Various Artists

Twine: Open Discussion + Q&A

Saturday 19 October 2024, 4.00pm5.30pm

144 Potters Ln
Birmingham, B6 4UU United Kingdom
+ Google Map
90 minutes | Free | 16+

Free

A person stands in the doorway of a mobile home. On the side of the mobile home, written on individual pieces of newspaper: son, mother, daughter, father, baby.

Bobby Baker, Documented by Andrew Whittuck

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Inspired by Twine, what is the future of care, family and love? 

Join Selina Thompson Ltd, Dr Claire McGettrick born Lorraine Hughes (Co-founder of Adoption Rights Alliance& Justice for Magdalenes Research), Sarah O Brien (Oral Historian and Lecturer at MCI) and artist Marley Starskey Butler for an informal discussion, a welcome opportunity to share, listen and reflect. 

The discussion will take place directly after the matinee performance of Twine on Saturday 19th October (2pm) and is included as part of the ticket to the performance. You can attend this Open Discussion and Q&A without attending Twine

If you would like to dig deeper into the themes in Twine,  you can find a reading list here

About Canopy

Canopy is a series of artistic projects that investigates and maps the ways in which adoption moves people, money and national values across the world. Over the last two years, Selina Thompson Ltd has been connecting with adult adoptees, adopters, foster parents, social workers, community organisers, academics and artists resonating reflections on a global scale. The research to date has taken us to Dublin, Cork, Berlin, Hannover, Beijing, Birmingham and beyond, as we seek to build a collaborative, global community of adult adoptees (who are also artists), researchers, sociologists, historians, legal experts, ecologists, architects and valued partners. Twine is one output of the Canopy project. 

If you have any questions about the Canopy project or would like to connect with us please contact projects@selinathompson.co.uk or sign up to our mailing list at https://selinathompson.co.uk

 

Details

Saturday 19 October 2024

4.00pm

Legacy Centre of Excellence

crazinisT artisT, enormousface, Oozing Gloop (Accra / New York City / Berlin)

Talk: Get Out Of My Swamp

Saturday 15 October 2022, 11.30am12.45pm

Broad Street
Birmingham, B1 2EA United Kingdom
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75 mins

Free

Alex Nazarov

Join three singular artistic outsider voices for this discussion that questions our understandings of art, time, humanity and the planet! Themes running throughout the incredible bodies of work by enormousface, crazinisT artisT and Oozing Gloop include the reinvention of the self, the body as political site, swamps, garbage, internet culture and Donna Harraway’s theories of the Chthulucene.

Join this lively discussion as the artists discuss their practice and hopes for the future.

Fierce Says

We couldn't invite these three incredible artists to the festival and not get them together to have a lil chin wag. You're welcome!

Details

Saturday 15 October 2022

11.30am

Festival Hub @ Symphony Hall

Saeborg (Tokyo)

Talk: Half Human, Half Toy

Friday 14 October 2022, 2.00pm3.00pm

Broad Street
Birmingham, B1 2EA United Kingdom
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In partnership with the University of Sheffield. Supported by the Daiwa Foundation and the Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation.

60 mins. Free

Free

A latex pig with it's middle portion missing revealing it's ribcage and organs. It looks into the camera with a surprised look and it's hoofs by it's face.

”Saepork-1” photo:ZIGEN

A giant latex pig poses lying partially on the ground and partially sat up.

”Saepork-1” photo:ZIGEN

Tokyo-based artist Saeborg describes themselves as “an imperfect cyborg – half human, half toy”. Their work emerged out of the queer club scene in Tokyo, each piece beginning as a costume for Department-H, a nightclub and fetish party that has been running in the city since the early 1990s.

Saeborg creates inflatable worlds of latex, nightmarish and cute configurations that are stages for huge toy-like creatures to perform mythical fables of life and death. Saeborg’s aim in making these works, is “to transcend gender” and to move beyond the restrictions of human bodies to escape strict gender roles in Japanese culture. Using livestock and insects as analogies for society’s expectations and treatment of women, Saeborg creates worlds that are inhabited by creatures that “humans consider the basest of our ecosystem”.

Saeborg also presents their performance Pig Pen, as part of our party – Club Fierce: The Ho Down.

Saeborg, assisted by a translator, will be in conversation with Mark Pendleton from the University of Sheffield. Dr Mark Pendleton is Senior Lecturer in Japanese Studies at the University of Sheffield.

Details

Friday 14 October 2022

2.00pm

Festival Hub @ Symphony Hall

Living Room Talks

Sex(uality) and the City: Queer Resistance in Neoliberal Spaces

Sunday 17 July 2022, 2.30pm4.00pm

54-57 Allison St
Birmingham, B5 5TH United Kingdom
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Birmingham 2022 Festival Present
ACCESS: this event will be live streamed via Fierce's Instagram: @fiercefestival

60 minutes

Free

Sold out

Ajamu X

Mo Moulton

Yshee Black

Image of a person with a big pink bow in their pink hair, wearing a pink ruffle dress.

