sick! 2013
DESCRIPTION
The BasementTRANSCRIPT
INTERNATIONAL ARTS Festival1 MARCH - 16 MARCH 2013
FUNDERS
Brighton and SussexUniversity Hospitals
DUKE'S @
PARTNERS
east.by.south.east
beaconthe sussex
Registered Charity: 298388
Helen Medland
Artistic Director
Welcome to the first ever SICK! FestivalSICK! is an ambitious, international, cross-art form festival that seeks out new ways of talking
about and dealing with the experience of sickness of all kinds: physical, mental, ethical and spiritual.
It is about how our bodies and minds can act against us and against society’s expectations of what is
normal. It is about understanding and taking back control.
The diverse and engaging programme of performance, dance, film and digital art is framed by
presentations from leading medical practitioners and academics. Public debates will bring together
artists, health professionals and people for whom sickness is an urgent, present reality.
The festival is aimed at anyone who has ever been sick, cared for someone who is sick or struggled to
find the right words to talk about these difficult issues. Surely that is all of us. We invite you to reconsider
illness humanely, critically and sometimes with an irreverent humour as we seek out new languages
for understanding and dealing with illness.
Generously funded by the Wellcome Trust with support from Arts Council England and Brighton and Hove
City Council, SICK! 2013 is a pilot for a new annual international festival. We are delighted to be working
with a host of partners from the arts, healthcare services, local authorities and education establishments.
Without their support, input and guidance SICK! would have remained just an idea.
We hope to see you at the events within the festival programme, and look forward to hearing your thoughts.
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PERFORMANCE / INSTALLATION / MUSIC
Fri 1st March
11am – 6pm
The Basement
FREE
To apply see www.thebasement.uk.com/
whats-on
Sat 2nd March
8pm – 2am
£8 / £6 concs & under 25’s
The Basement
In the build-up to SICK! Supper Club, Bobby Baker will lead a free, day-long workshop for students and artists entitled ‘Culture Cake’. Over the course of the day, each participant will produce a brand new 3-minute solo performance drawing on participants own experiences and perceptions of illness, to be presented at Supper Club the following night. It’s not about making a polished piece, but a fresh and spicy bite-sized nugget of performance ingenuity. It’s also a great opportunity to work with a legend of performance art, meet other performers and take part in one of the most exciting contemporary performance nights in the country.
Defiant, daring and generous in equal measure, the legendary Bobby Baker hosts a SICK! Supper Club. As the patients take over the asylum, this evening of performance, film, installation and music will offer an exuberant celebration of peculiar, problematic and provocative bodies.
Supper Club has grown to become The Basement’s signature dish: a fantastic social night of intriguing occurrences and unexpected encounters taking place throughout the venue’s various subterranean spaces. Grab a tasty, home-made bite to eat and see what the night will hold. This evening’s artists include Jo Bannon, Tom Marshman, Martha Mosse, Jezebel & Oakenburg, Martin Lewton, James Wheale, Me & The Machine and students from the Brighton & Sussex Medical School.
QUICKFIRE WORKSHOPWITH BOBBY BAKER
SICK! SUPPER CLUBVarious Artists, HOSTED BY BOBBY BAKER
4 ENQUIRIES: 01273 699733 Book TICKETS: www.thebasement.uk.com
Work up an appetite for Supper Club by joining A Wall is a Screen – SICK!: A moving cinematic exploration of the architecture of the city starting at 6.30pm in Jubilee Square (see page 7).
Photo Andrew W
hittuck
Photo Andrew W
hittuck
Photo Klaas D
ierks
Videoclub AND The Basement present PERFORMANCE / FILM
A WALL IS A SCREEN - SICK!A SHORT FILM TOUR (GERMANY)
ENQUIRIES: 01273 699733 Book TICKETS: www.thebasement.uk.com 7
Sat 2nd March
STARTS 6:30pm
FREE
Begins at Jubilee Square
Created especially for SICK! A Wall is a Screen will lead an audience of festival-goers and passers-by on a unique, cinematic journey through the streets of Brighton. This free event will incorporate a host of SICK!-themed short films in a guerrilla-style intervention, transforming the architectural fabric of the city.
