Fringe

The Big Bite-Size Plays Factory Goes Down the Toilet at #edfringe

2000px-1020788-1This show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

Synopsis: We can’t promise you won’t get wet! Super silliness, ridiculously funny, become a sustainability secret agent and help save the planet! 2013 Latest Award winners Best Theatre Performance return with their five-star team and more award-winning plays for younger people. Find out first-hand about Poosey’s Ruined Ride, where the chamber pot went in The Wrong Thomas and why it went to trial by jury in Ms Wet Wipe versus The Crown!

For more information or to purchase tickets click HERE.

The World Mouse Plague at #edfringe

AwardThis show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

The show features a man who comes home from the shops to find he’s cohabiting with two friendly and peculiar-looking mice. Avoidance becomes intolerance as the two parties come up with increasingly ingenious methods to steer clear of each other. Hate propaganda, pest control instructions and current political policies are played out in a Tom and Jerry style battle over cream cake and biscuits. A wibbly wobbly world of silence, squelches, slaps and traps.

For more information or to purchase tickets click HERE.

Green Arts Initiative Spotlight: Puppet Animation Scotland

This post comes from Creative Carbon Scotlandpuppet-animation-WEB

Puppet Animation Scotland is an organisation that hosts festivals, support schemes and activities to encourage and develop the art form of professional puppetry. Their sustainable operations and green-tinged programming provide inspiration for the performing arts community at large, making them a valuable member of the Green Arts Initiative. Creative Carbon Scotland heard from Fay Butler, Festivals and Project Administrator at Puppet Animation Scotland, about the organisation’s recent developments and thoughts on sustainability.

CCS: What is your most recent action related to sustainable operations or programming?

PA: We are in the process of creating Environmental Information Packs for artists and venues that we work with. In doing so we aim to engage them in our environmental work – communicating our environmental commitments and giving realistic recommendations and practical support to make greener choices.

CCS: What have you most enjoyed about being a member of the Green Arts Initiative?

PA: We have enjoyed being part of a wider community of organisations/artists that we have not worked with before and to discover together new ways of addressing environmental sustainability in the arts.

CCS: What are you most eager about for the 2014 summer festivals season?

PA: We are excited to discover new productions working with puppets (i.e. James II at the Festival Theatre), as well as seeing some older classics (Ubu and the Truth Commission at the Royal Lyceum Theatre).

CCS: Do you have a top tip for new GAI members?

PA: We have found having an Environmental Action Plan for 2014-15 (with deadlines!) useful for putting ideas into action.


More information and programme of events can be found at Puppet Animation Scotland’s website.

Image credit: Puppet Animation Scotland

 

The post Green Arts Initiative Spotlight: Puppet Animation Scotland appeared first on Creative Carbon Scotland.

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Creative Carbon Scotland is a partnership of arts organisations working to put culture at the heart of a sustainable Scotland. We believe cultural and creative organisations have a significant influencing power to help shape a sustainable Scotland for the 21st century.

In 2011 we worked with partners Festivals Edinburgh, the Federation of Scottish Threatre and Scottish Contemporary Art Network to support over thirty arts organisations to operate more sustainably.

We are now building on these achievements and working with over 70 cultural organisations across Scotland in various key areas including carbon management, behavioural change and advocacy for sustainable practice in the arts.

Our work with cultural organisations is the first step towards a wider change. Cultural organisations can influence public behaviour and attitudes about climate change through:

Changing their own behaviour;
Communicating with their audiences;
Engaging the public’s emotions, values and ideas.

Go to Creative Carbon Scotland

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be-dom at #edfringe

This show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

be-dom_2014BEDOM_UKCheeky, clever, fun, charismatic, interactive… Be-Dom provides an infectious experience of epic proportions. Using nothing more than everything you can think of, the group will drag you into their crazy vaudevillian world. Back to Fringe after four years touring around the globe, Be-Dom now dares you to witness the premiere of their new show.

 

For more information on the show visit their website or to purchase tickets click HERE.

 

 

#GreenFests Highlights: Out of Water

This post comes from Creative Carbon Scotland

Hosted at an offsite location as part of the Summerhall Festival 2014 series, Out of Water begins with the audience being led across the expanses of Portobello Beach, meeting a collection of performers dressed in identical blue trousers and white shirts. Although not obvious, these performers are largely members of the local Portobello community, recruited by the artists for the series of one hour performances.