Lacey Lou

Late capitalism has produced British cities with a decline in industry, massive socioeconomic inequalities and an environment that is more hospitable to business than it is to human lives. Reflecting on the ways in which queer lives offer possibilities of resisting this bleak status quo, this panel considers queer lives that use the city as a springboard for ways of living that resist the lifecycles of capitalism, offering hope in an otherwise cataclysmic political landscape.

Including speakers Mo Moulton, Ajamu X, Yshee Black and Lacey Alexandria.

Mo Moulton
Mo Moulton is a queer writer, a historian of the twentieth century, and an extremely-privileged migrant to this island. They work at the University of Birmingham's History Department and have published widely on subjects ranging from agricultural cooperatives to detective fiction.

Yshee Black
The self-proclaimed Alison Hammond of drag – Yshee Black – is loud, bubbly and always up for a laugh & known for her high energy performances. She hosts a lip-sync competition in Birmingham called “The Church of Yshee” that she started in 2017. On top of hosting and producing events around the UK, she hosts the Popbuzz Year Book that interviews the alumni of Canada’s Drag Race, Drag Race down under and Drag Race UK Series 2 & 3. Currently, she is working in London with Tuckshop on various projects such as The Crown drag competition and the West End Drag Panto “Dick Whittington”.

Ajamu X
Ajamu X (aka Master Aaab) is a darkroom/fine art, neurodivergent photographer, archive curator and radical sex activist. His practice incorporates portraits, nudes and studio-based constructed imagery which unapologetically celebrates black queer bodies, the erotic, pleasure and difference. His work has been shown worldwide in museums, galleries, and alternative spaces. He is the co-founder of rukus! Federation and the award-winning rukus! Black LGBTQ Archive. He is one of the UK’s leading black queer heritage, history, and cultural memory specialists. Most recently, he has co-founded Spit & Spider Press, an alternative publishing venture focusing on the radical materiality of the book.

Lacey Alexandria
Lacey Lou is a freelance event manager, visual artist and advocate for Diversity & Inclusivity. She began as one of Birmingham’s first female drag queens 8 years ago and has worked ever since to create a more inclusive community within Birminghams LGBTQ+ village and surrounding areas. One of her most proud achievements was working on the amendment of the dictionary definition of ‘Drag Queen’ to be gender inclusive. Lacey also began running inclusive events, which are still running including ‘Glitter Shit’, ‘Disco Pussy’, ‘Hooker Club’ and newly launched ‘Hu$$y’. Some of these events have been featured in Dazed and Confused Magazine, Teen Vogue and were part of Red Bulls Top LGBTQ+ events to attend in the UK.

The Living Room Talks

Based loosely on the eighteenth-century French salon, the Living Room invites you in. Recognising the exclusivity of the salon, and its associations with heteronormativity, whiteness, and elitism, The Living Room instead seeks to promote the voices and experiences of LGBTQ+ folk, first nations/indigenous people, and QTIPOC. Reflecting on some of the themes that have informed the programming and artistic work of the Healing Gardens of Bab, the Living Room invites you in for conversations with local and international artists, activists and queer icons. We hope to see you in the Living Room for a brew and a chat soon!

The Living Room talks have been conceived by Hassan Hussain and Patrick Vernon.

Details

Sunday 17 July 2022

2.30pm

Warehouse Cafe

£0.00

Sold out!

Living Room Talks

Cruise Britannia: Imperial Histories of Sexuality

Monday 11 July 2022, 6.00pm7.30pm

Chamberlain Square
Birmingham, B3 3DH
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Birmingham 2022 Festival Present
ACCESS: Talk will be live streamed via Fierce's Instagram @fiercefestival

90 minutes

Free

Join the artists behind Duckie’s performance ‘Princess, Picnic Promenade’, for this fun and fascinating chat. Focusing on the relationships between empire, Britishness, sexuality, and racism, this discussion grapples with many of the themes that have informed the Healing Gardens of Bab programme.

The Living Room invites you to join artists EJ Scott (of the Museum of Transology), Bird La Bird, Ange Loft (of Jumblies Theatre, Toronto), Alaska B, Kieron Jina and more, as they offer an insight into the queer histories and stories that animate their artistic work, and the political messages they want to communicate.

The Living Room Talks

Based loosely on the eighteenth-century French salon, the Living Room invites you in. Recognising the exclusivity of the salon, and its associations with heteronormativity, whiteness, and elitism, The Living Room instead seeks to promote the voices and experiences of LGBTQ+ folk, first nations/indigenous people, and QTIPOC. Reflecting on some of the themes that have informed the programming and artistic work of the Healing Gardens of Bab, the Living Room invites you in for conversations with local and international artists, activists and queer icons. We hope to see you in the Living Room for a brew and a chat soon!