During the daytime, the streets are filled with life, fuelled by the businesses and work places. After business hours certain parts of the city become deserted. These are the places that A Wall is a Screen seeks out and reanimates. It is a combination of a guided city tour and a film night. Armed with a mobile projector, sound system and energy supply A Wall is a Screen makes unexpected connections between film and the city landscape: the location and passers-by seem to interact with the film, become part of it. Street noises seem to have an impact on the action of the plot. Thoughts and places that remain otherwise hidden are made visible.
Join us in Jubilee Square and see where the trail will take us, then after the tour, why not roll on to The Basement for Supper Club, a packed night of performance, video, installations and music (see page 4).
www.awallisascreen.com
Photo Klaas D
ierks
8 ENQUIRIES: 01273 699733 Book TICKETS: www.thebasement.uk.com
PERFORMANCE INSTALLATION / FILM
Sun 3rd March
3.30pm – 6pm
Free
The Basement
Blue Remix credits:
Design and performance: Yann Marussich
Artistic collaboration and lighting: Daniel Demont
Music composition: Clive Jenkins who remixes
Yann Gioria
Scenery construction: David Châtel
Production: Perceuse Productions Scènes
With the support of the City of Geneva, la Loterie
romande and Pro Helvetia
Mucus Factory credits:
Commissioned by: Live Art Development Agency, London, 2010
Supported by: Arts Council England
Live percussion: Becky Beyts
With thanks to: Ron Athey
BLEU REMIX: Yann Marussich (Switzerland)Bleu Remix is a stunning and unsettling visual meditation on the nature of the body - a reflection on the relationship between inside and outside. Over the course of one hour, Yann Marrusich’s body is transformed, as a blue liquid gradually and magically seeps through his skin. The physical pathways between the interior and the exterior are startlingly revealed, but more, a complex relationship between interior consciousness and public perception is established. A live soundtrack provides a haunting response to the performance.
MUCUS FACTORY: MarTIN O’Brien (UK)A durational performance-installation which subverts the common representations of people with severe illness as icons of bravery or eliciting sympathy by presenting a transgressive but more realistic image of what it means to have a severe chronic illness. Presenting his body as a medical specimen, O’Brien literally performs medicine, taking physiotherapy, a common treatment for Cystic Fibrosis, from the hospital to the gallery space.
SHORT FILM SCREENINGS IN COLLABORATION WITH THE LIVE ART DEVELOPMENT AGENCYA selection of films of documentation and performances to camera drawn from the Live Art Development Agency’s extensive archive. The works reflect the ways in which the practices of artists working with Live Art have engaged with and represented issues of illness in innovative and radical ways. www.thisisliveart.co.uk
UNDER OBSERVATIONAn afternoon of durationAL performance and video
Photo Marc G
remillon
Photo Marc G
remillon
Photo Ben van Duijn
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UK Premiere PERFORMANCE
Creation: Hans Man in’t Veld and Jochem Stavenuiter
Script: Jochem Stavenuiter
Director: Hans Man in ‘t Veld
Played by: Jochem Stavenuiter
Technician: Markus Schnizer
Thurs 7th March
Bar opens 7pm
Show starts 8pm
£10 / £8 concs & UNDER 25’s
The Basement
Eleonora is Jochem Stavenuiter’s mother. When he was fifteen years old, she suffered a stroke and, as a consequence, lost her memory.
Rooted in this true story, this honest and profoundly insightful performance is about forgetting who you are. It is about struggling to retain dignity and identity and about weekly visits to an Alzheimer clinic. It is also about hope, the hope that one day she will be cured.
For the past fifteen years, Dutch theatre company Bambie have been creating physical theatre that moves and amazes. Theatre in which the actors work up a sweat while letting their imaginations run riot. With Bambie, slapstick can go hand-in-hand with poetic choreography. This is theatre created ‘on the floor’, and forged by the bodies of the actors. What starts out with big themes and big emotions ends up as pursuits, death-defying leaps, mock battles and soothing rituals. The starting point is the body as reflector of the human soul. Impulses and urges, dreams and frustration are exaggerated until the characters on the stage are almost crushed beneath their weight.
