A performative archive of the independent theatre
02.06.–06.06., Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf + Online
The digital Impulse Archive ist online.
The Impulse Archive at Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf, is open from 03.–06.06.m 13:00–17:00 h. Please register here.
Since the Impulse Festival was founded, independent theatre has undergone major changes: aesthetically, thematically and structurally. What traces have these left in 31 years of festival history, what remnants are left? What statements do they allow us to make about the past? And what might an archive look like that not only conserves the past but contemporises it? The Impulse ACADEMY originally planned for our 30th anniversary is now established on a temporary basis: a living archive of three decades of festival history will be created in a disused shop unit in Düsseldorf. The Impulse ACADEMY simultaneously represents both an archive of art and the art of archiving.
Selected artists will make research trips to Düsseldorf and devise their own artistic approaches to relics of past festivals. They will examine statistics, objects, photos and audio-visual media, published programmes, press texts and eye witness accounts. In doing so they will search for dominant narratives and utopias and enquire about what is invisible, marginalised and excluded. At the end of the process, the artists will then open up their workshops and allow their archival work to be seen.
At the same time five collectives of artists from NRW that have responded to an open call from the Impulse Theater Festival will explore the question of what archiving their own artistic output might look like. In rummaging through their own archival collections they will experiment with various artistic (self-)archiving strategies on the boundaries of theatre, archives and digital art. They will present interim stages of their research during the ACADEMY. Visitors to the archive may explore the artists’ workrooms independently or on guided tours and participate in their research processes.
In daily Archive Talks, experts from the fields of cultural and media studies, museology, history, oral history and futurology will discuss archiving processes ranging between the culture of remembrance, utopian scenarios and making omissions visible.
Programme Leader: Daniel Richter
Production Management: Susanne Berthold
Concept for 2020: Kolja Burgschuld, Alice Ferl
The ACADEMY #1 — MAKING HISTORY is produced in co-operation with the Initiative für die Archive des Freien Theaters e.V., and the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the Ministry for Culture and Science of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
A performative archive of the independent theatre
02.06.–06.06., Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf + Online
The digital Impulse Archive ist online.
The Impulse Archive at Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf, is open from 03.–06.06.m 13:00–17:00 h. Please register here.
Since the Impulse Festival was founded, independent theatre has undergone major changes: aesthetically, thematically and structurally. What traces have these left in 31 years of festival history, what remnants are left? What statements do they allow us to make about the past? And what might an archive look like that not only conserves the past but contemporises it? The Impulse ACADEMY originally planned for our 30th anniversary is now established on a temporary basis: a living archive of three decades of festival history will be created in a disused shop unit in Düsseldorf. The Impulse ACADEMY simultaneously represents both an archive of art and the art of archiving.
Selected artists will make research trips to Düsseldorf and devise their own artistic approaches to relics of past festivals. They will examine statistics, objects, photos and audio-visual media, published programmes, press texts and eye witness accounts. In doing so they will search for dominant narratives and utopias and enquire about what is invisible, marginalised and excluded. At the end of the process, the artists will then open up their workshops and allow their archival work to be seen.
At the same time five collectives of artists from NRW that have responded to an open call from the Impulse Theater Festival will explore the question of what archiving their own artistic output might look like. In rummaging through their own archival collections they will experiment with various artistic (self-)archiving strategies on the boundaries of theatre, archives and digital art. They will present interim stages of their research during the ACADEMY. Visitors to the archive may explore the artists’ workrooms independently or on guided tours and participate in their research processes.
In daily Archive Talks, experts from the fields of cultural and media studies, museology, history, oral history and futurology will discuss archiving processes ranging between the culture of remembrance, utopian scenarios and making omissions visible.
Programme Leader: Daniel Richter
Production Management: Susanne Berthold
Concept for 2020: Kolja Burgschuld, Alice Ferl
The ACADEMY #1 — MAKING HISTORY is produced in co-operation with the Initiative für die Archive des Freien Theaters e.V., and the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the Ministry for Culture and Science of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
It’s Showtime, Baby! In PLAYBLACK songs and interviews by icons of pop history are copied and appropriated. A fast-paced collage about the role of Black stars in the white-dominated entertainment industry.
03.06. in person at TanzFaktur, live stream + chat
04.–06.06. Video on demand
Language: English and German
“If you’re thinking about being my Baby, it don’t matter if you’re black or white” the King of Pop professes in ‘Black or White’ is an audio-visual symbiosis of white rock guitar riffs and Black gangsta rap. On its release in 1991 Epic records described the song as a “rock ’n’ roll dance song about racial harmony”. It seems as if Pop Culture repeatedly claims that it is capable of overcoming racist power structures. This colour-blindness is addressed with a childish naivety and PLAYBLACK proves that exactly the opposite is true.
Hijacking the format of the German TV program Mini Playback Show, Joana Tischkau uses it to show that the lived experience of whiteness is not universal. In an ever-evolving battle with costumes, wigs and dance-moves, the performers are imitating a range of interviews and performances by different pop-historical icons: the choreography, gestures, facial expressions and playback – perfect copies.
PLAYBLACK exposes the ambivalent potential of the copy: In what way can they become an expression of solidarity, but also drift into being caricatures? The white German desire for Black embodiment is exposed when we lose ourselves in the the recesses, memories and projections of African American and Afro-German cultural productions. It’s Showtime Baby!
Concept and Choreography: Clara Reiner, Joana Tischkau
Chorus: Dilara Celebi, Nadina Kiala, Rahma Klein
Audio Direction : Jan Gehmlich
Dramaturgy: Elisabeth Hampe
Lighting: Dennis Dieter Kopp
Costumes: Ina Trenk, Nadine Wagner
Assistance: Leonie Kopineck
Graphic and Stage Design: Justus Gelberg
Picture Direction: Anh Trieu
DOP: An Nguyen
Vision Mixer: Nao Aphischai Luu
Production Management: Lisa Gehring
Streaming Operator: Jonathan Kastl
Camera: Michael Maurissens, Max Kluger
A production by Joana Tischkau in co-operation with Künstlerhaus Mousonturm and students of the Choreography and Performance course at the Hessian Theatre Academy, funded by the City of Frankfurt Culture Department.
Annedore Adei Antrie is currently the only Person of Colour in the Third Year studying Acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Frankfurt. As a human being who acts she appears on stage and in front of a camera in student and independent productions and hopes that after she has graduated she will be able as a Black performer to work on interesting and complex roles and that she will be spared stereotypical characters marked only by their Blackness. As a participant in the ‘Mini Playback Show’ she would perform Judi Jackson’s hit ‘Still’.
Jan Gehmlich studied Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. He writes songs and produces audio dramas, podcasts, sound collages and stage works – often in collaboration with others. His work is guided by the principle of putting himself as a white cis male at the disposal of feminist and anti-racist art productions in which women and POCs can be perceived as authors. Because art is only half a living, he also drives a golf cart around Frankfurt airport bringing passengers to their gates. He is seeking work in the fields of sound, performance and emotional care.
Elisabeth Hampe studied Theatre Studies at the Free University Berlin and Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She writes concepts, works as a performer and dramaturg and also works in a Berlin record shop. She has a particular interest in the mechanics of representation in Black music and cultural production and has engaged critically with the much-discussed medium of blackfacing on German stages.
Dennis Dieter Kopp studied Theatre, Media and
Literature at the University of Hildesheim. Since 2012 he has worked as a
lighting technician, performer and dramaturg at venues including the
Münchner Kammerspiele and for Oliver Zahn//HAUPTAKTION, Thermoboy FK,
christians//schwenk, Henrike Iglesias, Markus&Markus, Marie Simons
and Ceren Oran and Joana Tischkau. As a solo performer and member of
cobragianni.cobra he has been responsible for ‘Let Me Be the Object of
Your Desire’ (2012) and ‘EIN BISSCHEN MEHR MUSS MAN SCHON SEHEN oder:
Wie ich mich in einen Schmetterling verwandelte’ (2017). His artistic
practice is concerned mainly with issues of critical research into
masculinity in searching for queer, feminist and intersectional
perspectives. Having grown up in a home with very little pop music,
Clara Reiner only discovered the pleasures of the ‘Mini Playback Show’ through working on PLAYBACK. She now has a nose for the pitfalls of show business and has cultivated an ear worm. When she’s not touring with PLAYBLACK, she studies Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She makes both plays and things, usually works with others and is interested in non-human actors.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is
of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party.
This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance
and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently
studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and
Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies
in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of
bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced
based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the
king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation
production for her Master’s degree.
