
- Dance
- NL premiere
Rapeflower
Disclaimer
This performance features full nudity, non-explicit material on rape culture and flashes from lights.
Departing from the experience of rape, this choreography is not only about the individual experience of reconnecting with one’s body after sexual violence, but also about the societal taboo surrounding it. At the same time, the work confronts a universal issue: the objectification of the female body, turned into a pawn in social and political struggles.

How long does it take to unfreeze a raped body?
Identifying ourselves as survivors, we often choose silence. We resist the victim label being projected onto our living bodies. Unwilling to become objects of pity, we render ourselves invisible. Yet, by avoiding confrontation with the experience of rape, we risk trapping ourselves in a cycle of repetition—re-enacting aspects of the trauma in a desperate search for lost control.
How can we speak honestly about rape? How do we navigate our own experiences between the tabooization and pornographization of this subject? Rapeflower is an investigation conducted within the body itself. It is in the body—not in discourse—that the experience of sexual violence, whether personal, inherited, or learned, intertwines with defense mechanisms and survival strategies. This is a story about rape understood not as a single event, but as a condition.
How can the practice of classical Japanese jiutamai dance contribute to this exploration? Is it a form of liberation, or does it perpetuate oppression? Or perhaps both? In Rapeflower, Hana Umeda draws on the traditions of this 19th-century art form, performed exclusively by women in Japan. For many of these women, dance was inseparable from the experience of violence—confined to small rooms and subjected to sexual abuse during closed performances. The movement, the tension of the body, its confinement and freezing, were all emphasized by jiutamai masters as they passed their knowledge to the next generation of female dancers.
In Roman legend, Lucretia, after being raped by Sextus Tarquinius, takes her own life, becoming a symbol of female virtue for centuries. Today, her death might be interpreted as a consequence of PTSD. In contrast, the Baroque painter Artemisia Gentileschi, who repeatedly depicted Lucretia in her work, processed her own rape trauma through artistic creation, becoming one of the first recognized female painters in European art history.
Can the stage—where I place my raped body on public display, speaking in my own voice while embodying the collective experiences of generations of dancers—become a space for liberation?
This performance is made possible by:
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Hana Umeda
Credits
Concept/director/choreographer/text/ performance: Hana Umeda
Dramaturg/Collaboration on the text: Weronika Murek
Video: Martyna Miller
Music: Olga Mysłowska
Light direction: Aleksandr Prowaliński
Collaboration/Outside eye: Joanna Nuckowska
Production: Olga Kozińska
KOMUNA WARSZAWA- production house
Hana Umeda’s RAPEFLOWER performance was produced in Komuna Warszawa as a project selected in Open Call for performance in 2024.
Research for the performance was conducted as part of the “SoDA” MA program within the framework of HZT Berlin, Univeristy of Arts Berlin & Ernst Busch Academy of Dramatic Arts Berlin and the “Thinking Through the Museum” residency, Museum of the History of Polish Jews POLIN.
This work was produced with the financial assistance of the European Union. The views expressed herein can in no way be taken to reflect the official opinion of the European Union.