Featuring a discussion between Jochem Stavenuiter and Dr. Sue Eckstein, Lecturer in Clinical and Biomedical Ethics at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, exploring the condition from personal, ethical and medical perspectives.
ELEONORAbambie (The Netherlands)
Photo Ben van Duijn
12 ENQUIRIES: 01273 699733 Book TICKETS: www.thebasement.uk.com
Sun 10th March
Bar opens 7pm
SHOW Starts 8pm
£10 / £8 concs & under 25’s
The Basement
Creative Team
Conceived & Created by: Kazuko Hohki
Performed by: Kazuko Hohki, Lewis Barfoot,
Colin Carmichael, Alastair Forbes & Max Hallett
Voice Over: Danielle Marshall
Dramaturgy: Andy Cox
Music by: Maxwell Hallett
‘Tesco’ song by: Lewis Barfoot
‘Incontinental’ lyrics by: Lewis Barfoot (based on
‘Continental’ by Con Conrad and Herb Magidson)
Animation: Andy Cox
Video, Design & Production Management:
Nao Nagai & Andy Cox
Producer: Joanna Crowley
This project has been supported by a Wellcome Trust
Small Arts Award
Drowning my hopes of romance The fear of losing control whilst I dance Hiding away from public eyes An invitation to Secrecy and Lies
Kazuko and Company invite you to join them for an incontinental cabaret of stories, situations, song, science and a spot of ballroom dancing exploring everyday control and what it means to loose it.
Incontinental is the new show from the multiple award winning Kazuko Hohki created in collaboration with artists Colin Carmichael, Lewis Barfoot, Andy Cox and Max Hallett in partnership with Professor Alastair Forbes and the Gastroenterology team at University College Hospital London.
‘Delightfully batty and bizarrely charming… a wonderfully eccentric piece of hokum.’ The Guardian (On Evidence for the Existence of Borrowers)
Featuring a discussion on the experiences and people suffering from incontinence and related conditions, with Kazuko Hohki and Prof. Alastair Forbes, Professor in Gastroenterology & Clinical Nutrition at UCL, chaired by Dr. Sue Eckstein, Lecturer in Clinical and Biomedical Ethics at Brighton and Sussex Medical School.
INCONTINENTALKazuko Hohki (UK)
PERFORMANCE
Photo Alex Brenner
Photo Alex Brenner
Photo THIS IS Studio
ENQUIRIES: 01273 699733 Book TICKETS: www.thebasement.uk.com 15
Thurs 14th March
TWO PERFORMANCES:
5pm (BAR OPENS 4pm)
9pm (BAR OPENS 8pm)
£10 / £8 concs & under 25’s
The Basement
limited capacity
Artists: Bobby Baker & Charlie Whittuck
Performance Development & Public Engagement:
Sian Stevenson
Technical Director: Steve Wald
Performer: Marie Collins
Stage Manager: Emma Cahill
Mad Gyms & Kitchens has been commissioned for Unlimited,
a project celebrating disability, arts, culture and sport as part
of the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad.
The project is principally funded by the National Lottery
through the Olympic Lottery Distributor.
Prepare to be surprised and delighted, moved and enlightened as Bobby Baker demonstrates how she achieves that ultimate ‘wellbeing’ factor. From working out to chilling out, via the kitchen sink, Bobby’s ‘wellness roadshow’ investigates how to get better at feeling better – cup of tea included.
Bobby Baker is one of the most popular and acclaimed performance artists working today. In a career which spans nearly four decades she has, amongst other things, danced with meringue ladies, made a life size edible version of her family and driven around the streets of London strapped to the back of a truck yelling at passers by to ‘Pull Yourselves Together’.
