Sophie Allerding
March 18, 2026

Diabladas (dance of the devils), Carnival de Oruro, 2025.
Hey there,
After a winter break practice-hibernation period, I am back with some invitations to play, upcoming events, and some notes on Carnival and collective joy that seem relevant to my practice and people surrounding it. I’m also sharing some places I will be appearing soon, hoping to connect with people around!
Last year I started my residency at the EKWC, where I got the incredible opportunity and support from their fantastic advisors to create a work that I now call Songs for the Renewal. The work shows ritualistic objects: whistles, huacos, and fountains, each displaying a urinating female human-like figure. The fountains are interactive and sound-triggered, each attuned and activated by a different whistle pitch.
The instruments belong to an imagined society from the future that worships the cycles of breath and urination as sacred cycles that continuously connect our inside with the outside world, making our bodies part of a larger organism. The ritual surrounding these objects is known to have been performed for renewal. However, the exact nature of the ritual remains unclear, inviting the audience to speculate and participate by playing the instruments.
I am excited to show a full version of the installation at the Prospects exhibition (27–29 March 2026), organized by the Mondriaan Fonds at Art Rotterdam.

My personal invitation to you to see me at Prospects
For the presentation of the work I have been collaborating with Jack Bardwell, whose scenographic skillset has helped me tell the story of the work. Working with a spatial designer on the scenography has been an invaluable experience, as often it feels like the worlds I am building are mainly grounded in the imaginary. Now they are manifesting in space.
During the exhibition I will conduct experiments to come closer to the nature of the ritual. This participatory performance will happen twice a day, accompanied by performance artists Anna Bierler and Leon Lapa Pereira.. Keep an eye out for the performance schedule and join the whistle choir!

Carnival de Oruro, 2025.
A year ago I visited the Carnival de Oruro, something I had been dreaming of for years, as it is said to be one of the most beautiful carnivals in the world. In this carnival, groups from all over Bolivia come together to perform Indigenous dances and music, while also displaying traditional arts in the form of masks and textile works such as weavings and embroideries.
I couldn’t stop crying for at least an hour while watching that spectacle. Since then I have been obsessed with Carnival, and especially the experience of witnessing this particular one. It made me reflect on the role of art within it and, more broadly, the role of art and the function of the artist in society at large.
I did not grow up in a place where Carnival is celebrated. Being descended from two Carnival-obsessed cultures, Brazil and Bolivia, the lack of Carnival in my life has always felt like something problematic that I had to counter through organizing theme parties. But it seems this isn’t a personal problem: it is a broader societal and while nothing new, I still think it’s alarming.

Final game to identify who will be the council of the vampire queen of Rotterdam. The Full Moon Blood Ball produced by .zip, party committee: Erik Peters, Remco Akkermann and me, hosted by Roodkapje, Rotterdam.
In the book Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy, author Barbara Ehrenreich addresses the inherent human desire for collective joy. She traces the origins of communal celebration in culture and its function in human evolution. Dancing together was, much like developing language, essential for enabling human communities to function beyond individual action. “Dance cannot work to bind people unless (1) it is intrinsically pleasurable, and (2) it provides a kind of pleasure not achievable by smaller groups.” 1
Ehrenreich identifies the key elements of these communal festivities as feasting, drinking, song and music, dancing, costuming, and masking. What was once an essential part of human culture is now, at least in modern societies in the Global North, largely reduced to a single yearly activity: Carnival.
In her book, Ehrenreich tells the story of the disappearance of communal celebrations and collective ecstasy, often suppressed by ruling classes throughout history: “The essence of the Western mind, and particularly the Western male upper-class mind, was its ability to resist the contagious rhythm of the drums, to wall itself up in a fortress of ego and rationality against the seductive wildness of the world.”2
She writes that there used to be many carnivals throughout the year, but these occasions sparked and unleashed forces in people that became threatening to ruling elites. Peasant uprisings and slave revolts were common side effects of Carnivals that led to Carnival being increasingly restricted and replaced by spectacles such as military parades, in which the public merely watches in awe rather than participating. The disappearance of Carnivals are accompanying phenomena of big societal changes through the spread of monotheistic religions, the imperialism that originated in Europe, the militarisation of armed forces, industrialisation, and the advance of capitalism. While, the author explains, there have been ressurecctions of the phenomena of carnivalesque collective ecstasies in movements such as the rock’n roll hype, football and rave culture, all these movements have been successfully commodified at large.

