Teaser | Subtle Like a Volcano

  A plural duet, where one body inhabits dance and the other, music, explores the bonds that arise from their encounter. Through a corporeal presence shaped by spatial and visual composition, the artists share, on stage, the art of staying alive. Between subtlety and eruption, the piece sparks friction between individual and collective symbols and sentiments of feminisms — allowing their force to flow, like lava from a volcano.

Teaser | Look at me

  Inspired by the lecture of the same name by Brazilian psychiatrist Ângelo Gaiarsa on human needs, Look at Me dives into the intimacy of the gaze — its risk, its refuge, and the search for belonging. The performance unveils human vulnerability through the artists’ bodily dramaturgy, in fluid and intimate dances that suggest a primal desire pulsing within the restlessness of human relationships.

Teaser | Aquatic

  Aquatic is freely inspired by the ocean and its constant transformations. Reflecting on human evolution and our bodies, we are all aquatic — water exists both within and around us. We are like water, flowing through different states throughout life. Like water, the human being changes according to temperature, circumstances, relationships, moments, and time. The integration between various levels of consciousness and reality, along with the vastness of the ocean, reminds us that every era is transitory.

Documentary Film |Living from Dance 

  Living from Dance is a documentary centered around a series of interviews that create a dialogue between contemporary dancers from different nationalities. The cinematic language intertwines with the project’s proposal, bringing audiences closer to the bodies and socio-cultural contexts of the interviewed artists. The film opens a space for dialogue and support through the understanding that diversity is a foundation of artistic practice. The series invites viewers to reflect on the profession of the artist, touching on themes such as self-sustainability, life choices, interests, and lived experiences.


Dance Film | The Encounter  

  Emerging from the interrelation between dance and audiovisual language, the dance film The Encounter began as an initial investigative process for the stage work Look at Me. It explores the potential of dance and the body on screen as powerful tools of expression. Two dancers draw on their embodied memories to investigate what drives human beings in the pursuit of feeling whole. The experiment develops a visual dramaturgy rooted in the intimacy between their bodies, as they explore movement through the lens of the subtle body — a concept that remains at the core of the company’s physical research.