At the heart of the Athenaeum Center’s Entangled Beauty: Conversations on Quantum Science conference stands a performance unlike any other: Beyond Reality: Quantum Artistry. Choreographed and directed by Sandra Kaufmann, and supported by the Joan and Bill Hank Center for Catholic Intellectual Heritage at Loyola University Chicago, this interdisciplinary work transforms the strange principles of quantum mechanics into movement, dialogue, and visual storytelling.
Audiences don’t just hear about quantum mechanics — they see it, feel it, and experience it. Seven dancers move like subatomic particles in flux. Multimedia projections evoke hidden dimensions. A physicist unpacks the science as it unfolds, while words and images add texture to the dance. At once playful and profound, Beyond Reality asks: how do we sense realities beyond our perception, and what happens when science and art combine to reveal them?
Beyond Reality: Quantum Artistry
At its core, Beyond Reality is an exploration of the unseen. We cannot perceive the quantum realm directly. Our senses are tuned to rivers, streets, voices, and stars, but at the atomic level the world behaves very differently. Particles can exist in multiple states at once. They can influence each other across vast distances. Certainty dissolves into probability.
Kaufmann translates these insights into choreography. The dancers suspend, split, recombine, and pulse in ensembles that appear chaotic one moment and orderly the next. A gesture may fracture into many possibilities, only to coalesce into a clear, shared phrase. Out of apparent randomness emerges a structure — a metaphor for the way life itself rises from the dance of quantum probabilities.
This performance is not dance alone. It is conversation and collaboration. Physicist Constantin Rasinariu joins Kaufmann on stage, providing insights that make the science accessible without slowing its wonder. Visual artist Kelli Evans adds striking imagery, while playwright Michael Bassett contributes a jazzy, whimsical monologue. The result is an evening where science and art don’t illustrate one another but grow together.
How Beyond Reality Connects to Entangled Beauty
Beyond Reality is not an isolated piece — it is a living hinge in the larger season of Entangled Beauty: Conversations on Quantum Science. Athenaeum Center’s season-long series recognizes the United Nations’ International Year of Quantum Science and Technology and invites audiences to consider how quantum discoveries affect philosophy, faith, and the arts.
The weekend-long conference brings together an array of programs:
- Talks & Conversations: Physicist Stephen Barr explores the philosophical and theological implications of quantum theory. Fr. John Kartje, priest and astrophysicist, reflects on how quantum science can deepen approaches to prayer and discernment. Constantin Rasinariu explains the basics of superposition, entanglement, and wave-particle duality in approachable terms.
- Theatre Preview: A sneak peek of Constellations by Nick Payne, a play that examines love and fate through multiverse theory.
- Film: Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer screens on our Historic Main Stage, inviting reflection on the moral dimensions of scientific discovery.
- Comedy: Uncontrolled Variables, Chicago’s science-meets-comedy troupe, turns complex research into witty, interactive performance.
- Visual Art: Two exhibits bring quantum science into visual form: Singularities & Infinities by Shanthi Chandrasekar, intricate drawings inspired by cosmology, and Quantum Figures by Julian Voss-Andreae, sculptures that vanish and reappear depending on perspective.
Placed in this context, Beyond Reality acts as the conference’s connective tissue. Where talks provide clarity, the dance provides sensation. Where theatre and film tell stories, the choreography embodies principles. Where art exhibits freeze a moment, Kaufmann’s performance lets that moment breathe and shift. It reminds audiences that the quantum world is not only an idea to study but also an experience to inhabit.

About Sandra Kaufmann
The vision for Beyond Reality springs from Kaufmann’s remarkable career. She is the founding director of the Dance program at Loyola University Chicago and has spent decades weaving performance, education, and research into a life devoted to movement.
Early in her career she toured internationally with the Martha Graham Dance Company, carrying forward a modern dance tradition that emphasized storytelling through physical intensity. She later became Artistic Director of the Graham Ensemble and taught at the Martha Graham School. Along the way, she danced with celebrated choreographers Pearl Lang and Richard Move, each of whom expanded her range and reinforced her commitment to expressive clarity.