Photos from the Office party organized by the party committee: Emma Verhoeven, Alina Turdean, Kirsten Spruit, Mila Broomberg and me, hosted at Extra Practice. Photos: Gijs de Boer.
In recent years my love for theme parties and my artistic practice of LARP making have gradually come closer together in events like the Full Moon Blood Ball or an office Christmas party for freelancers who don’t have a company that organizes one for them.
While these events had a manageable number of guests, many of whom were also friends, they were public events. Like other parties, they provided relief from everyday life, but in addition to music, dance, and drinking, they also offered the opportunity to take a break from being yourself by putting on a costume and becoming someone or something else for a night, as well as games that could be played together. It is said that in the Roman Empire people were given panem et circenses (bread and games) to satisfy and distract them, so that they would not voice discontent or criticism of the ruling class. I wonder whether today panem et circenses might have exactly the opposite effect: luring people out of their isolated “personal” spaces and into collective pleasures that have the potential to transform into collective power..
In both cases, the feedback from guests was that they had talked and connected with strangers during the festivity more than they normally would at a public party.
My grandmother says the end of Carnival is the saddest time of the year. So my conclusion here is we shouldn’t wait for Carnival, neither travel far to participate, we should have more of it, here and now. More Carnivals to combat the growing disconnection to each other, to spark collective joy, to dance away the hardships and fuel resistance and love for each other through ecstatic collectivity. I know that theme parties will not save the world, but they might save your sanity. So the party committee and I are on the lookout for the next carnivalesque happening. If you have an idea, place, or urgency, let us know! And if you don’t wanna miss out on the next Vampire ball subscribe to the .zip newsletter if you haven’t yet. Rumour has it that there will be a tavern night in Rotterdam where my wine- and beer-brewing friends Jack Bardwell and Felix Bell and I will be serving drinks. Reach out for more information!

A photo of the brainstorm and LARP drafts in The School of Prepping Otherwise CLiP, Kunstinstituut Melly, 2026.
The Garage School is a collective that organizes schools around different themes, depending on the needs and resources of participants. Since last fall they have been running the School of Prepping Otherwise for the collective learning in practice (CLiP) at Kunstinstituut Melly. In this school they question, challenge, and expand the measurements and advice on catastrophe-prepping provided by national and European governments, which are often tailored around able-bodied citizens who can afford it.
I had the pleasure of contributing to the School of Prepping Otherwise as a tutor for LARP. Over the last months I introduced participants to LARP as a tool; we played together and designed our own LARP inspired by their learnings and experiences during the school.
The design process took place during a jam in which we first gathered common interests and then sketched out LARPs in smaller groups. Interestingly, three out of four groups included a carnival as part of their LARP. While Carnival was present partly because it coincided with the Christian Carnival season, the motivation for including it seemed more connected to the desire to use the force of collective joy to conspire against the immense and ungraspable power structures suppressing us.
For everyone curious to learn more about the School of Prepping Otherwise: they will present their final event, The end is both near and already here; prepping for collective beginnings on March 28 at Kunstinstituut Melly.
Athens… (End of May till end of June)…With how many strangers could you speak between Hamburg and Athens, and how can radio-making and storytelling counter loneliness and isolation? With these questions as a starting point, Daniel Siegersma and I were selected for the Tiny Residency Deep Connection programme at Communitás Athens. While our artistic practices differ aesthetically, we share a passion for participatory storytelling that we have been wanting to explore together for some time. The goal of this residency is to travel by slow means (train, bus, ship) and explore how artistic practices can unfold under these conditions. On our way we will pass through multiple countries and cities such as Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Timișoara, Rome and Athens. We would love to meet cultural practitioners and spaces along the way with overlapping interests in our methods or themes. If you are on our route—or know someone we should meet, please let us know!
Knutpunkt in Gothenburg (April 16-19)…A big carnivalesque festivity I look forward to every year is the Knutpunkt, this year happening in Gothenburg, Sweden. I will be testing and launching a new LARP I have been working on: The Ballad of the Broken Signal. This LARP is based on collective singing, the writing and singing of heroic tales, and LARPing out the gaps in historic storytelling. Participants will create the ballad of a group of adventurers and sing it together, while also becoming the very characters celebrated in the song. While the technology within the game is reset to a level comparable to the Middle Ages, the scenario takes place in a future after climate collapse, where a group of adventurers search for a signal using an antenna, hoping to learn more about their past, and perhaps their future.
Venice (May 6-10)…With the kind support of the Mondriaan Fonds I will be visiting the opening of the 61st Venice Biennale between May 6–10. If you are there as well let’s meet?
