Gateshead International Festival of
Theatre Goes Digital in May
Gateshead International Festival of Theatre
Online: https://www.giftfestival.co.uk/
Friday 1- Sunday 3 May 2020
Gateshead International Festival of Theatre launches digital, tenth
edition programme of performance art and interactive events- to connect artists
and audiences to share, and inspire creativity.
This week the Gateshead International Festival of Theatre, (GIFT) announced a fully digital, thought-provoking programme of contemporary theatre, dance,
talks and workshops; featuring Jonathan Burrows, Matteo Fargion, Wendy
Houstoun,Tania El Khoury, Action Hero, Greg Wohead, Bertrand
Lesca and Nasi Voutsas, from Friday 1- Sunday 3 May 2020.
Aiming to entertain, inspire and reaffirm the importance of artistic and
cultural communities throughout the coronavirus pandemic, this year’s festival
features exciting UK premieres and an eclectic programme exploring human
connection, surveillance, resilience through crisis and international identity.
GIFT creates a vibrant, curated space for self-isolating artists and
audiences to harness domestic technology to encounter bold new works, share
human stories, build networks and discuss ideas. Over 30 performances
and events will be presented in real time, online at giftfestival.co.uk, and tickets are
available to book, from Friday 10 April.
GIFT was created to make extraordinary things happen across Gateshead,
and this year’s tenth edition will transport global artists and audiences at
home on sensory journeys to virtual locations, ranging from a radio studio
campervan in Europe and a detention centre, to a rock band escape, a tropical
getaway, and a kids catwalk birthday party.
Contemporary artists are once again invited to participate in GIFT by
pushing the parameters of their practice and performance genres; showing their
work, co-creating new pieces in response to the pandemic and other urgent
modern day issues, and meeting other artists at digital social events.
Alongside the main programme, a community of North East artists who regularly
engage with GIFT, including Unfolding Theatre, Gillie Kleiman and Rosa
Postlethwaite, will be offering bite-size online opportunities to welcome new
audiences, and facilitate conversations across the festival community.
GIFT 2020 performance highlights include:
Don't Worry Me By Atresbandes
Bertrand Lesca and Nasi Voutsas
Photo: Berta Vicente & Richard Perryman
|
Crack Of Dawn by Greg Wohead.
Photo: Paul Blakemore
|
Crack of Dawn: Online
premiere of Texan writer, performer and live artist, Greg Wohead’s improvised
durational, sunrise to sunset performance featuring four artists simultaneously
performing from different UK locations. In January 2009, Greg and his partner
found themselves in rural Illinois sitting at the kitchen table of a
traditional Amish couple. Secret thoughts, differing perspectives and apple
butter recipes are shared over a distance as one afternoon turns into a
strange, kaleidoscopic examination of empathy, assumptions, and the possibility
or impossibility of ever really understanding one another. Jokes recur, facades
slip and there might be Time After Time karaoke (Saturday 2 May).
Radioh Europa by Action Hero
Photo JMA Photography
|
RadiOh Europa- artists
Gemma Paintin and James Stenhouse of Action
Hero create a
24 hour international homage to love, in a new digital translation of their
continent-spanning work, Oh Europa, where they travel through Europe in a
motorhome recording strangers’ love songs. Audiences can tune in live to enjoy
all the love songs recorded to date by global performers, and newly recorded
songs from North East artists including Ross Millard of The Futureheads
and actor Charlie Hardwick. Since 2005, Action Hero have created
performances spanning theatre, live art, installation, multimedia and
site-specific practice, touring to over 30 countries across five continents
(Saturday 2 May, 9pm through to Sunday 3 May, 9pm).
As Far As Isolation Goes by Tania El Khoury & Basel
Zaraa.
Photo: Basel Zaraa
|
As Far as Isolation
Goes (Online). Lebanese artist Tania El Khoury and Basel Zaraa invite
audience members to individually take part in this thought-provoking
performance installation, using touch, sound and interactivity, to experience
the personal journey of one man’s detention centre inhumanity (Friday 1 May-
Sunday 3rd May, performances for one audience member at a time).
World premiere of
soundscape, Music For Lectures/ Get lost, written and spoken by Wendy
Houstoun with music by Jonathan Burrows, Francesca Fargion
and Matteo Fargion. A funny and deeply moving podcast show, a new
commission by GIFT, which invites audiences to listen to a short piece on
lostness through the medium of a rock band, while walking or running in a
moment of escape from the house, colliding travels with a virtual journey that
goes nowhere. Music for Lectures: Get Lost is the third of an ongoing series
conceived by Burrows and Fargion, inviting artists to deliver a talk, alongside
band accompaniment (available across the festival, for download- Friday 1 May-
Sunday 3 May).
Elision by Gudrun Soley Sigurdardottir
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Elision, by Icelandic
artist Gudrun Soley Sigurdardottir - In a climate of division and
disconnection, this live performance piece explores national identity through
an attempt to stay warm in a fake tropical set. A funny and tender show, which
invites the audience to work with materials and objects at home in the same way
as planned for a live theatre space, and draws on autobiography, pop culture
and ice in its many forms (Saturday 2 May, broadcast live from the artist’s
home).
