Skör is a dance installation where audience members are free to enter and exit at any time. The work unfolds in a shared space between performers and visitors, without a fixed beginning or end. The performers oscillate between holding and pushing, protecting and exposing, inviting and rejecting. The performers form a kind of ecosystem, a shifting network of bodies in relation, where tension builds and dissolves through proximity, repetition, and subtle negotiations of power. The piece explores the physical and relational boundaries between care and cruelty, not as opposites, but as forces that often blur or overlap. A gentle gesture may conceal resistance; a firm grip may contain care.
Loosely inspired by The Art of Cruelty by Maggie Nelson, Skör considers how violence and care can coexist in a single action, and how the line between them rarely stays still. Rather than illustrating these ideas, the work creates a space where they can be felt, observed, and embodied – in the flicker between contact and withdrawal, between attention and discomfort.
Performers:
Bertine Bertelsen Fadnes
Elsa Kamøy Furuseth
Jaakko Fagerberg
Leevi Mettinen
Saga Sigurðardóttir
Sóley Ólafsdóttir
Anna Schou
Rósa Ómarsdóttir is an interdisciplinary choreographer. In her work, Rósa explores the relationship between humans and nature, in search of non-anthropocentric narratives. She strives to create a rich ecosystem of humans, non-humans and invisible forces. Her work is interdisciplinary in nature, interweaving choreography, live soundscapes and visual art, with a feminist approach to dramaturgy that embraces vulnerability and flux.
Rósa’s work has been shown internationally at numerous festivals, theatres, galleries and art museums. Her work has received several awards for the Icelandic Theatre Awards for soundscape and received numerous nominations.