Isaac Chong Wai / Performed by Ryota Maeda
Choreographing Gravity: Dance Rehearsal
performance DateS
Performance week 1 and 2, July 13-27, 2025
In Isaac Chong Wai's newly commissioned performance Choreographing Gravity: Dance Rehearsal (2025), a dancer rehearses movements referencing artworks within a rotated rehearsal room, navigating between everyday life practices and a gravity altered by the spatial situation. Gravity, fundamental to our daily lives, shapes how we move, act, and relate to the world. Chong challenges this invisible force by reimagining it through a choreography that follows a different logic. This durational performance reinterprets the methods of Marina Abramović and the movement studies of Joseph Beuys through an embodied translation. While the rules of gravity are seemingly suspended and the rehearsal space tilts, the audience is invited to a disorientating experience of an unknown dance.

TAVROS

Virginia Mastrogiannaki examined the latter years of Joseph Beuys’s life and oeuvre, during which his expressive language became increasingly politically charged. She explored the profound impact of the universalist and humanist ideas of Anacharsis Cloots on Beuys’s artistic and ideological framework, as well as Beuys’s spiritual affinity with the Enlightenment thinker known as the “Orator of Mankind.”

Anacharsis Cloots, a Prussian-born aristocrat and radical figure of the French Revolution, was perhaps the first to advocate a universal parliament, envisioned a world united under a universal republic, devoid of national borders and ruled by the ideals of human reason and equality. These ideas deeply resonated with Joseph Beuys, whose notion of Soziale Plastik was based on the belief that art and life are inseparable, and that every individual has the creative ability to transform society.

Beuys saw in Cloots a kindred spirit — someone who represented the fusion of philosophical idealism and political engagement. Beuys’s identification with Cloots was so strong that he would refer to himself as, “Josephanacharsis Clootsbeuys,” as a symbolic merging of their identities.

In 1983, Beuys performed at Schloss Gnadenthal, the former residence of Cloots in the Rhineland. There, he read aloud from Cloots’s biography in an “aktion” that functioned as both homage and political invocation. This performance demonstrated Beuys’s aim to rejuvenate Enlightenment principles in a modern, post-war European setting and to establish the artist as a catalyst for political transformation.

During the monthly residency at Artoll, Mastrogiannaki conducted extensive in-situ research. In addition to studying the archives and collection of Schloss Moyland, she also consulted the municipal archives of Kleve, explored Anacharsis Cloots’ letters and political speeches, some of which are displayed in the exhibition. She engaged in discussions with the Koekkoek Museum and visited Schloss Gnadenthal, the residence of Anacharsis Cloots in Kleve.

In her performance project TAVROS, Virginia Mastrogiannaki focuses on Beuys’s candidacy for the European Parliament in 1979, which reflected his vision  of  merging  artistic  practice  and  democratic  action. Mastrogiannaki examines the institutional texts that form the legal and political basis of the European Union today. Drawing on Beuys’s legacy, she studies the legal and political foundations of the European Union by engaging with the official Treaties that form its institutional framework.

Linguistic issues have long been a central focus of her artistic research. For TAVROS, the impact of language plays a central role. She is drawn to the multilingual and internationalist nature of the European Community, both as a political construct and a symbolic space.

In TAVROS, Mastrogiannaki removes all economic jargon from the institutional texts governing the European Union. While analyzing the Treaties that regulate the Union, she contemplates the elements that define our contemporary European identity.

The title TAVROS (Bull) refers to the transformation of Zeus, the second main figure in the myth of Europa’s abduction — a myth from which the European continent and, later, the European Union derive their name.

Virginia Mastrogiannaki, 2025

Travel Route

Daily documentation
Filmed by Nadja Stanišić

Day One
27 July 2025
Fruška gora, Serbia

Day Two
28 July 2025
Novi sad, Serbia -
Ilok, Croatia

Day 3
29 July 2025
Ilok - VUKOVAR - Varaždin, Croatia

Day 4
30 July 2025
Varaždin, Croatia - Maribor, slovenia

Day 5
31 July 2025
Maribor, slovenia -
Graz, Austria

Day 6
1 August 2025
Graz, Austria -
Nuremberg, Germany

Day 7
2 August 2025
Nuremberg -
Düsseldorf, Germany

Day 8
3 August 2025
Düsseldorf -
Bedburg-hau, Germany

about the artist
Isaac Chong Wai (b. 1990) is a Berlin Hong Kong based artist using glass, drawing, photography, video and performance as mediators to investigate contemporary global phenomena. His work transforms the emotions, tensions, and memories from human interactions into performative materiality and immersive experiences. Treading the line between the individual and the collective, he examines the vulnerability of the body and the inherent violence within social systems and historical traumas and imagines alternative microcosms of human relationality. Chong had his first German institutional solo exhibition, The End of Growth, at Museum Schloss Moyland under the direction of Dr. Antje-Britt Mählmann. Chong is a participating artist in the 60th Venice Biennale curated by Adriano Pedrosa and the 14th Taipei Biennial curated by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath. His works have gained recognition at prominent venues, including the Biennale of Videobrasil, São Paulo Bundeskunsthalle Bonn; MMCA, Seoul; IFFR, Rotterdam; MOCA Taipei; and M+, Hong Kong.
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