Sound is integral to the performance: each audience member is given a device whose headphones emit almost bewilderingly dislocated sound, drowning out the physicality of the immediate environment, individualising each audience member’s experience, and enabling the entrance into the life-world of the performing characters. Throughout the performance audience members experience shipping forecasts that progress into calls for help, and guidance about the flying patterns of geese when familial members are suffering. Jocelyn Pook’s score accompanies the collaborative ‘breathing’ of rope, and the ceasing of the music becomes a powerful tool in commanding the group of audience members.   Equally powerful is the voice of soprano, Laura Wright, whose sound manages to carry on the beach, culminating in a choral song from many of the uncharacterised performers.

Image: Tony Millings

Image: Tony Millings

Throughout the performance the notion of time is a central theme, most evidenced through the choice of of locating the production either at sunrise or sunset. The audience awareness of temporal passage is heightened by this, with the light distinction echoing the progression and change the piece depicts: it adds a certain gravity to the performance, the natural light change acting for technical benefit. Although the piece is abstract in nature, this passage of time, and the place of relationships and reciprocity within this time stand out. It is piece that lingers with the observer.

Out of Water does not only relate to sustainability through it’s direct examination and interaction with the physical environment: the piece is produced by Artsadmin, an organisation that aims to be a leader in the arts in responding to climate change through artistic practice, whilst finding ways to reduce the environmental impact of the arts. Throughout the development of the work, the notion of sustainable communities has also been given prominence with Paris and Wright’s liaison with artist and Portobello resident, Michael Sherin. The locally-recruited performers and performances are rooted in the community that they exist within, boosting social interaction and providing artistic opportunities to those who might not otherwise perform at the Fringe.

Out of Water is immersive, not only for its actors, but for those who witness the piece. In the sand and sea-exposed surrounds, it is a production that challenges its audience to confront their relationship to a natural threat and to human resilience: each common threads of growing sustainability concerns in our society.


Out of Water ran from 8-10 August 2014 with dawn and dusk performances at Portobello Beach. The production has been shortlisted for the 2014 Edinburgh Fringe Sustainable Practice Award.

Image credits: Tony Millings

The post #GreenFests Highlights: Out of Water appeared first on Creative Carbon Scotland.

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Creative Carbon Scotland is a partnership of arts organisations working to put culture at the heart of a sustainable Scotland. We believe cultural and creative organisations have a significant influencing power to help shape a sustainable Scotland for the 21st century.

In 2011 we worked with partners Festivals Edinburgh, the Federation of Scottish Threatre and Scottish Contemporary Art Network to support over thirty arts organisations to operate more sustainably.

We are now building on these achievements and working with over 70 cultural organisations across Scotland in various key areas including carbon management, behavioural change and advocacy for sustainable practice in the arts.

Our work with cultural organisations is the first step towards a wider change. Cultural organisations can influence public behaviour and attitudes about climate change through:

Changing their own behaviour;
Communicating with their audiences;
Engaging the public’s emotions, values and ideas.

Go to Creative Carbon Scotland

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Mates at #edfringe

photo-mainThis show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

With the human race threatened by a polluted environment, an environment that after prolonged exposure causes infertility, the government has created an incubator in which men and women are sent until they reproduce. While a database judges compatibility to match a man and woman with one another, a process similar to that of modern dating websites, even those unable to conceive have a place within this artificial reality, tracking the progress of assigned couples. Mates follows Sian as she oversees two couples, acting as their dysfunctional guardian angel and trying to counteract the government’s intentions for them.

For more information or to purchase tickets click HERE. 

 

SOS – Save Our Spaces at #edfringe

This show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

sos-save-our-spaces_2014SOSSAVF_JGSOS is a new musical comedy about a local community trying to save their town. Based on true events, it tells the mad story of one local area housing committee. Six eccentric characters gather to save their village green from the town planners. Is their community lost? Will politics or the common people win the day? An exciting 45 minute piece of new writing featuring live music, gags, mayhem and all kinds of fun and antics.

For more information or to purchase tickets click HERE. 

The Handlebards at #edfringe

This show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

handlebards-macbeth_2014HANDLEC_AHF“Four actors, four bicycles, 40 characters and a 2,000 mile adventure. The HandleBards – a madcap, all-male troupe of travelling players – are cycling to the Fringe from London on a UK tour. On just four bicycles they will carry all the necessary set, props, costumes and camping equipm
ent to perform two of Shakespeare’s greatest plays, Macbeth and The Comedy of Errors, at the beautiful Botanic Gardens. It’s Shakespeare done differently, an all-male, bike-powered, open-air, wild 1930s indie-folk romp.”

