Archive Search

  • Immersive film, specially designed for a fulldome environment. Multiple 3D landscapes modulated by female voices. The physical absence of the performers is materialized here by the pairing of the spatialization of their litanies to the movement of
  • One of the first dance and media performances designed for a fulldome virtual reality environment. An immersive visual and sound environment, paired with epicurean pleasures and the contemplation of a dance performance. Architectural skies and
  • Abandoned
    Abandoned artist's studio featuring a technical apparatus in a process of transition in which analog turns into digital. Reflection on mise-en-scène of media, performance, installation and exhibition: recorded and constructed, present and absent,
  • Spectators enter an intimate space to meet face-to-face with a performer offering her body as an interface to the media environment. Performer's outfit and scenic environment are equipped with touch sensors, theremins, and multiple buttons and
  • Two dancers, a visual artist and a sound artist, perform live. Performing bodies as an interface between the spectators and the media environment. By manipulating the sensors, spectators can modify certain parameters of the media environment.
  • Sleeping Bed -
    In our society sleep and wake rhythm is to a large extent influenced by work schedules. People should go to bed at a certain time, the period spent asleep should be held on a quiet place at night. Sleep research is concentrated on the biological act
  • Geolocative performance simultaneously staged in the street and in the theater. The public sits in a tent, on which text messages of an urban passer-by / actor are manipulated by movements of a dancer outside the tent. Surveillance technologies, GPS
  • Performers interact with images and sounds and manipulate four mobile projection surfaces, orchestrating a set of changing architectural constructions. Spectators circulate freely like visitors to an installation, accessing multiple points of view
  • Performers tele-dialogue from two distinct places with a single spectator at a time, whose shadows become the theater of the work. Each performance is unique and constitutes a singular experience for the visitor, who is no longer only a passive
  • Two dancers/performers interact with an audio-visual environment. Their movement data control cameras, microphones, and architectural projections of 3D representations of each performance venue. Four scenes, made up of choreography and media, play