The Living Room talks have been conceived by Hassan Hussain and Patrick Vernon.

Artist Biographies

Ange Loft
https://www.angeloft.ca/

Ange Loft is an interdisciplinary performing artist and initiator from Kahnawà:ke Kanien’kehá:ka Territory, working in Tsi Tkarón:to. She is an ardent collaborator, consultant, and facilitator working in arts based research, wearable sculpture, theatrical co-creation and Haudenosaunee history. She teaches Story Creation at Centre For Indigenous Theatre (2021) and was the Artist in Residence  at OISEE/ JHI (2021). She’s creating new performance work as Centaur Theatre’s Artist in Residence (2021-22) and as director of the Talking Treaties initiative with Jumblies Theatre + Arts, with projects including; experimental film and workshop series Dish Dances (2021) in collaboration with Centre for Indigenous Theatre, video and installation By These Presents: “Purchasing” Toronto (2019), and outdoor promenade theatre Talking Treaties Spectacle (2017, 2018). Upcoming collaborations include Black Creek Pioneer Village’s Changing the Narrative initiative (2022) and placemaking with the Canadian Centre for Architecture (2022). Ange’s been the Associate Artistic Director of Jumblies Theatre + Arts since 2015 and a touring vocalist and designer with Yamantaka//Sonic Titan since 2012. She’s holds advisory roles with Native Women In the Arts as a Board member (2021), OCAD University’s Indigenous Education Council (2021), City of Toronto Indigenous Arts and Cultural Advisory for the Indigenous Arts and Culture Partnerships Fund (2018), and Toronto Biennial of Art Advisory Council (2018-21).

Alaska B
https://www.alaskab.ca/

Based in Toronto, Ontario, alaska has a Bachelor in Interdisciplinary Arts from Concordia University, a degree in Computer Animation from Sheridan college, and a passion for exploring the intersection between media and technology. Known for her problem solving skills, creative approach, and mix of expertise, her practice moves fluidly between digital media production, installation and musical performance. Her unique skill range has seen her trouble shoot as theatrical technician for large scale community engaged performances; produce and present her own animations and intermedia creations; and to build a striking musical catalogue that is grand in scope. As a composer and performer, her award-winning film and game scores (Canadian Screen Award 2019, Canadian Game Awards 2016) and songwriting (Polaris Prize nominated, Juno Awards nominated) have been heard all over the world. Her film work includes Through Black Spruce (2018) and Michael Shannon Michael Shannon John (2015). Her video game credits include Mark of The Ninja (2012) and the critically acclaimed Severed (2016, PS VITA, 3DS, WiiU, Switch, iOS).

Bird La Bird
https://www.birdlabird.co.uk/

Bird la Bird is an artist who straddles comedy and performance art. Drawing on her love of history and art Bird has created highly popular queer people’s history tours of the V&A, Tate Britain, the National Portrait Gallery and the City of London.

E-J Scott
https://www.e-jscott.com/home/media

E-J Scott is a curator, cultural producer and academic and was awarded the UK’s Museum Activist Award 2020/21. He is the founder of the museumoftransology.com and the British Digital Art Network (Tate/Paul Mellor Research Centre). He is Stage 2 and 3 Leader of the BA (Hons) Culture, Curation & Criticism at Central St Martins.

Kieron Jina
https://kieronjina.com/

Kieron Jina, based in Johannesburg, South Africa, specializes in performance art, choreography, photography and video art to tell personal stories that are underpinned by activism and to challenge stereotypes. He has an MA in Drama from the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. Jina was awarded Mail & Guardian’s 200 Young South Africans: Arts and Culture, category for performance art. Furthermore, he was awarded danceWEB Scholarship at the ImPulsTanz – Vienna International Dance Festival. Jina has won multiple awards including the Ovation Award for choreography at the National Arts Festival & the Goethe-Institute International Coproduction Fund to create “Down to Earth” at Tanzfabrik Berlin. Jina completed artistic residencies that lead to collaborative performances and art creations in Brazil, Germany, Austria, France, Réunion, Nigeria, Tanzania, South Korea and Switzerland. He is the founder and curator of Queer Art Night South Africa and is currently touring with “#FemmeInPublic”, “Down to Earth” and “PINK MON€Y”.

Jina is creating more spaces for art that exists for people of colour (POC) and indigenous performance practices from different African regions. Jina is particularly interested in the challenges and complexities of the transitional millennial generation — a generation that experienced the end and fall of apartheid only to be flung into a country still grappling with its own trauma and healing. Jina studies this dynamic particularly in their exploration of the shifting identities of queer people of colour, a group that features centrally in their work.

