Date(s)
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Dr Stephen Greer: Live art, Scotland and the risk of the radical

MC Coble on the floor of a performance area, performing the work Timeline of Disruption (2016) at BUZZCUT Festival, Glasgow
Photo: Dr Stephen Greer

This talk explores performance curation as a lens for developing an expanded history of Live Art in the UK - and for historicising the conditions in which interdisciplinary performance practices become possible. Who gets to make ‘radical’, queer and experimental work, and in what circumstances? Focusing on Scotland as an under-examined context for new and interdisciplinary performance, I frame curation as a practice of critical selection that might also seek to enable forms of radical generosity and open-ended support. But what happens when the desire to say ‘yes’, unconditionally, meets the realities and hierarchies of a wider culture sector? How might these dynamics invite us to re-examine live art’s status as a strategy of making space for ‘bodies and identities that might otherwise be excluded from traditional contexts’ (LADA)?

In locating these questions in a history of ongoing shocks - the financial crisis, austerity, the pandemic – I also want to consider how the seeming resilience of the live art sector and its capacity to respond, react and reinvent itself may pose difficult questions for how we (artists, producers, programmers and critics) understand the risks of exploitation and self-exploitation in organising our work. Through engagement with the work of Natasha Ruwona, Alberta Whittle and other artists, curators and researchers working in the Scottish context, I suggest the significance of emergent curatorial practices which are oriented on slowness and care rather than growth, and which might challenge exploitative, racialised and class-based norms for creative practice. What can the wider performance sector learn from such efforts?

Biography

Dr Steve Greer is Senior Lecturer in Theatre Practices at the University of Glasgow where he leads the AHRC-funded Live Art in Scotland project. He’s the author of two books - Contemporary British Queer Performance (2012) and Queer exceptions: solo performance in neoliberal times (2018) - alongside a range of essays on British and European theatre, and the cultural politics of TV and video games.

A drinks reception will follow the seminar.

Photo of MC Coble, performing the work Timeline of Disruption (2016) at BUZZCUT festival, Glasgow

Photo credit: Stephen Greer

Location

Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
Eton Avenue
London
NW3 3HY
United Kingdom

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