Multidisciplinary artist and choreographer Laura Jantunen's new work examines disorientation as a creative, revitalising force.
Laura Jantunen’s ympyrät, jotka kuvittelevat olevansa viivoja (circles that imagine they are lines) combines dance and contemporary music to explore disorientation as a transient, everyday bodily phenomenon. It’s a gentle, playful rebellion against conservatism and our longing for permanence.
The work dwells in a state of constant change, inviting us to embrace unsteadiness rather than cling to stability and safety. What if the corporeal experience of disorientation were the very foundation of our existence and the key to navigating perpetual uncertainty?
Drawing on Sara Ahmed’s Queer Phenomenology (2006), the work treats disorientation as a creative space that opens new perspectives on our time and its crises. On stage, the recognisable and unrecognisable, the placed and displaced, the known and unknown appear simultaneously – generating wavering, contradictory moments that constantly seek their form. Here, confusion isn’t about being lost: it’s a deliberate disruption that allows new forms to unfold.
Composer Leevi Räsänen‘s process-based approach avoids predetermined outcomes, evolving instead through constant stretching, moulding and merging. Räsänen’s music for strings is built from flexible modules, recorded in advance and woven into the choreography as rehearsals progress. The sonic dimension thus emerges from a fragmented, displaced state.
Performers: Pauliina Sjöberg, Pääsky Miettinen, Hara Hermunen
Composition: Leevi Räsänen
Sound design: Mitja Nylund
Lighting design: Ilmari Paananen
Participating in the working process: Arttu Halmetoja
Recording engineer: Armi Lampela
Music performed on the recording by: Aino Szalai (violin), Ida Kosonen (viola), Eeva Rysä (cello)
Costume design: Talking through our bodies ja Soft_Art_by_Laura_Nen
Interns: Sonjis Laine
Production: Zodiak – Center for New Dance, Laura Jantunen, Et alia
Residency: Ehkä Production
Supported by: Kone Foundation, Arts Promotion Centre Finland, Samuel Huber Art foundation, City of Helsinki
More information
