Conrad Kaczor’s artistic practice integrates movement, film, photography, and emerging digital tools to explore themes of grief, memory, and transformation. Rooted in over twenty years of street dance, particularly Popping, Tutting, and geometric movement, his work merges physical precision with emotional vulnerability.
Influenced by post-war architecture and art, Brutalist structures, Cubism, and the traditions of street dance, he examines how structure and emotion coexist. His solo project, Kola, combines dance, projected visuals, video, and site-specific performance to investigate personal and collective healing.
The loss of his mother fundamentally reshaped his relationship to movement and image. In response, he began working across digital media, expanding his practice beyond the body alone. Drawing on personal grief alongside histories of migration and generational memory, he treats the body as both archive and instrument.
Through performance and media-based storytelling, Kaczor constructs immersive environments in which movement becomes a language for reflection and resilience. For open studios, he will perform Kola as a live, site-responsive work that integrates projection and movement to transform space into a living architecture of memory.
