What does it mean to have a company in this era?
Is that even possible for independent artists?
LOAIZAcorpóreo is the façade I've put forward since 2018. It exists as my "company" name whenever grant, festival or other annoyingly inflexible forms require it... In reality, I'm just a guy who works with who I can, when I can—stubbornly intent on building friendships along the way.
I think the idea of having a company piles unnecessary pressure onto independent artists who just want to make shit, imposing almost unnatainable work models on dance collectives that are figuring out how to stay together. What I care for is strong, diverse, fun groups that exchange their time and creativity for the satisfaction of art (...and getting paid, of course).
Things might change, but for now it’s just me—Victor—with great talented friends. Smashing art and body. Making stuff. Awesome stuff..
What does it mean to have a company in this era?
Is that even possible for independent artists?
LOAIZAcorpóreo is the brand that I have put forward since 2018. It serves as the name for my “company” whenever grant, festival or other application forms require it. It’s fake—in a sense…
I don’t care much for the idea of a company as an artist, I think it’s a somewhat impossible, romanticized and obsolete perspective on dance collectives in the present era. What I care for is friendships and strong, diverse, fun groups that come together for specific projects.
If you want, you can name my company LOAIZAcorpóreo, but… really, it’s just me: Victor, and great, talented friends—smashing art and body, making stuff, awesome stuff.
Amidst neon flashes, bodies entwine, immersed in the sweat of nightlife. Their forms blend and contort, blurring the lines between one another.
These bodies dwell underground, in the subterranean depths of perpetual revelry, where fragments of self are sought amidst the bustling crowd. A hidden multitude seeks refuge in this dark abyss, where norms are cast aside.
Kley2copio delves into the subculture of homosexual groups thriving in the counter-space of nightclubs, evoking echoes of the 90s circuit culture.