Kaufmann has choreographed for concert dance, opera, musical theatre, site-specific performances, protest actions, and interdisciplinary projects. She has received awards from the Dance Magazine Foundation, the American College Dance Festival, and the National Foundation for the Advancement of the Arts. Her activism culminated in an invitation from the Library of Congress to curate and perform The Legacy of the New Dance Group, a historic company of artists who combined art with social advocacy.
Science has long animated her work. With support from the Sloan Science and Technology Fund, she created Searching for Superstrings, an interdisciplinary piece that brought her into dialogue with physicist Brian Greene and playwright Michael Bassett. She later co-presented the keynote address for the Art/Science International Conference. Her current research project, Movement, Gnosis and Scientific Literacy, continues to test how embodied experience can support learning across disciplines.
About the Hank Center’s Support Matters
The Joan and Bill Hank Center for Catholic Intellectual Heritage at Loyola University Chicago sponsors Beyond Reality: Quantum Artistry because the project reflects its mission: fostering dialogue among faith, reason, and culture.
The Catholic intellectual tradition has long recognized science and art as complementary ways of knowing. The Hank Center continues that tradition by creating forums where scientific inquiry, humanistic study, and cultural expression meet. Supporting Kaufmann’s work is a natural fit. Dance, theology, and physics each reveal truths about creation, and together they form a more complete picture.
By placing Beyond Reality in front of Chicago audiences, the Hank Center affirms that quantum science is not only for specialists but also for anyone willing to enter the mystery with imagination. The performance becomes a civic and spiritual exercise: a chance to see how beauty and order emerge from chaos, how humility and curiosity sustain one another, and how art can deepen our grasp of reality.
What to Expect from Beyond Reality: Quantum Artistry
Audiences at Beyond Reality can expect an experience that is as engaging as it is enlightening. Kaufmann’s choreography is clear, musical, and full of energy. Dancers form lattices of movement, split apart, and return together in ways that suggest particles in flux. Sequences suspend in silence, then ripple outward in waves. The ensemble feels at once playful and precise.
As the dancers move, Constantin Rasinariu provides brief insights into quantum principles, guiding viewers without overwhelming them. Visuals from Kelli Evans extend the sense of scale, while Michael Bassett’s monologue threads humor and contemplation through the action. The interdisciplinary format ensures that no one mode of expression dominates; instead, science, movement, imagery, and voice converge to create a whole greater than the sum of its parts.
Why Entangled Beauty? Why Now?
The United Nations’ designation of 2025 as the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology marks a century of discovery. The past hundred years have seen quantum mechanics reshape not only our understanding of reality but also the technologies we use every day — from semiconductors to lasers to medical imaging. The next century promises even more transformative possibilities.
Yet for many people, quantum science feels distant, abstract, or intimidating. Beyond Reality meets that challenge head-on. It offers a bridge from concept to experience. It turns theory into choreography and invites everyone into the conversation. By connecting curiosity with creativity, the performance embodies what the International Year aims to celebrate: discovery as a shared human endeavor.
Join Us at Beyond Reality: Quantum Artistry
If Entangled Beauty is a chorus of voices, Beyond Reality: Quantum Artistry at Entangled Beauty conference is one of its most vivid solos. Join us at Athenaeum Center to watch quantum theory take shape in dance, conversation, and image. Experience Sandra Kaufmann’s vision, supported by the Hank Center, as it brings together art, science, and spirit in a performance that is as thought-provoking as it is inspiring.
Join us for the conference engagement of Entangled Beauty: Conversations on Quantum Science at the Athenaeum Center, September 12–14, 2025. Conference passes include access to all live presentations, performances, film screenings, and art exhibits throughout the weekend. Tickets are available now here or through the box office. Seating is limited, so advance purchase is recommended. For gallery hours and exhibit RSVPs, please check in at the box office.