
A double bill of new dance works created by the choreographer Alexander Whitley using live motion capture and generative AI is at Sadler’s Wells East, London, March 18-21, 2026.

The genesis was in rethinking The Rite. “It became increasingly apparent,” Whitley says, “that having some familiar element or a known quantity to balance the innovation and novelty that new technologies bring could be an interesting thing to explore.”

The Rite of Spring “opens that up to the community and a larger scale, in terms of the presence and impact of the digital elements” which respond to “the reframing of tech and AI as a replacement for, or something akin to, a godly element”.

“Right from the beginning she makes the point that the conversation around AI supremacy and it destroying us all is a distraction from the more serious issue of how current AI is affecting us and impacting our understanding of ourselves.”

He admits that it might appear to be a contradiction — including to audiences — that “technology is a big feature of what we're doing in the work, but there's also a critical angle [and] questions being raised about it.”

“It creates a tension which isn't always easy to work with and reconcile,” Whitley says. Elements “need to be slightly wrestled into shape in order to comfortably co-exist together”, he says.
Ben Luke is a writer and broadcaster based in London. He is a contributing editor of The Art Newspaper and presents its podcasts A brush with…, of which there have been more than 100 episodes since 2020, and the topical art news program, The Week in Art, which has run for more than 300 episodes. From 2009 to 2024, he was an art critic at the London Evening Standard. He is a regular guest on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row. Ben has contributed to books on artists as diverse as Phyllida Barlow, Glenn Brown, Michael Craig-Martin, Mark Dion, Matthew Krishanu, George Shaw, and Jiro Takamatsu. He was selected in the Critics’ Critics section of Artforum’s Best of 2024 issue. His book featuring 25 of the conversations from the A brush with… series, What is art for? Contemporary artists on their influences, inspirations and disciplines, was published in 2025 by HENI.
Alexander Whitley is an Artistic Director and Choreographer known for creating technologically innovative and thought-provoking productions. One of Britain’s most exciting young choreographers, his work explores the creative potential of digital platforms. He has choreographed for The Royal Ballet, Rambert, BalletBoyz, Candoco, Gandini Juggling, Birmingham Royal Ballet, and Hessisches Staatsballett in Germany. Whitley has previously performed at Sadler’s Wells Theatre with Anti-Body (2022) in the Lilian Baylis Studio, though The Rite of Spring / Mirror marks their debut at Sadler’s Wells East. In 2014, he founded Alexander Whitley Dance Company (AWDC), an internationally acclaimed artist-led studio redefining the boundaries of dance through pioneering work with digital technology. AWDC creates multidisciplinary performance experiences across stage, screen, and immersive or interactive platforms, which have been presented at many of the world’s most prestigious theaters, festivals, and media channels.