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Friday, May 24th, 2024

Queer-led creative arts organization HOME LIVE ART is bringing its arts festival KNOTTY back to Hastings UK

 

Queer-led creative arts organisation Home Live Art is bringing its arts festival Knotty back to Hastings over the first two weekends of June. Bigger and bolder than ever, this year’s Knotty festival features work from 20 adventurous artists in eight events across four venues: Hastings Museum and Art Gallery, White Rock TheatreMini Playhouse and Stables Theatre, plus outdoor locations in Hastings Town Centre. Most of the programme is free or offers a sliding scale according to what ticket buyers can afford.  

Katy Baird, Artistic Director of Home Live Art, says ‘I am thrilled to bring Knotty back to Hastings! This year’s programme features remarkable local, national and international artists, alongside community participants. In bold, provocative and joyful encounters, we invite audiences both to question the world we live in, and to actively create spaces where we can reimagine and redefine our future together. We take pride in continuing to showcase ground-breaking artists in Hastings, further enhancing the town’s well-deserved reputation as a daring, forward-thinking cultural hub.’

Knotty includes a programme of four performances co-curated  with Claudine Eccleston, founder of Playing the Race Card, a local arts and social justice organisation focusing on celebrating Black excellence and supporting relevant art and artists. Accompanying the current Black Joy! Up Close and Personal exhibition at Hastings Museum and Art Gallery, the collaboration includes the temporary installation of an interactive public sculpture from Sonia Hughes, a call-and-response exploration of museum objects led by Harold Offeh, Ray Young’s award-winning interdisciplinary work OUT, and Knotty’s renowned queer performance party, Salty. 

Claudine Eccleston said: ‘I am really excited to have teamed up with Home Live Art to bring these incredibly talented artists to Hastings, injecting a fresh perspective into our town’s cultural offerings. It aligns perfectly with the energy of our exhibition encouraging dialogue around Black Joy.‘ 

The festival begins with a queer event at the White Rock Theatre on Thursday June 6. Salty provides an inclusive space for LGBTQ+ folk and their allies to come together, dance and enjoy unforgettable, radical cabaret performances come courtesy of Harry Alexander who will embody  Warhol and Twiggy, with Thick and Tight, Mr IPM, aka Azara Meghie, winner of the Man Up competition plus local drag artist Paris Grande. 

On Friday June 7, taking the festival outdoors, performance artist Tink Flaherty brings their bench to the streets of Hastings, inviting visitors, audiences and curious locals to sit down and chat about how we connect with each other in advance of Tink’s performance Benched, at Trans Pride Hastings this July. Also on June 7, the Stables Theatre plays host to Ray Young’s celebrated piece OUT, which defiantly challenges homophobia and transphobia in a bold reclamation of dancehall culture.

Local artist and provocateur Beccy McCray will be parking her Climate Nan Caravan in Hastings Town Centre on Saturday 8 June, encouraging visitors to swing by and chat about climate solutions, hope, and fears. “Imagine a world where talking about climate change is like a nice natter with your nan…”. Climate Nan Caravan makes this a reality.

The same day, families of all shapes and sizes are invited to Sweet, a drag and cabaret show for anyone aged five and over, brimming with dance, drag, music and fun, hosted at the Mini Playhouse. 

Artist Harold Offeh will be delving into memories, stories and histories of the Hastings Museum and Art Gallery collection in Bring and Brag on Sunday 9 June, alongside members of the local Black community. This lively event promises an unprecedented opportunity to reshape museum narratives by delving into fascinating local stories behind everyday objects in relation to the Black Joy! Up Close and Personal exhibition. 

Over the final weekend of the festival, Hastings Museum and Art Gallery will be home to a brand-new artist commission and highly anticipated premiere for Knotty 2024. The Hero’s Journey on Friday 14, Saturday 15 and Sunday 16 June brings together community performers and local artists in a performance adventure celebrating the diversity, beauty and spirit of Hastings. Led by artist Anna Maria Nabirye and choreographer  Darragh O’Leary, produced by St Leonards creative hub Afri-Co-Lab. Details of the show are closely under wraps, but expect an immersive and heroic experience.

Meanwhile, artist Sonia Hughes presents I Am From Reykjavik on Saturday 15 June, with all she needs to build herself a shelter, which she will create and later demolish as a temporary sculpture in the town centre. Knotty audiences and visitors can witness how Sonia and Hastings get along.

Sounds like two fun weekends!

For full performance details and credits, ticket links and access information, please visit www.homeIiveart.com

 

 

Queerguru’s Contributing Editor Ris Fatah is a successful fashion/luxury business consultant  (when he can be bothered) who divides and wastes his time between London and Ibiza. He is a lover of all things queer, feminist, and human rights in general. @ris.fatah


Posted by queerguru  at  11:36

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