"Sofie Kramer astounds her audience with hellish physical tricks and beautiful prose." - Theaterkrant 
"A spectacle that is both powerful and intelligent. A true conversation starter." - Amsterdam Fringe Jury 2021
"Certainly the most startling piece I have ever seen, and it’s everyone’s judgement whether it’s art or just top-shelf pornography."Gscene.com 
"The death of a beautiful woman is the most poetic topic in the world" – Edgar Allen Poe
In A Pole Tragedy I search for female autonomy and sexual self-determination in a male-dominated society. Fascinated by Euripides' famous tragedy Iphigenia in Aulis, about the sacrifice of a young girl’s body in a men’s war, I explore the thin line between violence and the erotic. In a sweaty duet between my body and a sky high pole I dive into my darkest desires, with Iphigenia as my heroic alter ego. Pushing the power dynamics between my body and the pole to extremes, together with composer/sound artist Mári Mákó I built my own interactive dancing pole, which I play with my body like a music instrument. The hard, immobile, shiny piece of steel gets its own voice and is no longer a passive object in a feminist female fantasy. ​​​​​​​
Credits:
Concept, text, direction, performance: Sofie Kramer | Instrument development, sound design: Mári Mákó | Dramaturgy: Doke Pauwels | Audio-technical consultancy and live operation: Anne-Jan Reijn  | Costume design: Esther Sloots | Lichtdesign and video: Hendrik Walther | Artistic coaching: Keren Levi | Technician: Leon Vergouw | R Kelly Cover: Sofie Kramer (singer) and Tijl Kramer (producer) | Campaign image: Casper Koster (photography) and Jesse Smits (poster design) | Teaser: Hessel Stuut | Scene photography: Nichon Glerum | Made with support of: Bureau Dégradé, GREENHOUSE/Veem House for Performance, Performing Arts Fund, Amarte, Norma Fund and AFK | Many thanks to: Carl Beukman
About seven years ago, I was introduced into the fascinating world of pole dancing. The development of the pole dancing sports went hand in hand with female emancipation as it made its ways from stripclubs into regular gyms. Now women are using pole dancing as a way to train their abs and “re-claim” their sexuality. When learning it for the first time, pole dancing is very painful (and sometimes, when learning new moves, it still is…): bleeding wrists and feet, bruised shins, burning thighs. But it is also very fun, fierce and in a way liberating. I feel quite heroic sacrificing my skin, my wrists, my shins in order to master this phallic symbol. But after seven years of swirling around that pole I still wonder; is this self-expression or self-objectification?

Open studio at Veem House for Performance

For this performance I searched for a new body language in relation to pole dancing and the experience of femininity. I want to use the pole as an instrument of liberation but at the same time I want to question this chosen instrument. In my physical vocabulary I want to break free from the male gaze (aaahhh), using the pole as a dance partner and boxing ball at the same time. In a one week residency at Veem House for Performance I dived into this physical research. As a starting point, I used essays from Elisabeth Bronfen's book Over her dead body, in which she examines how the conjunction of death, art and femininity forms a rich and disturbing strata of Western culture. I furthermore explored the relationship between text, body, pole, video projection and the audience working towards a multi-layered, interdisciplinary performance. 
This residency was coached by Keren Levi, Nicole Beutler, Marga Kroodsma and Boogaerdt/Vanderschoot. 

Testing sensors during the research residency at Bureau Dégradé

The search for complete autonomy was taken into extremes during a three week residency at Bureau Dégradé in The Hague. Out of my desire to be fully autonomous on stage I wanted my body and the pole to be the source of the myth, the struggle, the dance, but also the sound. I noticed that the sound of pole dancing is actually very interesting; the scratching of a hand, squeaking of the skin, bumping of the body against the pole. Together with Mári Máko we developed an interactive pole using multiple sensors, making an actual instrument out of the pole that I play with my body. First Mári created a playground for me with various sensors; Bela Trix sensor, light sensor, ultrasound sensor, proximity sensor and contact microphones. With all these tools she wanted to find the most versatile setup where movements have a clear relationship to the sound. As a consequence, I needed to learn how to play this instrument, taming it with my body - a screaming pole with its own voice, a voice that needs to be heard. This phallic object and my female body suddenly ended up in a co-dependent relationship.
In August we got back into the studio to playfully combine the elements of sound, movement, text and video, searching for the boundaries of our taste while diving into Greek tragedy and the dirty stuff I write in my diary, to turn the piece into an apocalyptic orgasmic pole dancing opera about dark female fantasies and seductive sacrificial rituals. We premiered in October at the National Theater in The Hague. 
A Pole Tragedy will be back again on October 14th at the Kunstlinie in Almere, and it might be the very last chance to see it. So don't miss out if you haven't seen it yet!  
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