Ina Trenk studies Stage and Costume Design at Offenbach University of Art and Design and came to know Joana Tischkau and Jan Gehmlich by their work together on the project ‘Der Urpsrung der Welt’ initiated by Anne Kapsner at the Hessian Theatre Academy. Although she was immediately inspired by Boney M’s stage outfits, she did not previously know the band. Her favourite song is ‘Green Grass of Tunnel’ by Múm.
A performative archive of the independent theatre
02.06.–06.06., Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf + Online
The digital Impulse Archive ist online.
The Impulse Archive at Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf, is open from 03.–06.06.m 13:00–17:00 h. Please register here.
Since the Impulse Festival was founded, independent theatre has undergone major changes: aesthetically, thematically and structurally. What traces have these left in 31 years of festival history, what remnants are left? What statements do they allow us to make about the past? And what might an archive look like that not only conserves the past but contemporises it? The Impulse ACADEMY originally planned for our 30th anniversary is now established on a temporary basis: a living archive of three decades of festival history will be created in a disused shop unit in Düsseldorf. The Impulse ACADEMY simultaneously represents both an archive of art and the art of archiving.
Selected artists will make research trips to Düsseldorf and devise their own artistic approaches to relics of past festivals. They will examine statistics, objects, photos and audio-visual media, published programmes, press texts and eye witness accounts. In doing so they will search for dominant narratives and utopias and enquire about what is invisible, marginalised and excluded. At the end of the process, the artists will then open up their workshops and allow their archival work to be seen.
At the same time five collectives of artists from NRW that have responded to an open call from the Impulse Theater Festival will explore the question of what archiving their own artistic output might look like. In rummaging through their own archival collections they will experiment with various artistic (self-)archiving strategies on the boundaries of theatre, archives and digital art. They will present interim stages of their research during the ACADEMY. Visitors to the archive may explore the artists’ workrooms independently or on guided tours and participate in their research processes.
In daily Archive Talks, experts from the fields of cultural and media studies, museology, history, oral history and futurology will discuss archiving processes ranging between the culture of remembrance, utopian scenarios and making omissions visible.
Programme Leader: Daniel Richter
Production Management: Susanne Berthold
Concept for 2020: Kolja Burgschuld, Alice Ferl
The ACADEMY #1 — MAKING HISTORY is produced in co-operation with the Initiative für die Archive des Freien Theaters e.V., and the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the Ministry for Culture and Science of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
It’s Showtime, Baby! In PLAYBLACK songs and interviews by icons of pop history are copied and appropriated. A fast-paced collage about the role of Black stars in the white-dominated entertainment industry.
03.06. in person at TanzFaktur, live stream + chat
04.–06.06. Video on demand
Language: English and German
“If you’re thinking about being my Baby, it don’t matter if you’re black or white” the King of Pop professes in ‘Black or White’ is an audio-visual symbiosis of white rock guitar riffs and Black gangsta rap. On its release in 1991 Epic records described the song as a “rock ’n’ roll dance song about racial harmony”. It seems as if Pop Culture repeatedly claims that it is capable of overcoming racist power structures. This colour-blindness is addressed with a childish naivety and PLAYBLACK proves that exactly the opposite is true.
Hijacking the format of the German TV program Mini Playback Show, Joana Tischkau uses it to show that the lived experience of whiteness is not universal. In an ever-evolving battle with costumes, wigs and dance-moves, the performers are imitating a range of interviews and performances by different pop-historical icons: the choreography, gestures, facial expressions and playback – perfect copies.
PLAYBLACK exposes the ambivalent potential of the copy: In what way can they become an expression of solidarity, but also drift into being caricatures? The white German desire for Black embodiment is exposed when we lose ourselves in the the recesses, memories and projections of African American and Afro-German cultural productions. It’s Showtime Baby!
Concept and Choreography: Clara Reiner, Joana Tischkau
Chorus: Dilara Celebi, Nadina Kiala, Rahma Klein
Audio Direction : Jan Gehmlich
Dramaturgy: Elisabeth Hampe
Lighting: Dennis Dieter Kopp
Costumes: Ina Trenk, Nadine Wagner
Assistance: Leonie Kopineck
Graphic and Stage Design: Justus Gelberg
Picture Direction: Anh Trieu
DOP: An Nguyen
Vision Mixer: Nao Aphischai Luu
Production Management: Lisa Gehring
Streaming Operator: Jonathan Kastl
Camera: Michael Maurissens, Max Kluger
A production by Joana Tischkau in co-operation with Künstlerhaus Mousonturm and students of the Choreography and Performance course at the Hessian Theatre Academy, funded by the City of Frankfurt Culture Department.
Annedore Adei Antrie is currently the only Person of Colour in the Third Year studying Acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Frankfurt. As a human being who acts she appears on stage and in front of a camera in student and independent productions and hopes that after she has graduated she will be able as a Black performer to work on interesting and complex roles and that she will be spared stereotypical characters marked only by their Blackness. As a participant in the ‘Mini Playback Show’ she would perform Judi Jackson’s hit ‘Still’.
Jan Gehmlich studied Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. He writes songs and produces audio dramas, podcasts, sound collages and stage works – often in collaboration with others. His work is guided by the principle of putting himself as a white cis male at the disposal of feminist and anti-racist art productions in which women and POCs can be perceived as authors. Because art is only half a living, he also drives a golf cart around Frankfurt airport bringing passengers to their gates. He is seeking work in the fields of sound, performance and emotional care.
Elisabeth Hampe studied Theatre Studies at the Free University Berlin and Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She writes concepts, works as a performer and dramaturg and also works in a Berlin record shop. She has a particular interest in the mechanics of representation in Black music and cultural production and has engaged critically with the much-discussed medium of blackfacing on German stages.
Dennis Dieter Kopp studied Theatre, Media and
Literature at the University of Hildesheim. Since 2012 he has worked as a
lighting technician, performer and dramaturg at venues including the
Münchner Kammerspiele and for Oliver Zahn//HAUPTAKTION, Thermoboy FK,
christians//schwenk, Henrike Iglesias, Markus&Markus, Marie Simons
and Ceren Oran and Joana Tischkau. As a solo performer and member of
cobragianni.cobra he has been responsible for ‘Let Me Be the Object of
Your Desire’ (2012) and ‘EIN BISSCHEN MEHR MUSS MAN SCHON SEHEN oder:
Wie ich mich in einen Schmetterling verwandelte’ (2017). His artistic
practice is concerned mainly with issues of critical research into
masculinity in searching for queer, feminist and intersectional
perspectives. Having grown up in a home with very little pop music,
Clara Reiner only discovered the pleasures of the ‘Mini Playback Show’ through working on PLAYBACK. She now has a nose for the pitfalls of show business and has cultivated an ear worm. When she’s not touring with PLAYBLACK, she studies Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She makes both plays and things, usually works with others and is interested in non-human actors.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is
of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party.
This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance
and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently
studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and
Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies
in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of
bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced
based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the
king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation
production for her Master’s degree.
Ina Trenk studies Stage and Costume Design at Offenbach University of Art and Design and came to know Joana Tischkau and Jan Gehmlich by their work together on the project ‘Der Urpsrung der Welt’ initiated by Anne Kapsner at the Hessian Theatre Academy. Although she was immediately inspired by Boney M’s stage outfits, she did not previously know the band. Her favourite song is ‘Green Grass of Tunnel’ by Múm.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
A performative archive of the independent theatre
02.06.–06.06., Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf + Online
The digital Impulse Archive ist online.
The Impulse Archive at Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf, is open from 03.–06.06.m 13:00–17:00 h. Please register here.
Since the Impulse Festival was founded, independent theatre has undergone major changes: aesthetically, thematically and structurally. What traces have these left in 31 years of festival history, what remnants are left? What statements do they allow us to make about the past? And what might an archive look like that not only conserves the past but contemporises it? The Impulse ACADEMY originally planned for our 30th anniversary is now established on a temporary basis: a living archive of three decades of festival history will be created in a disused shop unit in Düsseldorf. The Impulse ACADEMY simultaneously represents both an archive of art and the art of archiving.
Selected artists will make research trips to Düsseldorf and devise their own artistic approaches to relics of past festivals. They will examine statistics, objects, photos and audio-visual media, published programmes, press texts and eye witness accounts. In doing so they will search for dominant narratives and utopias and enquire about what is invisible, marginalised and excluded. At the end of the process, the artists will then open up their workshops and allow their archival work to be seen.
At the same time five collectives of artists from NRW that have responded to an open call from the Impulse Theater Festival will explore the question of what archiving their own artistic output might look like. In rummaging through their own archival collections they will experiment with various artistic (self-)archiving strategies on the boundaries of theatre, archives and digital art. They will present interim stages of their research during the ACADEMY. Visitors to the archive may explore the artists’ workrooms independently or on guided tours and participate in their research processes.