And that’s it for now. As always, I am happy for this newsletter not to be one-sided only, love to hear comments, thoughts, desires and ideas. If there is more playable stuff (and hopefully more Carnivals) coming soon you’ll hear back from me.
1 Barbara Ehrenreich, Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy (London: Granta Books, 2007), p. 9.
2 Barbara Ehrenreich, Dancing in the Streets: A History of Collective Joy (London: Granta Books, 2007), p. 17.
Songs for the Renewal is a ritualistic site consisting of six indoor fountains, each displaying a urinating female human-like figure and a set of whistles, water whistles, and other ritualistic vessels and instruments. The fountains are interactive and sound-triggered, each attuned and activated by a different whistle. The ritual surrounding these objects is known to have been performed for renewals. However, the exact nature of the ritual remains unclear, inviting the audience to speculate and participate by playing with the instruments.
Songs for the Renewal is the culmination of my long-term research on the representation and taboos surrounding female bodies in Western art history, as well as the intersection of the exploitation of nature and women's rights. My interest in gender and urination also considers the ecological impact, from harvesting hormones through farming pregnant mares to environmental hormonal pollution (so-called feminization of the environment), which leads to fertility issues in many species and contributes to a broader alienation from natural bodily functions and the environment.
To address the various stories, concerns, and facts gathered in my theoretical research, I have crafted a speculative fiction: a future where hormonal pollution has reached such extremes that an overload of estrogen has dissolved traditional genders, making all species rather feminine. Human societies remaining in this world have evolved distinct cultures, technologies, and beliefs from our own. In their cosmology, the world was created by seven sisters who sat to relieve themselves, and from their streams of urine, their world emerged.
The six fountains in Songs for the Renewal depict the seven sisters, and the ritualistic site serves as a sanctuary for performing rituals such as renewing relationships and reciprocity with the cosmos. Drawing from today's world as a starting point, this future reimagines gender roles and bodily fluids, turning the artifacts of Songs for the Renewal into souvenirs of a possible alternative reality.
Songs for the Renewal is a ritualistic site consisting of six indoor fountains, each displaying a urinating female human-like figure and a set of whistles, water whistles, and other ritualistic vessels and instruments. The fountains are interactive and sound-triggered, each attuned and activated by a different whistle. The ritual surrounding these objects is known to have been performed for renewals. However, the exact nature of the ritual remains unclear, inviting the audience to speculate and participate by playing with the instruments.
Songs for the Renewal is the culmination of my long-term research on the representation and taboos surrounding female bodies in Western art history, as well as the intersection of the exploitation of nature and women's rights. My interest in gender and urination also considers the ecological impact, from harvesting hormones through farming pregnant mares to environmental hormonal pollution (so-called feminization of the environment), which leads to fertility issues in many species and contributes to a broader alienation from natural bodily functions and the environment.
To address the various stories, concerns, and facts gathered in my theoretical research, I have crafted a speculative fiction: a future where hormonal pollution has reached such extremes that an overload of estrogen has dissolved traditional genders, making all species rather feminine. Human societies remaining in this world have evolved distinct cultures, technologies, and beliefs from our own. In their cosmology, the world was created by seven sisters who sat to relieve themselves, and from their streams of urine, their world emerged.
The six fountains in Songs for the Renewal depict the seven sisters, and the ritualistic site serves as a sanctuary for performing rituals such as renewing relationships and reciprocity with the cosmos. Drawing from today's world as a starting point, this future reimagines gender roles and bodily fluids, turning the artifacts of Songs for the Renewal into souvenirs of a possible alternative reality.
In the 15th century, a flood breached the Markermeer dykes in the Netherlands and washed an unknown body ashore. The creature appeared like a woman but couldn’t speak nor behave like a human being. Experts declared: It must be a mermaid.
Waterland – On How to Become a Body of Water is a climate fiction narrative about rising sea levels told from the perspective of a mermaid. In this work, I address our alienated relationship with the ocean, the entanglement of gender and ecology, and the urgency of imagining collective futures in the face of the climate crisis. The work consists of photographs, analogue double exposures, newspaper clippings, and photo montages, mostly presented as an installation. The project originated from a collaboration with the Foundation for Environmental and Spatial Planning Advice (STAB), based in the Netherlands. During this project, they were working on the restoration of the Markermeer dykes, built in response to rising sea levels. The restoration generated conflict as many in Dutch society did not consider it necessary, signalling the difficulties of effectively communicating the urgency of climate change.
