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  • Stage performance with three dancers and sixty plastic boxes as scenographic objects, video mapping surfaces, and sound and light sources. Analogy between geopolitics and children's games. Internet found-footage combining images of Syrian refugee
  • How can Nietzsche’s fear of the Eternal Return made comprehensible, even if it may fallen victim to wrong interpretation? Elke Reinhuber's approach to explicate this problem is a vinyl record of an endlessly reiterating sound, which emphasises the
  • The audience is elevated and observes the stage from a low angle, as in an anatomical theater where humans are enveloped by a swarm of inorganic beings. Graphical entities with their own behavioral code. A show for two dancers and digital particles,
  • 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
  • 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.
  • 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