Uhritanssi

Kantonen Lea

The video is a document of the first performative graduation project of the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts. The perfomance is an observation of the effect of movement on breathing and sound of a moving person. The movement continues until the speech is completely inhibited. The space of the performance is a painting installation consisting of an area demarcated with white cloths; a pink tempera painting depicting a human figure; and a bowl of red currants. The performer jumps, falls, and rolls in the space while intermittently and breathlessly uttering the words of Peter’s first epistle: "… and build yourself as a living sacrifice…" In the end, she crushes the currants with her hands, rubs them in her face and on the painting.

Production Year
1984
Duration
00:12:57
Tyyppi
Asiasana
Original Title
Uhritanssi
Finnish Title

Uhritanssi

Production Countries
Finland
Dialogue
Yes
Sound
No
Cast
Lea Kantonen (Author), Lea Kantonen (Director), Lea Kantonen (Editor), Lea Kantonen (Producer), Lea Kantonen (Script), Lea Kantonen (Sound Design), Lea Kantonen (Still Photography), Lea Kantonen (Actor)
Press Photos

Lea Kantonen

Born: 1956

Lea Kantonen is emerita professor of artistic research at the University of the Arts Helsinki and PI of the research project Taking Back the Museum – Opening the Space of Community Museums to Recover the Art of Indigenous People. She belongs to the pioneer generation of Finnish performance, video, environmental, and socially engaged art. In the 1980s, she worked in the land art group Turppi and the performance art group Auki. Her video performance, Offering Dance (1984), presented as a part of her final work at the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts, was the first performance at this Academy. Her doctoral thesis Teltta – Kohtaamisia nuorten taidetyöpajoissa (The Tent – Encounters in Art Workshops with Young People, 2005), was the first Finnish-language doctoral thesis in the field of socially engaged art. Since 1999, she and her partner Pekka Kantonen have collaborated with the Tatuutsi Maxakwaxi education center on the Sierra Madre Occidental and, since 2014, with the video collective Sembrando at the University of Nayarit, Mexico, co-creating community-initiated performances and video installations. She is engaged with decolonial methodology and intrigued with multilingual dramaturgy and interpretation as a challenge in performance art. The works of Lea and Pekka Kantonen have been presented both locally in community centers and internationally in video festivals and art museums. In 2011, they received the AVEK Media Art Award.