Healing Gardens of Bab Funders

Details

Monday 11 July 2022

6.00pm

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery

£0.00

Tickets not on sale

Living Room Talks

On Our Knees: Queerness, Faith and Spirituality

Tuesday 5 July 2022, 6.00pm7.30pm

54-57 Allison St
Birmingham, B5 5TH United Kingdom
+ Google Map

Birmingham 2022 Festival Present

90 minutes

Free

The relationship between queerness and faith is often seen as an antithetical and antagonistic one, as evidenced by recent high-profile protests in Birmingham. This panel explores the ways in which LGTBQ+ people incorporate faith and/or spirituality into their daily lives, and the ways in which sexualities can inform faith and spiritual practices. This conversation offers an informal space to discuss, unpack and navigate our communities’ complex relationship with religion and beyond.

This talk includes speakers Hafsa Qureshi, Chris Dowd and Robert Stacey.

Robert Stacey
Rob is the Pagan chaplain for Aston University and is the LGBTQIA officer for the West
Midlands branch of Pagan Federation. He is asexual has a husband Richard who is an
atheist. Rob has written a Charge of the Mutable One as a Pagan invocation for those who
sit outside the binary gender. He writes and performs poetry and stand-up comedy as well as
being a D&D nerd.

Hafsa Qureshi
Hafsa (any pronouns) is an openly bi and genderqueer Muslim, working to raise visibility and
awareness for their community. By talking about faith, sexuality and disability, she wants to
help destigmatise people’s perceptions of queer people of faith. She currently works within
content development for Stonewall (UK)

Chris Dowd
I grew up in Australia in a socially and theologically conservative community but when I left
to go to university, I realised that faith is a very complicated thing and easy answers are
rarely satisfactory. After immigrating to the UK in 1995, I worked for a consulting firm before
opening my own in 1998. During this time, I became a self-supporting minister who planted
two congregations for a small LGBTQ+ focussed denomination that I had joined in Australia.
I transferred to the United Reformed Church in 2013 and after finishing my doctorate, I took
up my first post in Hull in 2015. In late 2019 I arrived in Birmingham, with my partner Will,
our 2 dogs, and a flock of chickens. Since 2015 I have co-authored two books about how
churches can affirm trans and non-binary people and am currently researching with 3 other
LGBT clergy about the experiences of LGBTQ clergy in England.

Living Room Talks

Based loosely on the eighteenth-century French salon, the Living Room invites you in. Recognising the exclusivity of the salon, and its associations with heteronormativity, whiteness, and elitism, The Living Room instead seeks to promote the voices and experiences of LGBTQ+ folk, first nations/indigenous people, and QTIPOC. Reflecting on some of the themes that have informed the programming and artistic work of the Healing Gardens of Bab, the Living Room invites you in for conversations with local and international artists, activists and queer icons. We hope to see you in the Living Room for a brew and a chat soon!

The Living Room talks have been conceived by Hassan Hussain and Patrick Vernon.

Details

Tuesday 5 July 2022

6.00pm

Warehouse Cafe

£0.00

Tickets not on sale

Living Room Talks (Birmingham)

Queerly Beloved: Chosen Families and LGBTQ+ Communities

Thursday 30 June 2022, 6.00pm7.30pm

Bromsgrove Street
Birmingham, B5 6RG United Kingdom
+ Google Map

Birmingham 2022 Festival present

90 minutes

Free

Bhenji Ra & Justin Shoulder

Image: Jess Dobkin by David Hawe

This talk explore the ways in which queer people subvert traditional relationships, the benefits of saying f*ck you to the heteronormative status quo, and the ways in which resistance informs ground-breaking art. Through a conversation reaching right across the globe, Canadian artists Jess Dobkin and Clayton Lee, and Australian artists Justin Shoulder and Bhenji Ra discuss themes such as alternative forms of kinship, belonging, and social/artistic practices which bring LGBTQ+ people together.

Living Room Talks

Based loosely on the eighteenth-century French salon, the Living Room invites you in. Recognising the exclusivity of the salon, and its associations with heteronormativity, whiteness, and elitism, The Living Room instead seeks to promote the voices and experiences of LGBTQ+ folk, first nations/indigenous people, and QTIPOC. Reflecting on some of the themes that have informed the programming and artistic work of the Healing Gardens of Bab, the Living Room invites you in for conversations with local and international artists, activists and queer icons. We hope to see you in the Living Room for a brew and a chat soon!

The Living Room talks have been conceived by Hassan Hussain and Patrick Vernon.

Healing Gardens of Bab Funders

Details

Thursday 30 June 2022

6.00pm

The Loft, Penthouse

£0.00

Tickets not on sale