My project Waterland is inspired by the Dutch folklore of the Zeemeermin from Edam, an imprisoned mermaid who appeared after a flood behind the Markermeer dikes in the 15th century. Her story of entrapment, public exhibition, and subsequent enslavement is exemplary of the modern Western approach to the environment, which prioritises profit and extraction over curiosity and respect - a worldview that objectifies nature. Some of the images represent the mermaid’s gaze, decentering the human perspective on the issue. Others show the mermaid navigating the human-made world using performance through staging. Playing with authority newspaper clipping conjure, I also blend historical legends with contemporary issues faced by Dutch society and present a fictional future pointing to the possibility of coexistence between humans and ocean life.
Astrida Neimanis' Essay On How to Become A Body of Water was a big inspiration for this work, and I have dedicated the subtitle of my work to it.
Installation shots: Climate Utopias Festival, Lahti, Finland 2021.
Read more about Waterland at Zero Nine Magazine.
In the 15th century, a flood breached the Markermeer dykes in the Netherlands and washed an unknown body ashore. The creature appeared like a woman but couldn’t speak nor behave like a human being. Experts declared: It must be a mermaid.
Waterland – On How to Become a Body of Water is a climate fiction narrative about rising sea levels told from the perspective of a mermaid. In this work, I address our alienated relationship with the ocean, the entanglement of gender and ecology, and the urgency of imagining collective futures in the face of the climate crisis. The work consists of photographs, analogue double exposures, newspaper clippings, and photo montages, mostly presented as an installation. The project originated from a collaboration with the Foundation for Environmental and Spatial Planning Advice (STAB), based in the Netherlands. During this project, they were working on the restoration of the Markermeer dykes, built in response to rising sea levels. The restoration generated conflict as many in Dutch society did not consider it necessary, signalling the difficulties of effectively communicating the urgency of climate change.
My project Waterland is inspired by the Dutch folklore of the Zeemeermin from Edam, an imprisoned mermaid who appeared after a flood behind the Markermeer dikes in the 15th century. Her story of entrapment, public exhibition, and subsequent enslavement is exemplary of the modern Western approach to the environment, which prioritises profit and extraction over curiosity and respect - a worldview that objectifies nature. Some of the images represent the mermaid’s gaze, decentering the human perspective on the issue. Others show the mermaid navigating the human-made world using performance through staging. Playing with authority newspaper clipping conjure, I also blend historical legends with contemporary issues faced by Dutch society and present a fictional future pointing to the possibility of coexistence between humans and ocean life.
Astrida Neimanis' Essay On How to Become A Body of Water was a big inspiration for this work, and I have dedicated the subtitle of my work to it.
Installation shots: Climate Utopias Festival, Lahti, Finland 2021.
Read more about Waterland at Zero Nine Magazine.
Glowing Eyes is about myths from the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, stories, that show humans as part of their environment and thus offer different perspectives than the Western concept of nature, where the human is seen as counterpart to it.
Myths have a great influence on how we perceive our environment, and move and act in it. The Amazonian Myths are part of the ecosystem of the forest, where they are alive, their storytellers tend to live in balance and respect with their environment. In contract to it colonialist created myths that show nature as wild which needs to be tamed to legitimize exploitation and degradation.
Due to my Latin American background I grew up with Brazilian folklore, it is part of my inner life. At the same time, I grew up in Germany, so that I also embody the western gaze which sees a tropical paradise of resources. To reestablish and heal a connection with nature, I look into the living myths to lead me. Through a visual and physical exploration, I reconnect to the stories of the Amazons to conjure up old images again and charge them with new magic.
This work emerged from research conducted during extended stays and workshops in Ribeirinho communities on Ilha de Marajó, Belém, Brazil.
Installation shots: Dior Visual Arts Award, Luma, Arles, France, 2021.
Glowing Eyes, solo show, Studio 45, Hamburg, 2020.
Read more about Glowing Eyes at PH Museum
Glowing Eyes is about myths from the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, stories, that show humans as part of their environment and thus offer different perspectives than the Western concept of nature, where the human is seen as counterpart to it.
Myths have a great influence on how we perceive our environment, and move and act in it. The Amazonian Myths are part of the ecosystem of the forest, where they are alive, their storytellers tend to live in balance and respect with their environment. In contract to it colonialist created myths that show nature as wild which needs to be tamed to legitimize exploitation and degradation.
Due to my Latin American background I grew up with Brazilian folklore, it is part of my inner life. At the same time, I grew up in Germany, so that I also embody the western gaze which sees a tropical paradise of resources. To reestablish and heal a connection with nature, I look into the living myths to lead me. Through a visual and physical exploration, I reconnect to the stories of the Amazons to conjure up old images again and charge them with new magic.
