Kalaallit Inuit Performance
Isumasioqatigiinneq eqqaasitsisoq - A re-membering seminar

Jessie Kleemann, ”Lone wolf runner,” performance 2023. Photo by Frida Gregersen
This one-day seminar on Kalaallit Inuit Performance. Isumasioqatigiinneq eqqaasitsisoq – A re-membering seminar brings together younger and elder Kalaallit and Inuit artists and academics to remember and present together on their terms: from the existence and banishment of Indigenous traditions during and after Danish colonial rule, over the Tuukkaq theatre in Fjaltring and festivals in the Arctic, to contemporary decolonizing performances. The purpose is to gather different practices and traditions, reflect on how they have been taken up from different sides, and how they can be remembered in decolonizing ways – in academia and beyond.
Programme
9:00 |
Arrival & coffee |
9:30 |
Welcome by the organizers |
10:00 |
CONVERSATION 1: rehearsing, remembering, schooling |
11:00 |
Work demonstration of Uaajeerneq, mask dance, by actress and dancer Elisabeth Heilmann Blind |
11:45 |
Lunch |
12:45 |
CONVERSATION 2: rooting and moving |
13:45 |
Short break |
14:00 |
”Balance is a Moving Target.“ A performance lecture with storytelling and poetry by Kuluk Helms, artistic PhD student, Université Paris-Saclay. |
14:45 |
Coffee, tea, cake |
15:15 |
CONVERSATION 3: archiving and organizing |
16:15 |
Closing the day |
Practical information
- Attendance is free, but registration is necessary.
- Refreshments & vegetarian lunch are included
- The event will be mainly in English
- The venue Forsøgsstationen is unfortunately not accessible for wheelchair users. After the seminar, a podcast will be produced for people not being able to attend the seminar.
Organizers
Sirí Paulsen, Naja Dyrendom Graugaard, Cecilie Ullerup Schmidt
In collaboration with Lotte Faarup and Ditte Maria Bjerg
Supported by: Forsøgsstationen, Malmö Theatre Academy - Lund University, Centre for Modern European Studies (CEMES), the Nordic Culture Fund, the New Carlsberg Foundation research centre "Art as Forum" at the University of Copenhagen, and the research cluster Nordic Models at Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen.