Lash - acts of love (2025)

An Opera in three acts.

Premiered on the 20th of June, 2025 at the Deutsche Oper Berlin.

Duration: 110’

Lash addresses the fundamental question how human beings experience themselves as loving, desiring, transient and moral creatures. It examines our physicality, as one of the inalienable prerequisites of this experience: our bodies make us part of the world, and at the same time, the only way we can experience the world is through our bodies. Our body must always be considered as an experiencing subject and an object experienced by others, in the same manner as our two hands, when interlocking, are both clasping and clasped – an ambiguity which cannot ultimately be resolved using the categories of subject and object. This existential and fundamental experience of humanity is brought to life.  

The piece opens with a cascade of text and questions phrased by the actor, as one of the protagonist’s embodiments. Each question opens with the same formula: “I wanted to ask…”: in a sheer endless sequence of variations, they express suppressed desires and longings, now impossible to contain, that the protagonist feels vis-à-vis another beloved and desired, but no longer present, person. Taking this as their point of departure, memories unfold in a sequence of scenes depicting her longing for love and sex just as much as the failure of her longing, with the tragedy of death hidden just beneath the surface. The mosaic of these snapshots recounts her life, but also reconstructs the reason and process of death, and the inherent transience of the human experience. Furthermore, the opera questions the perception and self-perception of one’s own body: as a body that is exhibited on stage, but also, adopting a micro-perspective and viewing minute physical details such as hairs, eyebrows, eyelashes, eyeballs or patches of skin, focusing on those parts of the body with which we exist in the world, but also use to feel, touch, see, smell and hear the world. Thus, a deeply sensual interplay embracing sex, body, love, and death unfolds.