“ALIEN” my ongoing practice will be presented in @the_space_sthlm at @steinslandberliner on Nov 8th at 18pm. 👽🫶🏻🌹 I hope to see you there ✨

It is said that when astronauts return to Earth after seeing it from so far away, reality takes on shades of fiction for them. The planet ceases to be an abstract and elusive notion; while the observer becomes smaller, the planet grows larger, too large. Common words are no longer enough, and self-awareness expands beyond its limits.

Alien, along with a series of pieces created over the past three years, stems from a continuously evolving practice dedicated to exploring and speculating on the human body as an instrument, investigating its inherent purpose and its possible alternative uses and functions.

Within this framework, new ways of embodying my body in the communicative act arise, both in performance and in everyday life. I pose various questions about our role in communication as speaking beings and consider the possibility of a more “human” operativity that transcends certain established limits and stereotypes.

Thus, the opportunity arises to create new codes of dialogue and understanding, where the sensory, gesture, and subjectivity become essential elements that invite us to authentically inhabit and share space-time together.

“Alien” unfolds in a fictional realm where forms blur, and the senses merge, reinterpreting and recreating our notion of what it might mean to be human, offering us the possibility of becoming “something else.”
“ALIEN” my ongoing practice will be presented in @the_space_sthlm at @steinslandberliner on Nov 8th at 18pm. 👽🫶🏻🌹 I hope to see you there ✨ It is said that when astronauts return to Earth after seeing it from so far away, reality takes on shades of fiction for them. The planet ceases to be an abstract and elusive notion; while the observer becomes smaller, the planet grows larger, too large. Common words are no longer enough, and self-awareness expands beyond its limits. Alien, along with a series of pieces created over the past three years, stems from a continuously evolving practice dedicated to exploring and speculating on the human body as an instrument, investigating its inherent purpose and its possible alternative uses and functions. Within this framework, new ways of embodying my body in the communicative act arise, both in performance and in everyday life. I pose various questions about our role in communication as speaking beings and consider the possibility of a more “human” operativity that transcends certain established limits and stereotypes. Thus, the opportunity arises to create new codes of dialogue and understanding, where the sensory, gesture, and subjectivity become essential elements that invite us to authentically inhabit and share space-time together. “Alien” unfolds in a fictional realm where forms blur, and the senses merge, reinterpreting and recreating our notion of what it might mean to be human, offering us the possibility of becoming “something else.”
566 16