The dance drama unfolds in five acts: Prologue, Seeking the Way, Enlightenment, Verification, and Epilogue — and features a dual narrative of a young and an adult Wang Yangming.
The young Wang Yangming, brimming with ambition, mirrors the inner drive that propels the philosopher toward insight. Wang Yabin draws on Guizhou's ethnic culture and modern dance techniques, merging them to create a dialogue between the philosopher's internal journey and the region's landscapes and traditions.
For example, Nuo Opera elements add texture, while sequences depicting Wang Yangming's pursuit by the imperial secret police dramatize the obstacles he faced, enhancing both the narrative's tension and pacing. Minimalist stage design evokes Ming Dynasty aesthetics, providing a historical anchor to the modern choreography.
The dance drama premiered in Guizhou in November 2024. Then, after months of touring, Wang Yabin and her team refined the performance.
"Following each show, we adjust the actors' expressions, timing and transitions," she says. "The integration of lighting, sound and stage technology becomes more seamless with every performance."
Wang Yabin is no stranger to ambitious projects. Over 10 years ago, her dance drama The Moon Opera, adapted from award-winning writer Bi Feiyu's novel of the same title, toured more than 150 performances at home and abroad — a milestone in her career and also in the country's contemporary dance scene.
Now, she returns to a familiar platform, using the universal language of movement to interpret a distinctly Chinese story.
The dance drama's music mirrors the dualities of the philosopher's life, moving between the grandeur of his public trials and his quiet, reflective thoughts.
"We based the score on his heart-mind thinking," composer Lyu Liang says. "It moves between grand, patriotic grandeur and quiet, introspective calm — moments of high ambition and moments of serene reflection. The music is meant to express the turbulence of his life alongside the steadfastness of his thoughts."
A symphony orchestra forms the backbone of the score "to convey the epic scope of the story and the rises and falls of Wang Yangming's personal journey", the composer adds.
Traditional Chinese instruments, including the bamboo flute, the guqin (a seven-stringed Chinese zither), guzheng (Chinese zither), and erhu (a two-stringed fiddle), imbue the music with "an elegance and meditative, Confucian serenity", he says.
Guizhou's ethnic instruments, meanwhile, reflect the landscape and culture of Wang Yangming's exile, their raw, earthy tones evoking the isolation and ruggedness of Longchang. "The result," the composer says, "is a layered, emotionally rich musical landscape that balances sweeping ambition with intimate reflection, and brings both the man and his philosophy vividly to life".