Moura (Architecture), András Schiff (Music) and Anne Teresa (Film/Theater).

Established in 1988 by the Japan Art Association, the Praemium Imperiale is a global arts prize that honors exceptional achievements. Laureates are recognized for transcending national and ethnic boundaries, and for embodying the culture and arts of our time.

Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker joins the prestigious lineage of choreographers and dancers honored in this category — including Mikhail Baryshnikov (2017), choreographer Merce Cunningham (2005), Pina Bausch (1999), and Maurice Béjart (1993)
 

Speech Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker

It is with a feeling of profound humility that I stand before you to receive this Prize. Since the founding of my dance company Rosas in 1983, as a choreographer and dancer, I have been warmly welcomed in this country on many occasions. Several of my artistic collaborators are Japanese. Today, I would like to share with you some thoughts on what I consider the very essence of the art of dancing and its relevance today.

What is the role of the arts in our complex – today, sometimes violently complex world? Is it ritual? We tend to cast the arts, and dancing in particular, as transitional: people have always danced and made music at important junctures in their lives, at moments of both great joy and great sorrow.  

In this optic, the arts can bring people together in an act of celebration, consolation, or reflection — three long-standing functions of the artistic. Celebrating, mourning and reflecting are, after all, essential for the mortal animals we are, stuck between past and future. Looking back at the past, being together in the present, imagining the future, a different future — this is the modest bet on artistic beauty we can still make today.

Yet perhaps dance is a bit more unique than some of the other arts — particularly through its bond with that stubborn component of human life, the body. Dance then appears as both the most contemporary and the most timeless of all the arts: what is more in the ‘here and now’ than the body itself? People have always danced. 

Yet the body ages. I undoubtedly do. In this sense, dance is both the most historical and unhistorical activity — both completely within nature and yet also rising above it. Similarly, dance seems universal and is also peculiarly human. We humans choose to dance, and therefore we can stand above nature while never fully transcending it. Do the stars dance, the clouds, the birds?

No activity better exemplifies this human experience than dancing itself. In this country renowned for its long tradition of living in a close relationship to nature, despite having also experienced the most violent and devastating forces of human technological interventions in nature, this is the conditional case I can still make for dancing as an art. 

As much as I believe in the intrinsic spiritual dimension and healing power of nature, I do believe in the potentially harmonising forces of all the arts and especially dance. 

I hope that this modest argument for dancing does justice to the immense honour you are about to bestow on me.

© The Japan Art Association/The Sankei Shimbun