In daily Archive Talks, experts from the fields of cultural and media studies, museology, history, oral history and futurology will discuss archiving processes ranging between the culture of remembrance, utopian scenarios and making omissions visible.
Programme Leader: Daniel Richter
Production Management: Susanne Berthold
Concept for 2020: Kolja Burgschuld, Alice Ferl
The ACADEMY #1 — MAKING HISTORY is produced in co-operation with the Initiative für die Archive des Freien Theaters e.V., and the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the Ministry for Culture and Science of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
It’s Showtime, Baby! In PLAYBLACK songs and interviews by icons of pop history are copied and appropriated. A fast-paced collage about the role of Black stars in the white-dominated entertainment industry.
03.06. in person at TanzFaktur, live stream + chat
04.–06.06. Video on demand
Language: English and German
“If you’re thinking about being my Baby, it don’t matter if you’re black or white” the King of Pop professes in ‘Black or White’ is an audio-visual symbiosis of white rock guitar riffs and Black gangsta rap. On its release in 1991 Epic records described the song as a “rock ’n’ roll dance song about racial harmony”. It seems as if Pop Culture repeatedly claims that it is capable of overcoming racist power structures. This colour-blindness is addressed with a childish naivety and PLAYBLACK proves that exactly the opposite is true.
Hijacking the format of the German TV program Mini Playback Show, Joana Tischkau uses it to show that the lived experience of whiteness is not universal. In an ever-evolving battle with costumes, wigs and dance-moves, the performers are imitating a range of interviews and performances by different pop-historical icons: the choreography, gestures, facial expressions and playback – perfect copies.
PLAYBLACK exposes the ambivalent potential of the copy: In what way can they become an expression of solidarity, but also drift into being caricatures? The white German desire for Black embodiment is exposed when we lose ourselves in the the recesses, memories and projections of African American and Afro-German cultural productions. It’s Showtime Baby!
Concept and Choreography: Clara Reiner, Joana Tischkau
Chorus: Dilara Celebi, Nadina Kiala, Rahma Klein
Audio Direction : Jan Gehmlich
Dramaturgy: Elisabeth Hampe
Lighting: Dennis Dieter Kopp
Costumes: Ina Trenk, Nadine Wagner
Assistance: Leonie Kopineck
Graphic and Stage Design: Justus Gelberg
Picture Direction: Anh Trieu
DOP: An Nguyen
Vision Mixer: Nao Aphischai Luu
Production Management: Lisa Gehring
Streaming Operator: Jonathan Kastl
Camera: Michael Maurissens, Max Kluger
A production by Joana Tischkau in co-operation with Künstlerhaus Mousonturm and students of the Choreography and Performance course at the Hessian Theatre Academy, funded by the City of Frankfurt Culture Department.
Annedore Adei Antrie is currently the only Person of Colour in the Third Year studying Acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Frankfurt. As a human being who acts she appears on stage and in front of a camera in student and independent productions and hopes that after she has graduated she will be able as a Black performer to work on interesting and complex roles and that she will be spared stereotypical characters marked only by their Blackness. As a participant in the ‘Mini Playback Show’ she would perform Judi Jackson’s hit ‘Still’.
Jan Gehmlich studied Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. He writes songs and produces audio dramas, podcasts, sound collages and stage works – often in collaboration with others. His work is guided by the principle of putting himself as a white cis male at the disposal of feminist and anti-racist art productions in which women and POCs can be perceived as authors. Because art is only half a living, he also drives a golf cart around Frankfurt airport bringing passengers to their gates. He is seeking work in the fields of sound, performance and emotional care.
Elisabeth Hampe studied Theatre Studies at the Free University Berlin and Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She writes concepts, works as a performer and dramaturg and also works in a Berlin record shop. She has a particular interest in the mechanics of representation in Black music and cultural production and has engaged critically with the much-discussed medium of blackfacing on German stages.
Dennis Dieter Kopp studied Theatre, Media and
Literature at the University of Hildesheim. Since 2012 he has worked as a
lighting technician, performer and dramaturg at venues including the
Münchner Kammerspiele and for Oliver Zahn//HAUPTAKTION, Thermoboy FK,
christians//schwenk, Henrike Iglesias, Markus&Markus, Marie Simons
and Ceren Oran and Joana Tischkau. As a solo performer and member of
cobragianni.cobra he has been responsible for ‘Let Me Be the Object of
Your Desire’ (2012) and ‘EIN BISSCHEN MEHR MUSS MAN SCHON SEHEN oder:
Wie ich mich in einen Schmetterling verwandelte’ (2017). His artistic
practice is concerned mainly with issues of critical research into
masculinity in searching for queer, feminist and intersectional
perspectives. Having grown up in a home with very little pop music,
Clara Reiner only discovered the pleasures of the ‘Mini Playback Show’ through working on PLAYBACK. She now has a nose for the pitfalls of show business and has cultivated an ear worm. When she’s not touring with PLAYBLACK, she studies Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She makes both plays and things, usually works with others and is interested in non-human actors.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is
of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party.
This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance
and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently
studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and
Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies
in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of
bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced
based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the
king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation
production for her Master’s degree.
Ina Trenk studies Stage and Costume Design at Offenbach University of Art and Design and came to know Joana Tischkau and Jan Gehmlich by their work together on the project ‘Der Urpsrung der Welt’ initiated by Anne Kapsner at the Hessian Theatre Academy. Although she was immediately inspired by Boney M’s stage outfits, she did not previously know the band. Her favourite song is ‘Green Grass of Tunnel’ by Múm.
Ten people were murdered by the NSU. Most Germans cannot even pronounce their names correctly. This is why Ülkü Süngün will invite passers-by to take part in a language course. A temporary memorial for Theodoros Boulgarides, Michèle Kiesewetter, Habil Kılıç, Mehmet Kubaşık, Abdurrahim Özüdoğru, Enver Şimşek, Süleyman Taşköprü, Mehmet Turgut, İsmail Yaşar and Halit Yozgat.
The performance starts with speech training: each time one person sits opposite the artist and practices with her the Turkish pronunciation of the letters “r”, “z”, “ı” and “ç”. Afterwards the participants learn to pronounce the names of the ten victims correctly and then recite them out loud together with Ülkü Süngün. The language course is broadcast using a speaker system and is amplified so that it can be heard all around. With every additional participant the “chorus of speakers and commemorators” grows louder.
Takdir is translated as appreciation, esteem. Memory and appreciation are generated through the act of repeatedly speaking their names, and a temporary memorial is established to the murder victims of the NSU. In her performance Ülkü Süngün investigates practices of remembrance culture in public spaces: who is recognised, who is honoured with memorials and who is not? How can remembrance take place publicly without being preserved with a monument? In what form can memory be contained in speech? And what does the moment of remembrance mean to each of us individually?
An independent production by Ülkü Süngün.
Ülkü Süngün lives and works in Stuttgart, where she studied Sculpture at the State Academy of Art and Design. Her artistic research uses process-orientated and collaborative approaches to examine (the politics of) migration and identity and also memory. Her critical works focus on photography, installation and sculpture, and are also realised in the form of lecture performances. As a lecturer at the Merz Academy and the Stuttgart State Academy of Art and Design she has also worked on emancipatory issues around teaching. She realised her project ‘The Institute for Artistic Migration Research’ at Künstlerhaus Stuttgart. With the eponymous association founded in 2017 she makes her artistic and socially critical practice structurally visible while using spaces on a nomadic basis.
Theatre visits the audience at home! The listeners are connected with each other and eight teenagers from Australia by phone. In physical isolation a touching dialogue ensues between generations – about intimacy, sexuality, fears for the future and grief.
SOLD OUT
06.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
11.06.21 22:30–23:45SOLD OUT
13.06.21 11:00–12:15SOLD OUT
13.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
Phone call + video conference
Language: English
The original version of this piece successfully toured the stages of Australia and Europe in 2019. Against the background of the pandemic Samara Hersch has devised a new version of her work that enables members of the audience to participate from home. Connected by digital signals, young people and grown ups exchange knowledge and experiences and, protected by anonymity, accept the uncertain terms of an encounter with strangers.
To participate in the performance, you need a computer and a telephone with access to WhatsApp. You will also receive a package of props by post. To ask for the number that you can be contacted on by WhatsApp and your postal address, we will send you an email after you have bought your ticket. If necessary, please check your spam folder.
