Natalia Pulido Granada is a choreographer and performer who blends her Colombian roots with the creative energy of Rome. In her work, gesture becomes a ritual and an act of resistance against homogenization and disconnection from the natural world. Her choreographies evoke sensory landscapes where bodies transform, decompose, and recombine, reflecting the constant change of nature.
Her research, inspired by biodiversity, transforms movement into a poetic language that tells the fragile and chaotic strength of life. She currently focuses on performance art and relational art, exploring the concept of community and creating spaces for sharing. Her most recent research focuses on sneezing and involuntary movements, investigating how the body interacts with public space as a place of dialogue with others.
Graduated in Contemporary Dance from the Academia Superior de Artes-ASAB and holding a Master's degree in Choreography from the Accademia Nazionale di Danza in Rome, she won the Erasmus scholarship at the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos in Madrid (2017) and is recently the winner of the A Landscape 2024 grant, which will allow her to participate in the DANCESCAPES 2024 training program.