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17th Conference of the Society for Artistic Research (SAR)

Working in Languages Spoken by Fewer: An Aesthetics of Non-Alignment

Presented by: Rita Júlia Sebestyén
🗓️ Wednesday, 24 June — 10:50am - 11:30am (40 mins)
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Working in Languages Spoken by Fewer: An Aesthetics of Non-Alignment
Abstract
This session examines how structural non-alignment between language, aesthetic form, and centres of cultural authority generates distinctive performative strategies. Rather than resolving into a single methodology, immanent ecosystems open up in which multiple artistic forms emerge as parallel worlds alongside canons.

Artistic work in languages spoken by fewer resists hierarchical or deficit-based framings, positioning these languages as generative and artistically productive. Theatre makers often develop alternative aesthetics. From within these conditions, they become architects of their own epistemic and artistic worlds. These practices are not organised by dominant frameworks. One example is a Hungarian theatre in Romania that has created its own artistic language, including: adopting Romanian theatre aesthetics and performative language, staging Ancient Greek tragedy as deliberate difficulty, and proposing new perspectives on Hungarian folk tradition. This experience led later to multilingual performances in Denmark and nomadic, international multimedia installations.

Working across Romania, Hungary, Denmark, and the UK, and increasingly with people with liminal life experience in transitional or in-between contexts, the development of deliberately new modes of artistic expression and research became instrumental. Embodied Artistic Research (EAR) is one such art-and-research format. It operates as a multi-modal incubator for practices that do not align with hierarchical, mainstream narratives. It is structured through three interlinked elements that enable both individual expression and collaborative creation: sideways storytelling, collective rituals and ceremonies, and conceptual collective artworks. It integrates artistic practice and research in a co-creative, iterative way.
Biography
Dr Rita Júlia Sebestyén is a theatre maker and artistic researcher working across performance, multilingualism, and collective artistic inquiry. She is the founder of Embodied Artistic Research (EAR), through which she develops artistic-research incubators and collaborative artistic formats. She is co-founder of the intercultural theatre periodical Játéktér / Playing Area. She has taught in Denmark, Hungary, and Romania, led EU-funded projects across eight countries, and received artistic and research recognition in the EU and UK.