What are you to do with your borrowed stardust in this world?
If you are reading this, you have most likely dedicated a great deal of yourself to drawing our perception nearer to the unfathomable scales of our cosmos — to peeking through obscurity, recalibrating imagination, and locating us within a universe whose scales dwarf every unit of human life and experience. That gap between what we are and what we study is not an obstacle — it is precisely where the work lives.
That, it turns out, is also what artists do. With different methodologies and systems of reference, artistic practices have long shouldered alongside science the work of expanding our imaginaries and orienting the human condition in the shared present and the unknown. The harsh dividing lines of contemporary institutional life have made genuine dialogue between them rare — this project is an attempt to restore that shared pursuit. Not as a novelty, and not as a solution, but as a research endeavour for all those involved.
This performance will bring together live musicians, theatre and movement performers, and researchers from the Centre of Gravity. What this is not: Art illustrating Science, or Science decorating Art. The intent is for each person involved to approach the topic as genuine research through their own practice — to listen deeply, through all available channels, and contribute together.
These experimental performance formats have been part of my transdisciplinary research and creative practice, crafted in collaboration with artistic and scientific researchers across Denmark and abroad — bridging diverse techniques and practices, united through a shared topic of inquiry. This first collaboration with the Centre of Gravity will be part of the Black Hole Week celebrations during the last week of August.
This is, above all, an invitation to journey playfully into how we generate meaning, how we are moved, how we reach and give generously in the pursuit of revelation — a recalibration of perception and praxis, vibrant and expansive, embodying the stardust we borrow and are destined to return.
(Link to website of the event in process of happening)
