Aleksandar Georgiev is a choreographer, cultural facilitator, and curator whose work spans choreographic work/performance, collective authorship, and institutional creation. His practice is shaped by what he calls the “flirting method”—an exploration of reciprocal attention between performer and audience, where conceptual lines emerge in real time.
Aleksandar’s performances often engage with anal politics, radical tenderness, and queer temporality, revisiting history while co-imagining inclusive futures. Pleasure, sensuality, and softness operate as political acts within his work, creating an aesthetic and ethical approach that is simultaneously intimate, accessible, and radical.
Over the past fifteen years, Aleksandar has developed projects across multiple contexts—solo and group works, collective research, and institutional frameworks. He is the initiator and director of the cultural project institution ICC (Imaginative Choreographic Center) and runs programs such as PEC (Programa de Encuentro y Acción Cultural Queer) and Teatro en la Escuela. He has also produced, coordinated, and toured numerous projects, navigating the practical, conceptual, and social dimensions of artistic creation.
His choreographic works, including FANTASTIC FUTURES, ATRÁS, Anal Body / Anal Politics, SCREENSAVER, The Power of S, and Echoes of S, explore radical tenderness, queerness, and speculative poetics.
While being one of the co-creators of the international artistic team STEAM ROOM, Aleksandar has explored collective authorship methodologies and the protest body as celebration. Their projects, including the dragON trilogy, investigate how shared authorship generates political, aesthetic, and social resonance while respecting individual creative voices.
Aleksandar’s trajectory bridges Sofia, Stockholm, Skopje, and Tenerife, reflecting a practice that embraces multiple homes, networks, and ways of being. Through performance, curation, and facilitation, he fosters spaces of collaboration, co-thinking, and co-dreaming, creating frameworks where diverse voices, temporalities, and bodies can inhabit artistic and cultural ecosystems together.