Tag: Georgia Mizen

  • Joseph Mercier: ‘The erotic has a different appeal to that of pornography’

     

    Queerrrr
    Of Saints and Go-Go Boys: ‘exploring party culture through a queer lens’

    Joseph Mercier is a theatre director, choreographer and performer who is fast becoming known for his erotic, provocative dance. His latest work Of Saints and Go-Go Boys explores party culture through a queer lens. Brave, innovative and interrogative of the explicit, he is building a reputation with fearless and shocking work

    Of Saints and Go-Go Boys is said to “explore the world of misfits and sinners”. Where did this fascination come from?

    It has something to do with not necessarily my own sexual questioning, but witnessing that of others. As an extension of that, the idea of critical questioning is important to me. I’m always rubbing up against a limit, seeing how flexible it is; hanging out at a challenging place, purposefully shocking and provoking. The state of shock can be interesting: in this show it’s playful.

    What can we expect from this production?

    Viewers will be invited into a hyper-theatrical flat with three characters and guided through by a narrative. It’s instructive and interactive with a light touch. There’s too much to see and hear, but it’s intimate, with only thirty at each performance. It’s the kind of show in which you can decide your own experience.

    You’ve been described as a “choreographic provocateur” – is that an accurate description?

    It’s quite delightful! I do try to create provocative art – it’s my reason for making work. In the wider sense of the word, it’s engagement with critical thought in all sorts of ways, not just sexually. I love it – it’s a compliment. 

    Do you think there are any similarities between the Parisian underworld of the 1940s and queer culture in Britain today?

    A sense of hedonism definitely unites them. But now we’re living in a time where our lives are entirely monitored. In a funny way it’s like Foucauldian reverse discourse: now we’ve named everything there’s less room for fluidity. The queer family has been absorbed by heterocentric models. I’m curious about what happens to concepts of the queer family that Jean Genet describes in Our Lady of the Flowers. Our subculture has got smaller, and in this performance we contemplate that space – it’s a fantasy of that space, anachronistic and contemporary at once.

    What do you think is the enduring appeal of the erotic, outrageous and explicit?

    The erotic has a different appeal to purely that of pornography. We’re not honest as a culture about our bodies and how they relate to each other. Eroticism is important socially, and the body is overlooked. Explicitness is inherently of the body, and Of Saints and Go-Go Boys faces the viewer with the body laid bare. I think nudity is beautiful in all spectrums of the word.

    What do you want viewers to take away from this experience?

    I’d love for someone to come and start to think about the beautiful in the abject or profane. In Liverpool an audience member avoided the show in horror, but came again the next night – and had the same reaction. She later told us she was repulsed and intrigued, delighted and challenged, which was wonderful. In this back and forth, in and out production there’s a contradiction of emotion, and that’s just it.

    Of Saints and Go-Go Boys is at Toynbee Studios, 28 Commercial Street, E1 6AB from 17 – 19 July.

  • All night Macbeth to be staged in East London

    Rift's Macbeth: so foul and fair a play you might never have seen. Photograph: Camilla Greenwell
    Rift’s Macbeth: so foul and fair a play you might never have seen. Photograph: Camilla Greenwell

    Sleepovers can be dark, scary, sexy, curious: Rift’s Macbeth promises to be all this and more.

    Following the success of last year’s The Trial, enacted across Hoxton by this pint-sized, innovative theatre company, the outfit returns with Shakespeare’s timeless tragedy –  witches, conspiracy and murder being the perfect bedfellows for a midsummer’s eve.

    Fiery, sinister and timelessly eerie, Macbeth is a good choice for Rift to take on – their track record of producing immediate, stomach-churning theatre stands them in good stead to put on a knock-out show.

    This overnight production, staged in a ‘brutalist architectural masterpiece’ in East London until August, comes at a moment when immersive theatre is on everyone’s lips. Headed up by Felix Mortimer and Joshua Nawras, Rift – whose previous works include The Wall and O Brave New World – can be counted alongside Punchdrunk and Secret Cinema for pioneering an intensely interactive form of performance that places the audience at the centre of the action.

    Director Felix Mortimer says: “Macbeth will push the boundaries of form, experimenting with dreams and the subconscious. The audience will be taken in groups to the location, the action unfolding around them: they will be a part of it. This is an exciting stage in our development.”

    Macbeth promises its audience a thrilling night of intrigue and drama to awaken the imagination, and perhaps scare you silly. The play’s characters will visit the gathered crowd in the night, enacting the chilling events surrounding Duncan’s murder and finally waking you at dawn for the final act. ‘Macbeth seen from the inside out’ will be a feast for the senses, heightened by the dark and the outdoors; stepping inside the Scottish scourge, you will come “face-to-face with witches … feasting with the Macbeths … as a siege rages around you”. This may be the most outrageous invitation to bed you’ve ever received.

    Steel your nerves and take your place in the hallowed halls of this yet unknown location out east for a long night of toil and trouble.

    Macbeth will be at a secret East London location until August.

    www.macbeth.in

  • Walthamstow’s E17 Art Trail gets underway

    Robert Jackson's Industrial Readymades, on display at Oxfam, Walthamstow High Street. Photograph: Paul Coomey
    Robert Jackson’s Industrial Readymades, on display at Oxfam, Walthamstow High Street. Photograph: Paul Coomey

    Tolstoy said that art is “a means of union among men, joining them together in the same feelings, and indispensable for…life and progress”. E17 Art Trails takes this concept and runs with it. The tenth anniversary of the independent artist-run festival kicked off at the end of last month with a union of the very best art Walthamstow has to offer.

    Part of a wider movement towards showcasing local art in the place of its creation and discovering artists among us, this is an event that is truly inclusive of the entire community, forging a dialogue between locals, artists and businesses. The theme this year is ‘Inhabit’, focusing on integration and urban development. East London is sympathetic to the growth of new against the old – a point that will be explored in audio trails, bus tours and a spotlight on heritage.

    This project will explore both where and how we live, who we really are and where we came from through open houses, walking tours and installations. Highlights will include: 15 Day Forest, which will build a forest from visitors’ leaf creations; the photographic exhibition Underpass Distractions, documenting life in the slow lane; and 15 Upper Walthamstow Road, an open house that will display the works of Sharon Drew, Josh Berry and Mark Sowden. This year the festival has expanded to include food pop-ups, an exciting new venture that will feature local and organic suppliers.

    The festival is a platform for E17 and Waltham Forest artists, placing East London firmly on the artistic map. Three E17 alumni were this year listed for the Aesthetica Art Prize, testament to the influence of the festival that kickstarted the careers of artists showcased there, building them local audiences.

    Curator Paula Van Hagen says: “This is fundamentally an artist-led project, mapping E17 and celebrating the work of artists who live in our community. E17 Art Trail is probably the largest open access arts festival in Europe that deals in visual arts.  It’s not about formal spaces, it’s about open houses: now a worldwide movement that has its roots here. This festival is all thanks to the incredible local support.”

    E17 Art Trail is blazing the way for the future of local art. There is something to be marvelled at by adults and children alike in every corner of the trail – a community adventure of art on our doorstep.

    E17 Art Trail runs in various locations across the E17 postcode until 15 June.