Lead Artist: Samara Hersch
Creative Technology: Fred Rodrigues, Nathan Fain
Artistic Associate: Cassandra Fumi
Dramaturgy: Maria Rößler
Production Support: Bec Reid
Photography: Pier Carthew
BODY OF KNOWLEDGE was produced as part of Be SpectACTive! in co-production with the SICK! Festival, Liveworks Festival of Experimental Art and Carriageworks. The “At Home” version is a co-production by the International Summer Festival Kampnagel, Hamburg and the Zurich Theater Spektakel.
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.
A performative archive of the independent theatre
02.06.–06.06., Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf + Online
The digital Impulse Archive ist online.
The Impulse Archive at Graf-Adolf-Strasse 49, 40210 Düsseldorf, is open from 03.–06.06.m 13:00–17:00 h. Please register here.
Since the Impulse Festival was founded, independent theatre has undergone major changes: aesthetically, thematically and structurally. What traces have these left in 31 years of festival history, what remnants are left? What statements do they allow us to make about the past? And what might an archive look like that not only conserves the past but contemporises it? The Impulse ACADEMY originally planned for our 30th anniversary is now established on a temporary basis: a living archive of three decades of festival history will be created in a disused shop unit in Düsseldorf. The Impulse ACADEMY simultaneously represents both an archive of art and the art of archiving.
Selected artists will make research trips to Düsseldorf and devise their own artistic approaches to relics of past festivals. They will examine statistics, objects, photos and audio-visual media, published programmes, press texts and eye witness accounts. In doing so they will search for dominant narratives and utopias and enquire about what is invisible, marginalised and excluded. At the end of the process, the artists will then open up their workshops and allow their archival work to be seen.
At the same time five collectives of artists from NRW that have responded to an open call from the Impulse Theater Festival will explore the question of what archiving their own artistic output might look like. In rummaging through their own archival collections they will experiment with various artistic (self-)archiving strategies on the boundaries of theatre, archives and digital art. They will present interim stages of their research during the ACADEMY. Visitors to the archive may explore the artists’ workrooms independently or on guided tours and participate in their research processes.
In daily Archive Talks, experts from the fields of cultural and media studies, museology, history, oral history and futurology will discuss archiving processes ranging between the culture of remembrance, utopian scenarios and making omissions visible.
Programme Leader: Daniel Richter
Production Management: Susanne Berthold
Concept for 2020: Kolja Burgschuld, Alice Ferl
The ACADEMY #1 — MAKING HISTORY is produced in co-operation with the Initiative für die Archive des Freien Theaters e.V., and the NRW KULTURsekretariat, the Ministry for Culture and Science of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
It’s Showtime, Baby! In PLAYBLACK songs and interviews by icons of pop history are copied and appropriated. A fast-paced collage about the role of Black stars in the white-dominated entertainment industry.
03.06. in person at TanzFaktur, live stream + chat
04.–06.06. Video on demand
Language: English and German
“If you’re thinking about being my Baby, it don’t matter if you’re black or white” the King of Pop professes in ‘Black or White’ is an audio-visual symbiosis of white rock guitar riffs and Black gangsta rap. On its release in 1991 Epic records described the song as a “rock ’n’ roll dance song about racial harmony”. It seems as if Pop Culture repeatedly claims that it is capable of overcoming racist power structures. This colour-blindness is addressed with a childish naivety and PLAYBLACK proves that exactly the opposite is true.
Hijacking the format of the German TV program Mini Playback Show, Joana Tischkau uses it to show that the lived experience of whiteness is not universal. In an ever-evolving battle with costumes, wigs and dance-moves, the performers are imitating a range of interviews and performances by different pop-historical icons: the choreography, gestures, facial expressions and playback – perfect copies.
PLAYBLACK exposes the ambivalent potential of the copy: In what way can they become an expression of solidarity, but also drift into being caricatures? The white German desire for Black embodiment is exposed when we lose ourselves in the the recesses, memories and projections of African American and Afro-German cultural productions. It’s Showtime Baby!
Concept and Choreography: Clara Reiner, Joana Tischkau
Chorus: Dilara Celebi, Nadina Kiala, Rahma Klein
Audio Direction : Jan Gehmlich
Dramaturgy: Elisabeth Hampe
Lighting: Dennis Dieter Kopp
Costumes: Ina Trenk, Nadine Wagner
Assistance: Leonie Kopineck
Graphic and Stage Design: Justus Gelberg
Picture Direction: Anh Trieu
DOP: An Nguyen
Vision Mixer: Nao Aphischai Luu
Production Management: Lisa Gehring
Streaming Operator: Jonathan Kastl
Camera: Michael Maurissens, Max Kluger
A production by Joana Tischkau in co-operation with Künstlerhaus Mousonturm and students of the Choreography and Performance course at the Hessian Theatre Academy, funded by the City of Frankfurt Culture Department.
Annedore Adei Antrie is currently the only Person of Colour in the Third Year studying Acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Frankfurt. As a human being who acts she appears on stage and in front of a camera in student and independent productions and hopes that after she has graduated she will be able as a Black performer to work on interesting and complex roles and that she will be spared stereotypical characters marked only by their Blackness. As a participant in the ‘Mini Playback Show’ she would perform Judi Jackson’s hit ‘Still’.
Jan Gehmlich studied Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. He writes songs and produces audio dramas, podcasts, sound collages and stage works – often in collaboration with others. His work is guided by the principle of putting himself as a white cis male at the disposal of feminist and anti-racist art productions in which women and POCs can be perceived as authors. Because art is only half a living, he also drives a golf cart around Frankfurt airport bringing passengers to their gates. He is seeking work in the fields of sound, performance and emotional care.
Elisabeth Hampe studied Theatre Studies at the Free University Berlin and Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She writes concepts, works as a performer and dramaturg and also works in a Berlin record shop. She has a particular interest in the mechanics of representation in Black music and cultural production and has engaged critically with the much-discussed medium of blackfacing on German stages.
Dennis Dieter Kopp studied Theatre, Media and
Literature at the University of Hildesheim. Since 2012 he has worked as a
lighting technician, performer and dramaturg at venues including the
Münchner Kammerspiele and for Oliver Zahn//HAUPTAKTION, Thermoboy FK,
christians//schwenk, Henrike Iglesias, Markus&Markus, Marie Simons
and Ceren Oran and Joana Tischkau. As a solo performer and member of
cobragianni.cobra he has been responsible for ‘Let Me Be the Object of
Your Desire’ (2012) and ‘EIN BISSCHEN MEHR MUSS MAN SCHON SEHEN oder:
Wie ich mich in einen Schmetterling verwandelte’ (2017). His artistic
practice is concerned mainly with issues of critical research into
masculinity in searching for queer, feminist and intersectional
perspectives. Having grown up in a home with very little pop music,
Clara Reiner only discovered the pleasures of the ‘Mini Playback Show’ through working on PLAYBACK. She now has a nose for the pitfalls of show business and has cultivated an ear worm. When she’s not touring with PLAYBLACK, she studies Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. She makes both plays and things, usually works with others and is interested in non-human actors.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is
of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party.
This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance
and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently
studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and
Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies
in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of
bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced
based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the
king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation
production for her Master’s degree.
Ina Trenk studies Stage and Costume Design at Offenbach University of Art and Design and came to know Joana Tischkau and Jan Gehmlich by their work together on the project ‘Der Urpsrung der Welt’ initiated by Anne Kapsner at the Hessian Theatre Academy. Although she was immediately inspired by Boney M’s stage outfits, she did not previously know the band. Her favourite song is ‘Green Grass of Tunnel’ by Múm.
Theatre visits the audience at home! The listeners are connected with each other and eight teenagers from Australia by phone. In physical isolation a touching dialogue ensues between generations – about intimacy, sexuality, fears for the future and grief.
SOLD OUT
06.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
11.06.21 22:30–23:45SOLD OUT
13.06.21 11:00–12:15SOLD OUT
13.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
Phone call + video conference
Language: English
The original version of this piece successfully toured the stages of Australia and Europe in 2019. Against the background of the pandemic Samara Hersch has devised a new version of her work that enables members of the audience to participate from home. Connected by digital signals, young people and grown ups exchange knowledge and experiences and, protected by anonymity, accept the uncertain terms of an encounter with strangers.
To participate in the performance, you need a computer and a telephone with access to WhatsApp. You will also receive a package of props by post. To ask for the number that you can be contacted on by WhatsApp and your postal address, we will send you an email after you have bought your ticket. If necessary, please check your spam folder.
Lead Artist: Samara Hersch
Creative Technology: Fred Rodrigues, Nathan Fain
Artistic Associate: Cassandra Fumi
Dramaturgy: Maria Rößler
Production Support: Bec Reid
Photography: Pier Carthew
BODY OF KNOWLEDGE was produced as part of Be SpectACTive! in co-production with the SICK! Festival, Liveworks Festival of Experimental Art and Carriageworks. The “At Home” version is a co-production by the International Summer Festival Kampnagel, Hamburg and the Zurich Theater Spektakel.
