Antinomy|二律背反

Shuting Wang (CN), Hanna Kortus (DE), Yixue Bo (CN), Ellinor Brandenburg (DE), Sasha Sokolov (RU), Paria Dayyani (IR), Sashe Urdovski (MK)

Wang Shuting (b. 1992, Qingdao, CN) is a dancer and media artist based in Linz, AT. Her work explores body autonomy, virtual embodiment, and ritualized memory through movement and technology. She studied at Anton Bruckner Private University and is pursuing a Master’s in Time-Based Media. She has performed at china, Austria, Staatstheater Nürnberg, and Marcel Leemann Physical Dance Theater.

Hanna Kortus (b. 1999, Regensburg, GER) is a filmmaker and media artist based in Linz, AT. She studied Intermedia at the University of Cologne and is pursuing a Master’s in Time-Based Media at the University of Arts Linz. Her work explores representations of the body from a queer-feminist perspective and has been shown at various international festivals and exhibitions, including Diagonale, Kurzfilmwoche Regensburg, International Dance Film Festival Japan and Akureyri Art Museum in Iceland.

Yixue Bo, graphic designer and photographer, specializes in visual storytelling. Now in the sixth semester of a Bachelor’s program in Graphic Design & Photography at the University of Art and Design Linz, Bo refines skills in layout, branding, and image-making to create work that is both conceptually strong and visually striking.

Sasha Sokolov is a multidisciplinary artist working at the intersection of music, sound design, and digital media. With a background that includes composing for Hollywood film trailers and performing internationally with a band, his diverse creative path informs a practice that bridges video, generative art, and new media. His immersive installations and digital works explore themes such as the nature of consciousness, the structure of reality, and the boundaries of subjective perception.

Antinomy is a 15-minute performance combining contemporary dance with generated visual art and video. It explores the paradox of bodily autonomy in a future where virtuality and control reshape human perception and identity.

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