LATE

Workgroup

LATE is a research project in which seven artists gather around the question of how to share time if we cannot share time. They meet in the studio whenever time allows, return to the beginnings of dance notation, pick up a historical ball dance and organize the space along their individual temporal scope. In LATE, they use time excessively, investigate being together on crip time and experiment on what collectivity might mean when we assume an opulence of time.

LATE is part of Juli Reinartz’s doctoral research project “All late, all babe” at the Theater Academy of Uniarts Helsinki. Part of the research group are also Addas Ahmad, Ariane Hassan Pour-Razavi, Dasniya Sommer, Gerko Egert, Matilda Carlid, Mika Sander and Silja Korn. The participants of LATE work together in different constellations (Late Belle Danse, 2029; Konturen, 2020; Yum Yum, 2023) since several years and have discovered that the topic of the research “crip time and collectivity” is right in the center of their collaborations. They have now come together for three working periods and present their findings in a public event in Berlin in summer 2024.

Juli Reinartz is as a choreographer and artistic researcher from Berlin. Since 2019, she is a doctoral candidate at the Theater Academy at Uniarts Helsinki where she researches on crip time as choreographic strategy and question to collective experience. Her endocrinologically quite turbulent body increasingly affects her perception of time so that this became the center of her research. Previous artistic productions have been presented internationally in Germany, Finland, Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands and USA. Between 2019 and 2022, Juli has been part of the artists collective PSR programming the Heizhaus in Berlin and joined the research project TBA, a collaboration between artists from Europe and Indonesia. Juli has been teaching and advising work processes in universities such as Bauhaus University, FU Berlin, DAS Theater Amsterdam, University of the Arts Helsinki, Universität für Künste im Sozialen, Ottersberg et al.