BIO – English

Dancer | Actress | Performer | Creator | Author

Multidisciplinary performing artist with a diverse background in contemporary dance, literature, music, circus, physical theatre, and martial arts. Her work is characterized by an ongoing exploration of hybrid languages, poetic imagery, and intercultural practices.

In her hometown of Rosario, Argentina, she worked as a dancer with the Isabel Taboga Contemporary Dance Company and as an actress within the Ministry of Innovation and Culture. Her artistic training was further enriched through studies in experimental dance and physical theatre at Kim Physical Theatre in Berlin.

Her training in martial arts took place in India at Hindustan Kalari Sangham (Calicut), where she studied Kalaripayattu, a discipline that continues to influence her physical language. In the audiovisual field, she took part in acting studies at the National University of the Arts (UNA) in Buenos Aires, as well as experimental cinema and video dance projects.

In 2018, she moved to London, where she began her training at Siobhan Davies Dance Studios. She has worked and collaborated in diverse artistic contexts in Cuba, Chile, Guatemala, Berlin, New York, Buenos Aires, and London. She has performed with companies such as Fuerza Bruta (New York), Dulce Compañía (Berlin), and LaFerraro & Guests at Tanzmesse (Düsseldorf), within the framework of the Catalan Arts Institute.

Since 2019, she has been based in Barcelona, where she continues her work as an actress and creator, collaborating with artists from Argentina, Italy, and Turkey. She has worked with companies such as La Fura dels Baus, deepening her exploration at the intersection of scenic, visual, and physical languages.

She is currently part of the body and voice laboratory at Centre d’Arts Santa Mònica and, for the past three years, has been a member of the training actors’ group at the Catalan Institute of Health (ICS). As a director, she coordinates the project LaFerraro & Guests.

Her artistic research focuses on scenic creation as a form of sensory translation between body, image, and memory, articulating a poetics of movement shaped by diverse cultures, practices, and disciplines.