ABOUT
SEXORAKELET will be an interactive theatre performance for young people in Scandinavia. The performance is being developed in 2026 by Sofia Moe and Natalie Eliassen. The premiere will take place in Oslo in November 2026, and the production will tour Norway, Sweden and Denmark from 2027.
The artists will gather information from teenagers aged 14 - 19 through the mythical character SEXORAKELET and its questionnaire, making the piece in dialogue with its intended audience. The performance is intended for young audiences and others with an interest in sexuality, pleasure and mythology.
Natalie S. Eliassen is a multidisciplinary artist based in Oslo. She has created and performed burlesque and performance art as the character Captain Clit, a clitoris costume. She has made countless glittery mythical costumes and masks and interviewed Norwegian sex workers. She works maximalistic and colourfully with: sculpture, installations, video and immersive theatre. Natalie often uses her costumes and sculptures as scenography in performances and self-produced essay films. Her goal is a more inclusive society, and topics she is interested in are: mental health, sexuality, psychological violence, hydrofeminism, female sailors, marine ecology and sea goddesses.
Sofia Moe is an artist and activist based in Malmö, working for and with the ocean through spoken word, theatre, dance and performance. She has an international background in literature, dance and artivism, and has written and performed poetry, created street theatre and other performances and sound pieces for the past decade. She often works collectively, with improvisation and movement, and central themes in her work include the sea and other bodies of water, community, migration and sensuality. She loves talking about sex, has considered a career as a sexologist and is the playwright and director for Sexorakelet. She highly recommends reading the book Pleasure Activism by Adrienne Maree Brown.
We are curious and inspired by the many forms and expressions of sexuality throughout history. We believe that free and healthy sexuality is an important indicator of well-being, both for the individual and for society as a whole.