This work emerged from research conducted during extended stays and workshops in Ribeirinho communities on Ilha de Marajó, Belém, Brazil.
Installation shots: Dior Visual Arts Award, Luma, Arles, France, 2021.
Glowing Eyes, solo show, Studio 45, Hamburg, 2020.
Read more about Glowing Eyes at PH Museum
Letting piss run free is a privilege most womxn in this world do not have.
The image of the urinating woman is not one that belongs into public, in addition, the sexualisation of the femxle body also makes it a dangerous risk in some places. Womxn have to hide, go off the beaten track and sometimes hold back until it is dark enough to relieve themselves.
Under the working title Ways of Peeing, I am developing a work that examines the urinating female body. In doing so, I aim to address the representation and taboos surrounding female bodies within the history of Western art. My interest in gender and urination includes the ecological impact of urinating women, ranging from hormonal pollution to the alienation from natural bodily functions and our physical selves.
Ways of peeing is a visual liberation and a piss on the impossibility of the restrictive conditions that surround us.
Letting piss run free is a privilege most womxn in this world do not have.
The image of the urinating woman is not one that belongs into public, in addition, the sexualisation of the femxle body also makes it a dangerous risk in some places. Womxn have to hide, go off the beaten track and sometimes hold back until it is dark enough to relieve themselves.
Under the working title Ways of Peeing, I am developing a work that examines the urinating female body. In doing so, I aim to address the representation and taboos surrounding female bodies within the history of Western art. My interest in gender and urination includes the ecological impact of urinating women, ranging from hormonal pollution to the alienation from natural bodily functions and our physical selves.
Ways of peeing is a visual liberation and a piss on the impossibility of the restrictive conditions that surround us.
The Anatomical Theatre explores the link between the male and medical gaze, uncovering how female bodies have been constructed through capitalism, “modern” science, and Christianity—framed by beauty, sexuality, and reproductive labor.
Using the darkroom as a metaphorical uterus, I create layered anatomies that depict inner landscapes rather than idealized forms. Inspired by the origins of Western anatomical science, particularly the fetishized Anatomical Venus—the first anatomical wax model—the work highlights the historical transformation of bodies into fragmented objects of male fascination.
Organs without a body, science generating magic, a darkroom instead of a womb: The Anatomical Theatre is a speculative exploration of female anatomy, created with the tools available to us in the domestic space, given to us to modify our bodies. Against the reduction of bodies to isolated organs and tissues, this imagery aims to depict the inner landscape of emotions, layering physical representations of historical and political violence with the subjective experience of embodiment. Sculpturally expanded through wax figures, these works highlight the possibilities and fragility of molding the body while engaging the senses with the natural odours of beeswax and burnt wick.
This work is the outcome of a collaborative research project with Mexican artist and disabled justice activist Ana Garcia Jacome. This mixed-media installation combines analogue black-and-white photomontages, wax sculptures, and Jácome’s video work, Votive Offerings.
Installation view: Städtische Galerie Karlsruhe, Germany
Centro de la Imagen, Mexico City, Mexico
The Anatomical Theatre explores the link between the male and medical gaze, uncovering how female bodies have been constructed through capitalism, “modern” science, and Christianity—framed by beauty, sexuality, and reproductive labor.
Using the darkroom as a metaphorical uterus, I create layered anatomies that depict inner landscapes rather than idealized forms. Inspired by the origins of Western anatomical science, particularly the fetishized Anatomical Venus—the first anatomical wax model—the work highlights the historical transformation of bodies into fragmented objects of male fascination.
Organs without a body, science generating magic, a darkroom instead of a womb: The Anatomical Theatre is a speculative exploration of female anatomy, created with the tools available to us in the domestic space, given to us to modify our bodies. Against the reduction of bodies to isolated organs and tissues, this imagery aims to depict the inner landscape of emotions, layering physical representations of historical and political violence with the subjective experience of embodiment. Sculpturally expanded through wax figures, these works highlight the possibilities and fragility of molding the body while engaging the senses with the natural odours of beeswax and burnt wick.
This work is the outcome of a collaborative research project with Mexican artist and disabled justice activist Ana Garcia Jacome. This mixed-media installation combines analogue black-and-white photomontages, wax sculptures, and Jácome’s video work, Votive Offerings.
Installation view: Städtische Galerie Karlsruhe, Germany
Centro de la Imagen, Mexico City, Mexico