Audiences can enjoy
two intimate Scratch performances by UK theatre makers Luca
Rutherford and Greg Wohead, over lunch, followed by a facilitated
feedback session, in a Scratch n’ Scran. SQUAWK is an ARC Stockton Production
co-commissioned by the Albany, Cambridge Junction and Theatre in the Mill,
presented by Luca Rutherford. A story of discovering quiet power in a moment of
making a lot of noise, SQUAWK is about the stories we tell, the ones that get
retold and the ones we hide behind. The ones we have the power to re-make,
re-mould and disrupt. Greg Wohead’s In Floods is an early-stage reading of new
material outlining the strange things that can happen when you unexpectedly
return to where you came from, for two back-to-back funerals. The lump in your
throat grows until there is no room for it (Saturday 2 May).
Ships-Ov-Fool by Gobscure.
Photo: Liz Rose Ridley
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Intimate live
performance installation ships-ov-fool, by writer-performer-artist and former
Sage Gateshead summer studio resident, gobscure international, followed
by a post-show conversation. In this new playful work, Newcastle-based gobscure
(Sean Burn) weaves together storytelling, soundscapes and objects inspired by
Hieronymous Bosch’s painting ‘Ship of Fools’, in which the artist once found
temporary peace. This playful performance questions those currently shouting
their sanity the loudest (Friday 1 May).
GIFT audiences will once again be at the forefront of the action this
year, from the comfort of their own homes. They can book to be the sole
participant in intimate interactive shows; workshop performance ideas; air and
share views in lively talks and debates and enjoy drinks and chats with artists
in GIFT’s virtual post show festival bar, from their own kitchens. Families can
take a break from entertaining children with a fun-filled, Little GIFT House
Party, offering hours of games and activities and the creative use of household
items, run by family-focused company Chalk.
Interactive art works, events, talks, debates and workshops
include:
Manifestos From Times Of Crisis - Scottish Artist Rosanna Irvine poses provocative questions
about our responses to the current global pandemic, in a new participatory
public art work, where groups of people connect across distances and
differences to come up with their own collective future manifesto. Conceived
during the current COVID19 outbreak, Manifestos From Times Of Crisis creates a
virtual gathering space to reflect on what is happening, how we are living -
and how we want to continue. Lively audience interaction guaranteed (Friday 1
May-Sunday 3 May).
International Working
and Sustainability- GIFT Festival Director, Kate Craddock, joins a panel of guest speakers
from arts venues and festivals across the world for a lively debate about
working internationally, its environmental impact and how to create artistic
projects more sustainably (Sunday 3 May).
The Atresbandes,
Bertrand Lesca and Nasi Voutsas post-show cocktail lounge- hold on to that
Friday night theatre feeling, with a post-show cocktail party in GIFT’s online
festival bar, hosted by Bert, Nasi and Atresbandes. Join the makers of It Don”T Worry Me E for a post show cocktail, curated playlists and chat. Audiences are
asked to bring their a-game small talk, internet connection, burning questions,
sincere and insincere reactions to the show. The place to hang out for
discerning theatre goers (Friday 1 May).
Making
Intergenerational Stories: Where have I been, where am I now, where am I
going?- CINAGE Live Director, Teresa Brayshaw, and performer and facilitator,
Hannah Butterfield, host a talk, film screening and accompanying workshop
designed to get people reflecting on their own experience of ageing. Based on
two innovative and ongoing practice-based research projects, CINAGE: Film &
CINAGE: Live, the session will encourage the telling of personal stories by
older people through the creative practice of film writing and theatre making.
The workshop will involve movement, speech and writing and is open to people of
all ages, with priority booking for people in Gateshead (Saturday 2 May).
Exploring Process: A lively workshop led
by Atresbandes, Bertrand Lesca and Nasi Voutsas, for theatre makers and artists
working across performance disciplines, which sees the artists explore their
own distinct methods for theatre making and the processes they encountered
coming together to create ‘IT DON’T WORRY ME’ (Saturday 2 May).
GIFT Festival Director, Kate Craddock, said: “Amidst the devastating and
hugely uncertain times that we face, we’re delighted to still be able to
deliver GIFT as a digital experience for artists and audiences this May. Packed
with new and experimental shows, sensory installations, practitioner workshops,
provocative talks and plenty of fun social events, we aim to make GIFT as
powerful as ever, and celebrate our tenth edition in style.
Little Gift House Party by Chalk
Photo: Dan McCourt for Chalk
|
“The festival was created to remove barriers between artists and
audiences, nurture creative communities and have fun together in the process.
It gives a crucial platform to otherwise underrepresented North East
contemporary artists and shares big ideas and creative responses to Gateshead,
as a site of regeneration and transition.This year, more than ever before,
we’re using GIFT’s spirit and energy as a vehicle for artistic communities, and
the millions of people impacted by this pandemic, to come together, to inspire
and encourage each other, maintain vital artistic conversations and champion
our human resilience and creativity.
“To keep the buzz of an ephemeral real-time festival, events will be
presented with their usual scheduled starts, audiences will have digital
tickets and can enjoy after-show virtual drinks and chats in the festival bar.
We’d love to see you this May for a very special GIFT 2020.”
All events will be hosted on giftfestival.co.uk. Tickets
are available to book, from Friday 10 April and audiences can make a Pay What
You Decide donation to support this year’s festival here.
GIFT is supported by artists, funders and partners including Arts
Council England, Gateshead Council and BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art.
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