‘…what Baker is offering is not a show but a priceless gift wrapped in a theatrical box of tricks.’ Lyn Gardner, The Guardian
‘I would go without food for a week just to get a ticket for her next show’ Nigel Slater, The Observer
www.dailylifeltd.co.uk
MAD GYMS AND KITCHENSBobby Baker (UK)
PERFORMANCE
Photo THIS IS Studio
16 ENQUIRIES: 01273 699733 Book TICKETS: www.thebasement.uk.com
Fri 15th March
BAR OPENS 7:30pm
SHOW STARTS 8:30pm
£10 / £8 CONCS & UNDER 25’s
The Old Market
Concept and direction: Giulio D’Anna
Creation and performance: Giulio e Stefano D’Anna
Production and direction assistance:
Agnese Rosati
Original soundtrack: Maarten Bokslag
Light and set design: Theresia Knevel and
Daniel Caballero
Produced by: Fondazione Musica per Roma, stichting Gillen
In collaboration with: Officina Concordia and
Civitanova Casa delle Danza
With the support of: Danceworks of
Luana Bondi-Ciutti, Anna Maria Quinzi
Winner of the 2011 Premio Equilibrio Roma
Two generations, Father and Son, confront each other on stage, telling the story of their relationship through their two, very different bodies: A 62 year-old therapist with no dance experience and a 31 year-old choreographer.
A journal of personal events is revealed, shared through the lines of the skin and the shapes of two bodies tied by blood and their stories. An intimate shared choreography responds to the limits set by the disease and the differences of age and youth. Limitations become opportunities and to tell the two stories and shine a light on the moments that make existence memorable. Parkin’son is a memorial and a manifesto, an exorcism of that which haunts past, present and future.
Featuring a discussion on Parkinson’s disease, giving an insight into the clinical features of the disease and its effect on the lives of those with the condition with Dr. Adam Harper, Consultant Geriatrician, Royal Sussex County Hospital and Giulio D’Anna chaired by Bobbie Farsides, Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics at Brighton and Sussex Medical School.
South East Dance and The Basement present
PARKIN’SONGiulio D’Anna (Italy/The Netherlands)
UK Premiere PERFORMANCE / DANCE
Photo Cinzia C
amela
Photo Cinzia C
amela
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SAT 16th march
TWO PERFORMANCES:
4pm & 6pm
bar openS 3pm
£10 / £8 CONCS & UNDER 25’s
THE BASEMENT
LIMITED CAPACITY
Supported by: Arts Council England
the vacuum cleaner is an Artsadmin Associate
Artist and a co-founder of the Laboratory of
Insurrectionary Imagination (2004 – 2009)
The Metropolitan Police call him a Domestic Extremist.
The NHS have labeled him as Schizophrenic, Bi-Polar and more recently Borderline Personality Disorder.
‘A real and present threat to the safe running of our lawful business’ is how E.ON described him at the Royal Courts of Justice.
He prefers the term Mental.
After 10 years of being an outlaw and inpatient, artist activist ‘the vacuum cleaner’ presents an autobiographical performance told through his psychiatric records, police intelligence files and corporate injunctions collected through the Data Protection Act.
This show contains material some may find challenging, and is not suitable for people under the age of 16.
‘the vacuum cleaner is one of the most significant and exciting artists working in the UK today. Blurring the boundaries between art and audiences and between performance and politics, the vacuum cleaner’s work not only gets people thinking about things, but actually doing things to effect social, cultural and political change.’ Lois Keiden, Director, Live Art Development Agency
www.thevacuumcleaner.co.uk
MENTALthe vacuum cleaner (UK)
PERFORMANCE
FILM
Sun 3rd MarchSTARTS 1pm
Duke’s at KomediaAdult £9.50, Member £7.50
ConcS £8.50, Child £5.50Family of 4 £26.00
Book AT: www.picturehouses.co.uk
0871 902 5728
Michael Haneke’s masterful, heartbreaking film is compelling tribute to a marriage tested by the onset of illness. Elderly couple Georges and Anne, retired music teachers, live a contented life enjoying one another’s company in Paris. When Anne suffers a stroke, Georges must learn to care for her in an entirely new way. Oscar-nominated and winner of the Palme d’Or, this exquisite, beautifully acted film is undoubtedly one 2012’s finest.