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
People are different and that is quite normal. But what about the difference between rich and poor? Does it have to be this way? And is it fair? An interactive online game based around the question of who or what determines which paths remain open to children and which do not.
School performance
08.06.21 18:00–19:15 09.06.21 10:00–11:15School performance
Video conference
Language: German
For children aged between 9 and 14 and adults
In the audience there are people with stripes, flowers and writing on their clothes. „I can’t make out any order!“ shouts one of the actors. Or do people get categorised anyway? Turbo Pascal play out social order together with the public and try to create disorder. The young members of the audience can choose which heading they feel happiest under — the shy kids, the cool kids, the football fans or the horse fans.
But is it also acceptable to separate rich and poor? And when is someone poor, or someone rich, or someone in the middle? Is someone who lives in a house with its own garden on the fringes of the city rich? Or only if they own five million Euro worth of shares? How does someone become poor, how does someone become rich? Does it depend on how much work someone does? Or was it already decided right from the start? And how did the people who appear here actually get involved in the theatre? One drew out theatre fans in the parental lottery, another tells us that, for his parents, money did not matter — he simply had to choose a profession he enjoyed. And a third had parents who owned very few books. Not all people have the same starting conditions, the same chances. And if you don’t recognise the differences, then you won’t be able to change them.
Winner of the IKARUS Theatre Prize 2019 awarded by the JugendKulturService Berlin.
Performers: Friedrich Greiling, Hanni Lorenz, Wolfgang Boos and alternating: Eva Plischke, Angela Löer, Frank Oberhäußer
Direction: Turbo Pascal
Stage Design, Costumes: Janina Janke
Music: Friedrich Greiling
Dramaturgy: Karola Marsch
Assistant Director, Stage Manager, Prompter: Melina Archipoff
Stage Technician: Henning Beckmann
Lighting: Rainer Pagel
Sound and Video Technician: Max Berthold
Make-Up: Karla Steudel
Props: Jens Blau
Contact for touring enquiries: Axel Möbius, axel.moebius[a]parkaue.de
Production: Junges Staatstheater Berlin — Theater an der Parkaue.
Turbo Pascal is a theatre and performance collective from Berlin. They are interested in how people organise and imagine living together. They have made a name for themselves in the area of ”theatrical audience experiments“: they devise interactive stage plays and performative installations which the audience may follow, address, involve themselves in and become independent of in different ways each time. In this way the theatre becomes a public space of assembly and negotiation for social processes. Turbo Pascal includes the founding-members, conceivers and performers Angela Löer, Frank Oberhäußer, Eva Plischke, Veit Arlt, Luis Pfeiffer, the performers and productions managers Margret Schütz and Kathrin Feldhaus, the musician Friedrich Greiling, the stage designer Janina Janke, the video artist Gernot Wöltjen and the sonic artist and programmer Georg Werner.
People die, but the online content they create lives on. DARUM’s hyperlink installation reveals which virtual remnants continue to tell people about us even after our deaths. An internet archive that evokes death and urban loneliness in an essayistic manner.
Hyperlink installation
Language: German
Millions of websites are not only constantly being created but also taken down again. Initiatives such as the “Internet Archive” pursue the objective of preserving information on the World Wide Web from virtual death. But what happens when the originators die – while their digital legacies continue to live on?
404-DEADLINK is inspired by the largely lost, colourful and often trashy websites of the 90s and early 00s. From a large number of interlinked of individual pages, a complex archive has been created that comprises documents, photographs and videos with evidence of those who have died in solitude in Vienna as well as highlighting issues of urban loneliness and the impenetrable nature of human existence. A sprawling associative labyrinth with a logic of its own, with no beginning and no end, that encourages visitors to search for their own clues and get lost there – while encountering both the familiar and the unexpected.
As part of the project, DARUM has invited numerous guest artists to help them co-devise this labyrinth: writers, musicians, visual artists, scenographers, but also experts such as funeral speakers and cooks extend the network of multiple perspectives on the theme and contribute works using text, images and sound.
In their debut performance in Vienna UNGEBETENE GÄSTE, DARUM examined what had been left behind by the dead: five individual, one-off performances went in search of what had happened to people who were buried without any loved ones present. These focussed not only on the deceased themselves but also the impossibility of reconstructing their life stories. Invited to the Impulse Theater Festival 2020, the work was intended to be performed in 2021 in the world premiere of a specially developed Cologne version, which cannot now be realized due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
A project by DARUM, Artistic realisation and Programming: Victoria Halper, Kai Krösche
Artistic Associates: Laura Andreß, Matthias Krische, Clara Hirschmanner
With guest contributions from: Emre Akal, Shabnam Chamani, Simon Dietersdorfer, Franz Hammerbacher, hoelb/hoeb, Andrea Imler, Nora Jacobs, Kristof Kepler, Hannes Benedetto Pircher, Roland Rauschmeier, Mario Schlembach, Andres Stirn, Simon Windisch et. al.
Game dramaturgy: Philipp Ehmann & Clara Hirschmanner (Play:Vienna)
Concept: Kai Krösche
UNGEBETENE GÄSTE is a production by DARUM in co-operation with WERK X-Petersplatz (Wien). Funded by SHIFT, the City of Vienna's Department of Culture as well as Bezirk Innere Stadt.
The new digital version 404–TOTLINK is a co-production between DARUM and Impulse Theater Festival. Funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture, Civil Service and Sports.
The collective DARUM. Darstellende Kunst und Musik
(Performing Arts and Music), founded in 2018, operates at numerous
intersections between artistic disciplines. It is made up by Laura
Andreß, Victoria Halper and Kai Krösche, who have operated in between
independent and institutional structures in the performing arts for
several years. This core team bring together expertise in numerous
artistic disciplines including film and theatre direction, dramaturgy,
music, literature, video and media arts, acting and performance. Der
Formensuche von DARUM’s search for form is always preceded by the big
question “why?” However, questions prove to be the best answers: as a
result in its artistic projects DARUM attempts to fail productively in
its quest for answers. UNGEBETENE GÄSTE (UNINVITED GUESTS) is DARUM’s
debut performance. The performative installation ‘Ausgang: Offen’ was
presented in Vienna in April 2020.
Laura Andreß studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies in Vienna. After working as an intern and assistant at several theatres, performance venues and festivals and for independent theatre productions in Vienna she completed a Masters in Dramaturgy at the HfS Ernst Busch in Berlin. In 2018 her graduation project was given its world premiere as part of the Berlin Performing Arts Festival. Laura Andreß has since worked as a freelance dramaturg and production manager (for artists including Florentina Holzinger). Her work has been presented at venues including the Volksbühne Berlin, Festspielhaus Hellerau and the Münchner Kammerspielen. In 2019 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Victoria Halper studied Acting and Directing at the University of Toronto. She emigrated to Austria in 2010 in search of her roots in the Burgenland and worked as an Assistant Director at numerous theatres. From 2013 to 2016 she worked as a director and editor for several films including the detective story ‘Kommissar Taler’, for which she was awarded the City of Traun Prize for Culture in 2015. Since 2016 she has operated as a freelance director in an experimental field between different forms of the performing arts: contemporary circus, essay-performance, video art installations and ludification theatre in public spaces. In 2018 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Kai Krösche is a director and musician. He studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies and Philosophy in Vienna. Since 2005 he has worked as a director, musician and video artist on his own theatre projects as well as in the fields of music, video, dramaturgy and performance at venues including Schauspiel Köln, Landestheater Niederösterreich, WUK Vienna, Volkstheater Vienna, WERK X in Vienna and HochX in Munich. As a screenwriter and director he has produced numerous short film projects since 2002. In 2018 he was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office. Between 2010 and 2016 he worked as a theatre and film critic for outlets including nachtkritik.de and the Wiener Zeitung.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
People are different and that is quite normal. But what about the difference between rich and poor? Does it have to be this way? And is it fair? An interactive online game based around the question of who or what determines which paths remain open to children and which do not.
School performance
08.06.21 18:00–19:15 09.06.21 10:00–11:15School performance
Video conference
Language: German
For children aged between 9 and 14 and adults
In the audience there are people with stripes, flowers and writing on their clothes. „I can’t make out any order!“ shouts one of the actors. Or do people get categorised anyway? Turbo Pascal play out social order together with the public and try to create disorder. The young members of the audience can choose which heading they feel happiest under — the shy kids, the cool kids, the football fans or the horse fans.
But is it also acceptable to separate rich and poor? And when is someone poor, or someone rich, or someone in the middle? Is someone who lives in a house with its own garden on the fringes of the city rich? Or only if they own five million Euro worth of shares? How does someone become poor, how does someone become rich? Does it depend on how much work someone does? Or was it already decided right from the start? And how did the people who appear here actually get involved in the theatre? One drew out theatre fans in the parental lottery, another tells us that, for his parents, money did not matter — he simply had to choose a profession he enjoyed. And a third had parents who owned very few books. Not all people have the same starting conditions, the same chances. And if you don’t recognise the differences, then you won’t be able to change them.
Winner of the IKARUS Theatre Prize 2019 awarded by the JugendKulturService Berlin.
Performers: Friedrich Greiling, Hanni Lorenz, Wolfgang Boos and alternating: Eva Plischke, Angela Löer, Frank Oberhäußer
Direction: Turbo Pascal
Stage Design, Costumes: Janina Janke
Music: Friedrich Greiling
Dramaturgy: Karola Marsch
Assistant Director, Stage Manager, Prompter: Melina Archipoff
Stage Technician: Henning Beckmann
Lighting: Rainer Pagel
Sound and Video Technician: Max Berthold
Make-Up: Karla Steudel
Props: Jens Blau
Contact for touring enquiries: Axel Möbius, axel.moebius[a]parkaue.de
Production: Junges Staatstheater Berlin — Theater an der Parkaue.
Turbo Pascal is a theatre and performance collective from Berlin. They are interested in how people organise and imagine living together. They have made a name for themselves in the area of ”theatrical audience experiments“: they devise interactive stage plays and performative installations which the audience may follow, address, involve themselves in and become independent of in different ways each time. In this way the theatre becomes a public space of assembly and negotiation for social processes. Turbo Pascal includes the founding-members, conceivers and performers Angela Löer, Frank Oberhäußer, Eva Plischke, Veit Arlt, Luis Pfeiffer, the performers and productions managers Margret Schütz and Kathrin Feldhaus, the musician Friedrich Greiling, the stage designer Janina Janke, the video artist Gernot Wöltjen and the sonic artist and programmer Georg Werner.
Theatrical Community, Protest and International Collaboration in a Disembodied Age
10.–12.06., Conference programme online via Zoom, Workshops in various locations
Language: English
The pandemic has hit theatres hard all over the world. Places that were built for bodies to gather and share meaningful experiences together have spent most of the last year empty. The Impulse Academy takes a closer look at this situation. What is lost when performances and working processes take place in the digital space? And what is gained?
The three days of the ACADEMY will take place in a hybrid format, both online and in person in Düsseldorf and Cologne, Berne, Johannesburg and Minsk:
The lectures and discussions in the mornings will focus on the role of the body in creating communities, political protest and international collaboration. These will take place online via Zoom.
In a workshop held over multiple afternoons, participants will explore the art of touching, smell, intimacy and vulnerability. The workshop will take place in person in Düsseldorf.
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important is physical togetherness to the theatrical experience and what do we lose when the audience is sitting at home watching on a laptop or mobile phone? How has our perception of intimacy and touch changed in times of physical distance?
10:00 Welcome
10:10 Bodies in solidarity
Keynote and discussion: Mazda Adli, Clinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy at the Charité Hospital, Berlin. Chaired by: Eva Neklyaeva
In his keynote speech the psychiatrist Mazda Adli shows why theatre has an existential importance as a place of assembly: collective emotional and cognitive experience makes a significant contribution to overcoming everyday stress and mental well-being, creates solidarity between people, thereby reinforcing social cohesion within society. In short: theatre keeps our souls healthy. But what role does the body play here? Do these effects occur when we are gathering in front of screens?
11:00 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:15 Intimacy at a distance
Samara Hersch and Damian Rebgetz, input and discussion. Chaired by: Eva Neklyaeva
In their artistic practice, the director Samara Hersch and the actor and performer Damian Rebgetz intensively explore voice and sound as well as intimacy and distance. Both sets of themes have attracted increased attention as a result of Covid- 19. Samara and Damian recount their personal and artistic experiences. Samara Hersch is also represented in the Impulse SHOWCASE with the interactive online performance BODY OF KNOWLEDGE (AT HOME).
Video
12:00 h a p t i c a f f i n i t i e s – a study group on touch, haptic aesthetics and intimacy in the arts
Breakout rooms with:
Joshua Wicke
Antonia Rohwetter
Carolina Mendonca
Bryana Fritz und Henry Andersen
Sofie Luckhardt, Anneliese Ostertag and Rahel Spöhrer
Siegmar Zacharias
Anna Zett
In conversations and exercises in an informal and participatory setting, participants are invited to explore the desire for and loss of intimacy together with the ambivalence and reciprocity of touch. The hosts are practitioners from the fields of art and theory who are working on the theme of touch and intimacy in the arts.
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important is the visibility and vulnerability of the body to the effectiveness of political protest movements? What influence has COVID-19 had on this?
10:00 Dance in Protest
Keynote and discussion: Kirsten Maar, Free University Berlin, Institute of Theatre Studies. Chaired by: Irina Bârcă
What potential do choreographic interventions have for protest movements in the age of the pandemic – whether in the context of Black Lives Matter, in Belarus, Poland or Hungary? In her keynote speech, Kirsten Maar will demonstrate choreography’s inherent potential to create a public sphere through assembly and intervention. Resilient and enduring bodies rehearse collectivity together by using the emancipatory potential of reciprocal touching.
Video
10:45 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:00 Appelation, Ideology and the Weird
Joana Tischkau and Julian Warner, inputs and discussion Chaired by: Irina Bârcă
Joana Tischkau talks about visualising BLM protests in the last year. How were the resistant bodies staged in the media and which images are left over in the end? In his input, ‘The Discourse That Made Me’, Julian Warner appeals to us to rid ourselves of the false consciousness of a neoliberal diversity paradigm: “Instead of succumbing to analogies of African-American suffering, we must endeavour to create our own archaeologies in order to produce knowledge of specific oppressions. We will need our material bodies and a sense of the weird and the eerie in order to break free from the appellations of platform capitalism.”
Both artists are also represented in the Impulse SHOWCASE: Joana Tischkau with PLAYBLACK and Julian Warner with THE HISTORY OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY AS TOLD BY FEHLER KUTI UND DIE POLIZEI.
12:00 “It’s all so bad, even complete introverts go out.“*
Discussion in co-operation with the Goethe Institut Belarus with Mikhail Gulin, Sophia Sadovskaya, Igor Shugaleev. Chaired by: Tania Arcimovich
Artists and activists from Belarus describe the role of the body in the public sphere as part of the protest movement. Which strategies were used and what effect did the pandemic have on these? What were the consequences for the cultural scene and the performing arts in particular?
*Placard slogan during the protests in Minsk in August 2020
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important are physical meetings to collective creative processes and developing good working relationships? To what extent can we replace them with online tools? And what does this mean for the future of a climate friendly, decolonial international collaboration?
10:00 Disembodied collaboration in creative processes – where does even the best digital tool reach its limits? Findings in media psychology after a year with Covid-19
Keynote and discussion: Maren Urner, HMKW, University of Applied Sciences for Media, Communication and Management, Cologne. Chaired by: Marta Keil
From one day to the other, the pandemic forced us to move our private, professional and cultural communication to the digital world. What are the risks, what the chances of "online lectures,” ”onlne meetings” and ”online gatherings”? What do we miss and what do we gain? How does it affect our well-being?
Video
10:45 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:00 Travelling for Art
Ant Hampton and Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez (Lagartijas tiradas al sol, Mexico), inputs and discussion. Chaired by: Marta Keil
Ant Hampton is currently working on the project ‘Showing Without Going – live performance options without air travel’. Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez has responded with an open letter to Jerôme Bel’s call to refrain from the use of air travel in the performing arts. Both performance artists discuss the necessity of travel, talk about privileges and the luxury of abstention as well as about how their views have changed as a consequence of Covid-19.
Video
12:00 Disembodied co-operations
Jayachandran Palazhy (Attakkalari Center for Movement Arts, Bangalore) and Clara Vaughan (Market Theatre Laboratory, Johannesburg), inputs and discussion. Chaired by: Ogutu Muraya
Jayachandran Palazhy, Artistic Director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts in Bangalore, and the Head of the Market Theatre Laboratory in Johannesburg, Clara Vaughan, talk about their experiences of rehearsal, performances and co-operation projects in the last year. What positive effects might there have been, but also where did the challenges lie – both locally and in an international context?
Video
12:45 Conclusions
from 14:30–17:30 h each day, Düsseldorf in person
By registration only (for further information see below)
Hosts: Sibylle Peters with Charlotte Pfeifer and Ansuman Biswas, and guest Moritz Frischkorn
Working language: English
What it means to be alone and what it means to be connected have changed because of the pandemic. Coronavirus is a shared problem that keeps us apart from each other. But the safety of isolation is accompanied by its own dangers: if our bodies cannot smell and touch other bodies, our stress levels remain high. Fear and depression take the place of shared vulnerability. Hedges of thorns start springing up around our castles. At the same time digital gatherings have replaced real get-togethers and connected people with each other – even globally – in new ways. Against this background, theatre and performance appear in a new light: as arts of intimacy that bring people close to each other and invite them to communicate and share their vulnerabilities.
EXERCISES IN SOCIAL INTIMACY will bring together 90 participants locally and globally, physically and digitally. Groups in Düsseldorf and Cologne, Bangalore, Berne, Johannesburg and Minsk will meet while each observing the public health regulations that apply in their location and conduct exchanges through video conferencing. They will explore the art of touching, smell and intimacy and experiment with the relationship between intimacy and distance.
“Pleasure Activism is called for in order to rediscover trust between bodies. Let us be the Princess who forces her way through the hedge of thorns and kisses Sleeping Beauty awake!” Sibylle Peters
It is only possible to take part in the workshop locally.
To participate in the workshop group in Düsseldorf you can register at email hidden; JavaScript is required. No particular previous experience is required. The cost of the workshop for three afternoons including catering is 30 Euro.
The
workshop will take place in compliance with the public health
regulations in force at the time. Participants agree to take a rapid
Covid test each day that will be organized by the producers.
International co-hosts:
Bern University of the Arts, Theatre Division (Switzerland)
The Market Theatre Laboratory, Johannesburg (South Africa)
Universität zu Köln, Institut für Kunst & Kunsttheorie
Goethe Institut Belarus
Mazda Adli is a psychiatrist and stress researcher. He runs the Fliedner Klinik in Berlin and the research group into affective disorders at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin. He founded the Interdisciplinary Forum on Neuro-Urbanism that examines the influence of city living on emotions and mental health and is the founder of the “Singing Shrinks”, the world’s only choir of psychiatrists. His book ‘Stress and the City: Why cities make us ill and why they are still good for us’ was published in 2017.
Tania Arcimovich is a writer, director and curator from Minsk. She graduated in Theatre Studies from the Belarus State Academy of the Arts in Minsk and has a Master’s in Cultural Studies from the European Humanities University in Vilnius. Since 2014, Tania Arcimovich has curated exhibitions, and produced a range of cultural and educational projects with institutions including the Gallery for Contemporary Art, Lohvinau publishing house, Minsk Photography Month and the TEART theatre festival. She taught at the European College of Liberal Arts in Belarus from 2016 to 2019. She is a co-founder of the ziErnie Performative Arts Platform and editor of the magazine pARTisan / pARTisanka. She is currently studying for a doctorate at the International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture (GCSC) at the Justus-Liebig University in Gießen.
Irina Bârcă is the Dramaturg at the FFT Düsseldorf with responsibility for children’s and youth theatre. Born and raised in Sibiu, Romania, she studied Acting in Bucharest and Theatre as Education at the University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück. From 2014 – 2017 she was Education Officer at the Theater an der Parkaue. She devises, produces and curates theatre projects principally for and with children and young people. At the FFT her work includes evolving formats in which theatres, schools and artists to encounter and co-operate with each other and theatre by digital natives. She is a member of numerous juries, the curatorial board of the Fonds Darstellende Künste and also curated the festival Augenblick mal! 2021.
Ansuman Biswas was born in India and trained in the UK. He has an international practice encompassing music, film, live art, installation, writing and theatre. He is interested in hybridity and interdisciplinarity – often working between science, art and industry, for instance, or between music, dance and visual art. Improvisation and play are key elements of his practice and at its core is the discipline of vipassana meditation.
Moritz Frischkorn has worked in the field of contemporary performing arts as a choreographer, performer and theoretician since 2014. His artistic and curatorial practice addresses choreographies of things and their social and political dimensions. In 2021 he was awarded his Doctorate at HafenCity University Hamburg for a thesis on the topic of “More-than-human Choreographies”. In recent years he has presented a series of his own works. His interdisciplinary research project ‘The Great Report’ on the relationship between choreography and logistics was premiered at Kampnagel in 2020.
Stacie CC Graham is a management consultant, executive coach, founder, speaker and writer. In her work, she uses practices and tools such as mindful leadership, intersectional attunement as well as emotional and social intelligence. Her holistic wellness brand, OYA: Body-Mind-Spirit Retreats, is dedicated to underrepresented communities typically underserved by the mainstream wellness industry. With an MS in economics and a PhD in psychology as well as experience living and working in different parts of the world, she continues to cultivate a nuanced understanding of underlying drivers of human motivation and behaviour.
Mikhail Gulin is an artist and curator. Since the 2000s, he has been one of the most influencing Belarusian artists making artistic interventions in public, focusing on how the public sphere works in Belarus. His artworks have been presented in galleries in Minsk, Brest, Eindhoven, Vilnius, Moscow, Warsaw, Kiev and other cities. Gulin participated in artistic symposiums and performance festivals in Lithuania, North Ossetia-Alania and Kazakhstan.
Ant Hampton is a performance artist. His works are characterised by a clear tension between strictly formal and structural elements and other elements that are lived and negotiated in the moment of performance. He has developed small-scale, intimate projects that involve members of the audience themselves and take place in cafés (‘Etiquette’) or libraries (‘The Quiet Volume’). His recent works encourage the public to take risks with genuine consequences (‘Someone Else’, ‘The Thing’).
The political and ethical implications of touch have come to the foreground within our current intensified experience of both the loss and the dangers of personal contact. Intimacies are both given and chosen that elude our control. Here touch manifests itself as the fundamental requirement of a vulnerable existence. It is a feature of reciprocal dependencies, porous physical boundaries, brutal intimacies and cross-species collaborations. The study group h a p t i c a f f i n i t i e s was initiated by Anneliese Ostertag, Sofie Luckhardt, Belle Santos and Rahel Spöhrer, meeting every week since the middle of April against this background to ask: what forms of touch take place in the performative arts that are noticed and unnoticed? How can we address the performativity and mediality of touch? And how can the manifold haptic encounters in the arts be understood on a consensual basis?
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.
Marta Keil is a performing arts curator, dramaturg and researcher. She focuses her curatorial and research practice on possible alternative processes of instituting and on redefining modes of working transnationally. Since 2019 she co-runs Performing Arts Institute in Warsaw, an independent organisation that aims at developing the independent performing arts field in Poland. Since 2019 she cooperates as a facilitator with the RESHAPE project that proposes instruments for transition towards an alternative, fairer, and unified arts ecosystem across Europe and the Southern Mediterranean.
Kirsten Maar has been Junior Professor for Dance Studies at the Free University Berlin since 2018 and works as a dramaturg. Her research focusses on choreographic practices in the 20th century, the removal of boundaries between choreography, architecture and the visual arts as well as intersectional discourses and canonical issues.
Ogutu Muraya is a writer and theater maker whose work is embedded in the practice of Orature. In his work, he searches for new forms of storytelling where socio-political aspects merge with the belief that art is an important catalyst for questioning certainties. He studied International Relations at USIU-Africa and graduated in 2016 with a Master in Arts at DAS Theatre. His texts have been published internationally. His performative works and storytelling have been featured in theatres and festivals around the globe. Ogutu is based in Nairobi where he continues his artistic practice and also teaches part time at the department of film and performing arts at KCA University.
Eva Neklyaeva is a curator concerned with the questions of freedom and is exploring these questions across performing art, politics and sexuality. At the moment, she is co-curating Samara Editions – performances by post; as well as Spielart Festival 2021. Previously, she has, amongst others, curated Santarcangelo Festival (2017–2019), and was Director of Baltic Circle International Contemporary Theatre Festival for six years. Under her leadership, the festival became an acclaimed international platform and laboratory for emerging multidisciplinary performance.
Jayachandran Palazhy is the Founder and Artistic Director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts in Bangalore and an internationally sought-after dancer and choreographer. He graduated in Physics from Kerala and then started his training started in India with Bharatanatyam, Kathakali, Indian folk dances and the martial art form of Kalarippayattu. He also trained at the London Contemporary Dance School and studied Classical Ballet, Tai Chi, Capoeira and African Dance. He collaborated with international artists on multimedia dance productions involving digital arts and interactive technology. At Attakkalari he has directed the research and documentation project “NAGARIKA” – on the movement principles of Indian physical traditions. He has also worked on the “Role of Interactive Technology and Telematics in Performance” as part of a collaborative project at the Arizona State University.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
Charlotte Pfeifer is interested in extending the stage situation in an interplay of art, music, audio drama and performance. She began work as an actor and subsequently became a dramaturg and director. She now amalgamates various roles for projects on everyday topics, science fiction and rubbish and likes to devise these as part of a group. PMS-LOUNGE – HULDIGUNG EINES ZUSTANDS(PMS-LOUNGE – TRIBUTE TO A CONDITION) won the Audience Prize and the Jury Prize at the Hauptsache Frei Festival in 2018. Pfeifer produces self-devised children’s plays and happenings with the interdisciplianry group of artists TRAUMMASCHiNE Inc.