For more information on The Handlebards visit Peculius or to purchase tickets click HERE (Macbeth) or HERE (Comedy of Errors).

#GreenFests: Taking a Walk

This post comes from Creative Carbon Scotland

Featured Image: “A Walk At the Edge of the World” / Photo: Nicholas Bone

Creative Carbon Scotland’s blogger-in-residence Allison Palenske reflects on walking-inspired events at the Edinburgh Art Festival and Edinburgh Festival Fringe

In a city of street performers fighting tooth and nail for any sort of audible reaction from audience members, it seems strange for a performer to ask you to be silent. Silence, or more specifically walking in silence, is a common theme shared by a pair of productions at the Edinburgh Art Festival and Edinburgh Festival Fringe, offering audience participants a refreshing meditative experience amid Edinburgh’s buzzing festival atmosphere.

We joined Deveron Arts this past Friday, 1 August, for their Urbanscape + Ruralsprawl performance and discussion. The day was full with activity, being led by artists Tim Knowles and Ania Bas for walks in, around, up and down the sprawling corridors of Summerhall. To thematically complement our time with Deveron Arts, we also attended A Walk at the Edge of the World, a production by Magnetic North featuring actor Ian Cameron. The performance involved a silent walk along the Water of Leith, both beginning and ending at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, followed by Cameron’s performance, narrating a collection of anecdotes inspired by walks.

It is difficult to reflect on these events without tracing the history of walking within the contemporary arts, as important precedents have paved a metaphoric path for these more recent explorations. The artist and the walk is a methodology often explored and easily implemented, valuable to an artist’s singular practice but also more collaborative social practices.

Often thought to be the contemporary innovators of walking as an artistic practice, the Situationists were a group of artists and intellectuals active from the late 1950’s to early 1970’s. Inspired by Dada, Surrealism and Lettrism the group owes much of its leadership to Guy Debord (a French Marxist theorist, writer and filmmaker). The Situationists embraced the idea of the dérive– a directionless wander through the context of a landscape, most often a city landscape, with the intention of inciting a particular emotion or behaviour from the participant. With their strong political ties to Marxism, these walks also became an opportunity to react to the capitalist-driven rhythm of the contemporary industrialised city.

British land artist Richard Long is also indubitably relevant to the artistic practice of walking. Known for his “epic walks, sometimes lasting many days, to remote parts of the world,” Long’s creations embody his action through and within a landscape, turning over conventions of landscape representation by more conventional means. Falling somewhere between a meditation and an intervention, Long’s works are well recognised across the international art network.

Our time with Deveron Arts was split between a complete immersion of action through the context of Summerhall and more thoughtful provocations that arose from the afternoon’s seminar. The morning began with participatory performances by Ania Bas and Tim Knowles. Bas, co-founder of The Walking Reading Group on Participation, led us through Summerhall on the same route multiple times, altering the experience each time by asking participants to walk in pairs and either speak, remain silent or allow their partner to guide them as they walked with their eyes closed along the corridors. Knowles’ approach to participation involved a fast-paced jolt through Summerhall, using a communication technique similar to a game of Chinese whispers.

After the active-rich morning, the group reconvened at the Creative Scotland headquarters, to hear from artist/poet Alec Finlay and artist Gill Russell, along with Ania Bas and Tim Knowles, with artist/writer/curator Dave Beech.

Highlights from the afternoon session included the following-

Finlay shared thoughts from his work involving the reading of the Gaelic landscape through place names, often drawing attention to eroded ecologies of places whose names may no longer be illustrative of the environment specific to that given area. Finlay noted “nature is indifferent to our walking.”

Russell discussed her practice of walking, and how this methodology has exposed historical, geological, political and ecological layers of the landscape. She also shared a humorous anecdote about tracing an ancient Pict walk that was interrupted by a modern-day wind farm; an experience the artist described as drawing awareness to the “surreal duality of the area.”

Bas elaborated on her use of walking as methodology for communication and social behaviour, as she uses the techniques implemented earlier in the day at Summerhall with her walking reading group to provoke conversation and allowing for equal participation amongst all members.

Knowles’ projects bring both urban and rural applications of walking to his practice. Playing with concepts of being taken ‘wherever the wind leads you,’ or the translation of an immersive forest walk for a gallery context, Knowles’ work often brings a new context to participatory practice.

AwardShortly after attending Deveron Art’s Urbanscape + Ruralsprawl event and symposium we found ourselves “walk(ing) at the edge of the world” with performer Ian Cameron from Magnetic North. A Walk at the Edge of the World is a contender for the Edinburgh Fringe Sustainable Practice Award, due to its thematic links to sustainability and the low material impact of the production. The performance began with Ian Cameron requesting we remain silent during the entirety of a twenty-minute walk along the Water of Leith. As Summerhall hosted the event at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, the location of this walk provided a beautiful stretch of the city’s major waterway. While Cameron’s performances usually take place in more rural settings, the refuge of this hidden bit of the city provided a powerful immersive contrast for those who attended.

After a meditative walk, we were brought into a theatre to listen to Cameron’s monologue. Cameron explained his history of walking, citing a key instance of when he began walking freely, rather than adhering to a path prescribed by a guidebook. In this instance, he had been following a trail, out of a rather old guidebook he noted, that was abruptly interrupted by a motorway perpendicular to the path. After relying on the guidebook’s prescribed trails for a number of walks, Cameron’s mind was sent into a flurry- what does he do now, where does he go from here? Resolutely, he began following the motorway, quickly losing any sense of a trail, and thus realised that walking freely gave a sense of elation and infinite possibility.

What emerged from these performances and discussions is the idea that walking can be a convenient tool for contextual artworks. Using and working within the context that is already existing can be more effective than a permanent creation that simply responds to a remote context. An interesting provocation mentioned at the Urbanscape + Ruralsprawl discussion was the acknowledgment of the tension between capturing a moment permanently and the ephemeral act of walking. Aside from the aforementioned ideologies that are aligned with this mode of practice, the performances we recently viewed and discussed are extremely lo-fi in their production materials; rather than imposing a set and props on a location, the context is the set and the participants are the props and actors. The low material impact of these pieces on their respective contexts allows a more authentic experience, as well as a more environmentally sustainable one.

Whether a healthy pastime or a means to ‘jiggle thinking’ (in the words of Alec Finlay), walking as an artistic practice can reflect past environmental and social conditions and can also readapt itself infinitely to contemporary contexts.


Urbanscape + Ruralsprawl was a one-off event on 1 August 2014 organised by Deveron Arts in collaboration with the Edinburgh Art Festival. A Walk at the Edge of the World runs 6, 8, 10, 12-17, 19-24 August 2014 from 17.00-18.10 as part of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

Do you have experiences walking within an artistic context? We’d love to hear your thoughts via Twitter @CCScotland using #GreenFests

The post #GreenFests: Taking a Walk appeared first on Creative Carbon Scotland.

———-

Creative Carbon Scotland is a partnership of arts organisations working to put culture at the heart of a sustainable Scotland. We believe cultural and creative organisations have a significant influencing power to help shape a sustainable Scotland for the 21st century.

In 2011 we worked with partners Festivals Edinburgh, the Federation of Scottish Threatre and Scottish Contemporary Art Network to support over thirty arts organisations to operate more sustainably.

We are now building on these achievements and working with over 70 cultural organisations across Scotland in various key areas including carbon management, behavioural change and advocacy for sustainable practice in the arts.

Our work with cultural organisations is the first step towards a wider change. Cultural organisations can influence public behaviour and attitudes about climate change through:

Changing their own behaviour;
Communicating with their audiences;
Engaging the public’s emotions, values and ideas.

Go to Creative Carbon Scotland

Powered by WPeMatico

Song of the Earth at #edfringe

AwardThis show is part of the Fringe Sustainable Practice Award Shortlist – celebrating the greenest and most sustainable shows at the Fringe.

A woman escaping from noisy modern life finds herself in a garden, the shelter of gods, through an inner flux helped by songs, she shares reflections, visions and epiphanies. Can gardens be our natural rebellion against modernity? She tells thoughts of some extraordinary travellers and eternal spirits leading us towards secret truths: Hildegard von Bingen, Raimon Panikkar, Pierre Rabhi and Vita Sackville West. 45 minutes of trance, this electro-folk hypnotic musical will lead us to the depths of the earth, through enchanting metaphysical dimensions.

From Gruppo del Cerchio, written and directed by Carola Benedetto, translated and produced by Luciana Ciliento and performed by Susanna Paisio.

 For more information or to purchase tickets click HERE.