AMOUR (12A) PRESENTED BY CINECITY AND THE BASEMENT
Director: Michael Haneke, Introduction: DR. KHALID ALI: Senior Lecturer in Geriatrics, Brighton & Sussex medical School / Stroke consultant physician, Princess Royal Hospital, Haywards Heath
Wed 13th MarchDoors 5:30pm, Starts 6pm
Sallis Benney TheatrePanel discussion from 8pm
register for your free ticket at: www.sussexbeacon.org.
uk/asmaa
This visually beautiful film captures the experience of an Egyptian woman facing the challenges of life with HIV. Profoundly moving, the film depicts her daily battle with prejudice and discrimination. Featuring acclaimed actor Hend Sabry in the title role, this is more than simply a film about HIV, it is a film about fear, endurance and courage.
This event is organised by The Women and Families Service at The Sussex Beacon, a charity which supports people living with HIV both locally and nationally.
ASMAA PRESENTED BY THE SUSSEX BEACON AND THE BASEMENT
Director: Amr Salama, FOLLOWED WITH A Discussion, ChairED BY Dr. Khalid Ali
Mon 11th MarchSTARTS 6:30pm
Duke’s at KomediaAdult £9.50, Member £7.50
ConcS £8.50, Child £5.50Family of 4 £26.00
book AT: www.picturehouses.co.uk
0871 902 5728
OUR CHILDREN (À perdre la raison) ADVANCE PREVIEW, PRESENTED BY CINECITY AND THE BASEMENT
Director: Joachim Lafosse, Introduction: DEBORAH BOWMAN, Professor of Bioethics, Clinical Ethics and Medical Law at St. George’s, University of London
Young, effervescent and full of life, Murielle has a promising future ahead of her when she meets and falls for the handsome Mounir. A wedding soon follows, and the happy couple move in with Mounir’s adoptive father. As Murielle brings new life into the family in the form of four beautiful young girls, the tensions rise between her and the controlling Doctor. This intense, multi-layered dissection of an unorthodox family unit is based on real-life events.
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Fri 15th March
STARTS 6:30pm
Free
THE OLD MARKET
Visit The Basement’s website for full profiles
on the speakers
We have all been sick yet sickness remains resolutely the other, different, hidden, a transgression against what we think we should be. Despite its many forms and degrees of intensity, we define and separate it, build walls around it and bury it. How can we as individuals, family members, friends, members of society, healthcare professionals and sufferers find more direct ways of talking about difficult subjects? The panel includes Professor Bobbie Farsides and Lois Keidan.
BREAKING TABOOSThurs 14th March
STARTS 6pm
Free
Sallis Benney Theatre
Visit The Basement’s website for full profiles
on the speakers
ONLINE / interactive
DEBATE
DEBATE
We all know a sick joke or two. Some are about sickness. Some reveal hidden truths about unpleasant experiences. Some reveal attitudes and prejudices that we find unacceptable. Sick Notes is an online video archive of over 100 patients, doctors, comedians and members of the public telling their favourite (or least favourite) sick jokes and funny stories about illness. Artist, activist and political gadfly Richard DeDomenici has been commissioned to track down and record the best and most inappropriate sick jokes. The website will be launched at the start of the festival and gradually grown by Richard DeDomenici over the course of 2013. How do different groups of people say the unsayable and use humour to deal with physical and mental illness? Go to www.sick-notes.com to find out.
SICK NOTESRichard DeDomenici: www.sick-notes.com
The website will be launched at the start
of the festival and gradually grown by
Richard DeDomenici over the course of 2013
The world is designed for people who are ‘well’, so being ‘well’ can be defined as belonging to the category for which the world is designed. If you do not fit, does this make you sick? This debate looks at the way in which illness can be seen as a social rather than physical or medical condition. It will explore the possibilities of changing social perceptions and finding new ways of living, and consider the role that the arts might play in this process. The panel includes Dr. Sue Eckstein, Gillian Bendelow, Lisa Rodrigues and ‘the vacuum cleaner’.
WHO SAYS I’M SICK?
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DUKE'S AT KOMEDIA 4
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THE OLD MARKET
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Funded by: