Birdie Danse Macabre

Mortimer, Nicholas; Macdonald, Dash and Kargotis, Demitrios. 2024. 'Birdie Danse Macabre'. In: Birdie Danse Macabre. IASPIS, Sweden 3 February 2024. [Conference or Workshop Item]

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Abstract or Description

To conclude a three month residency with the Swedish Arts Grants Committee’s international programme for visual and applied arts (IASPIS) Post Workers Theatre presented their practice and current project ‘The Birdie Dance Macabre’ as a live performance lecture in three acts, followed by a conversation with Magnus Ericson.

The design troupe shared their research into Workers Theatre in Sweden, and positioned their enquiry into the “frankenchicken” as a symbol of the human and environmental cost of cheap chicken in The Capitalocene today.

In the first act, PWT discussed recent research into the Swedish workers theatre movement and wider political folk music history reflecting on how this relates to their practice of updating historic forms of creative resistance. The second act delivered a performative reading of worker testimony from the Big Poultry industry alongside a discussion of PWT’s translation of verbatim theatre techniques. The final third act, concluded the lecture performance with an interpretation of The Tweets 1981 viral ‘Birdie Song’ framing it as a participatory narrative device, and reimagining both the song and the dance to address the lived experience of unseen workers within industrial scale food production and delivery.

Following the performance, a conversation chaired by Magnus Ericson, unpacked Post Workers Theatre’s history and methods in relation to design, and a socially / politically engaged practice.

Item Type:

Conference or Workshop Item (Lecture)

Keywords:

Lecture Performance, Design Activism, Post Workers Theatre,

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Design

Dates:

DateEvent
3 February 2024Completed

Event Location:

IASPIS, Sweden

Date range:

3 February 2024

Item ID:

35226

Date Deposited:

11 Mar 2024 09:56

Last Modified:

11 Mar 2024 09:56

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/35226

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