Damian Rebgetz studied classical voice, music theatre and has an MA in Sound Studies. He has performed in various theatre, music theatre, dance and performance contexts and was a member of the acting ensemble of Münchner Kammerspiele 2015–2020. His own performances are inspired by listening practices and memory as well as notions of music, noise, voice, sound, identity and materiality. In 2013, his performance “Something for the Fans” was coproduced by Impulse Theater Festival and HAU Hebbel am Ufer.
Lázaro Gabino Rodriguez holds a master degree in theater from the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten (AHK). His work consists in explorations around notions of true and false, emerging from personal memories and their relation to fiction. In 2003 he founded with Luisa Pardo Lagartijas tiradas al sol, an artists collective dedicated to contemporary creation, with which they have developed projects that take their final form as theater pieces, texts, films, pedagogical processes and radio productions. Their work has been presented all across México and internationally.
Sophia Sadovskaya is an independent curator and art educator from Minsk. From 2012–2021, she curated the “EVAA project” (Environmental Visual Audial Art Project) which combines environmental activism and contemporary art practices. Additionally to her curatorial projects, Sadovskaya is the co-author of a series of books, “The Art of Belarus of the 20th century for kids”.
Igor Shugaleev is an independent actor and performer. He collaborated with TOKtheatre in Minsk and HUNCHTheatre Belarus. In 2019, Igor began to work on solo projects. Cooperating with artists across creative disciplines, he searches for his artistic language at the intersection of dance, theatre and performance.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party. This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation production for her Master’s degree.
Maren Urner is Professor of Media Psychology at the HMKW University of Applied Sciences for Media, Communication and Management in Cologne. She has studied Cognitive Science and Neuroscience and took her Doctorate in Neuroscience at University College London. She founded the online magazine ‘Perspective Daily’ for constructive journalism in 2016 and was its editor until March 2019. Her first book ‘Schluss mit dem täglichen Weltuntergang’ was a bestseller and her second, ‘Raus aus der ewigen Dauerkrise’, will be published in 2021.
Clara Vaughan is the Head of the Market Theatre Laboratory in Johannesburg, South Africa, and a theatre-maker, arts facilitator, arts manager, and writer. At the Market Lab she brings together diverse theatre-practitioners and other artists to collaborate in various learning/making/experimenting/researching processes, with an emphasis on emerging artists, and subaltern experiences, voices and identities.
Julian Warner works as a cultural anthropolgist in the
fields of curating, music, performance art and research. He is Artistic
Director of the Festival der Kulturregion Stuttgart 2022 and curator of
the Spielart festival in Munich. Under the alias Fehler Kuti he also
releases discursive pop. Warner has worked as a research assistant at
the Institute of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Göttingen.
The anthology he has edited AFTER EUROPE – Beiträge zur dekolonialen Kritik is published by Verbrecher Verlag in April 2021.
Direction ACADEMY #2: Anne Schulz
Direction Workshop: Sibylle Peters
Production Management: Lena Busse
The ACADEMY #2 – LOST IN SPACE? is funded by the Goethe Institut and the International Visitors Programme of the NRW KULTURsekretariat.
People die, but the online content they create lives on. DARUM’s hyperlink installation reveals which virtual remnants continue to tell people about us even after our deaths. An internet archive that evokes death and urban loneliness in an essayistic manner.
Hyperlink installation
Language: German
Millions of websites are not only constantly being created but also taken down again. Initiatives such as the “Internet Archive” pursue the objective of preserving information on the World Wide Web from virtual death. But what happens when the originators die – while their digital legacies continue to live on?
404-DEADLINK is inspired by the largely lost, colourful and often trashy websites of the 90s and early 00s. From a large number of interlinked of individual pages, a complex archive has been created that comprises documents, photographs and videos with evidence of those who have died in solitude in Vienna as well as highlighting issues of urban loneliness and the impenetrable nature of human existence. A sprawling associative labyrinth with a logic of its own, with no beginning and no end, that encourages visitors to search for their own clues and get lost there – while encountering both the familiar and the unexpected.
As part of the project, DARUM has invited numerous guest artists to help them co-devise this labyrinth: writers, musicians, visual artists, scenographers, but also experts such as funeral speakers and cooks extend the network of multiple perspectives on the theme and contribute works using text, images and sound.
In their debut performance in Vienna UNGEBETENE GÄSTE, DARUM examined what had been left behind by the dead: five individual, one-off performances went in search of what had happened to people who were buried without any loved ones present. These focussed not only on the deceased themselves but also the impossibility of reconstructing their life stories. Invited to the Impulse Theater Festival 2020, the work was intended to be performed in 2021 in the world premiere of a specially developed Cologne version, which cannot now be realized due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
A project by DARUM, Artistic realisation and Programming: Victoria Halper, Kai Krösche
Artistic Associates: Laura Andreß, Matthias Krische, Clara Hirschmanner
With guest contributions from: Emre Akal, Shabnam Chamani, Simon Dietersdorfer, Franz Hammerbacher, hoelb/hoeb, Andrea Imler, Nora Jacobs, Kristof Kepler, Hannes Benedetto Pircher, Roland Rauschmeier, Mario Schlembach, Andres Stirn, Simon Windisch et. al.
Game dramaturgy: Philipp Ehmann & Clara Hirschmanner (Play:Vienna)
Concept: Kai Krösche
UNGEBETENE GÄSTE is a production by DARUM in co-operation with WERK X-Petersplatz (Wien). Funded by SHIFT, the City of Vienna's Department of Culture as well as Bezirk Innere Stadt.
The new digital version 404–TOTLINK is a co-production between DARUM and Impulse Theater Festival. Funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture, Civil Service and Sports.
The collective DARUM. Darstellende Kunst und Musik
(Performing Arts and Music), founded in 2018, operates at numerous
intersections between artistic disciplines. It is made up by Laura
Andreß, Victoria Halper and Kai Krösche, who have operated in between
independent and institutional structures in the performing arts for
several years. This core team bring together expertise in numerous
artistic disciplines including film and theatre direction, dramaturgy,
music, literature, video and media arts, acting and performance. Der
Formensuche von DARUM’s search for form is always preceded by the big
question “why?” However, questions prove to be the best answers: as a
result in its artistic projects DARUM attempts to fail productively in
its quest for answers. UNGEBETENE GÄSTE (UNINVITED GUESTS) is DARUM’s
debut performance. The performative installation ‘Ausgang: Offen’ was
presented in Vienna in April 2020.
Laura Andreß studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies in Vienna. After working as an intern and assistant at several theatres, performance venues and festivals and for independent theatre productions in Vienna she completed a Masters in Dramaturgy at the HfS Ernst Busch in Berlin. In 2018 her graduation project was given its world premiere as part of the Berlin Performing Arts Festival. Laura Andreß has since worked as a freelance dramaturg and production manager (for artists including Florentina Holzinger). Her work has been presented at venues including the Volksbühne Berlin, Festspielhaus Hellerau and the Münchner Kammerspielen. In 2019 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Victoria Halper studied Acting and Directing at the University of Toronto. She emigrated to Austria in 2010 in search of her roots in the Burgenland and worked as an Assistant Director at numerous theatres. From 2013 to 2016 she worked as a director and editor for several films including the detective story ‘Kommissar Taler’, for which she was awarded the City of Traun Prize for Culture in 2015. Since 2016 she has operated as a freelance director in an experimental field between different forms of the performing arts: contemporary circus, essay-performance, video art installations and ludification theatre in public spaces. In 2018 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Kai Krösche is a director and musician. He studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies and Philosophy in Vienna. Since 2005 he has worked as a director, musician and video artist on his own theatre projects as well as in the fields of music, video, dramaturgy and performance at venues including Schauspiel Köln, Landestheater Niederösterreich, WUK Vienna, Volkstheater Vienna, WERK X in Vienna and HochX in Munich. As a screenwriter and director he has produced numerous short film projects since 2002. In 2018 he was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office. Between 2010 and 2016 he worked as a theatre and film critic for outlets including nachtkritik.de and the Wiener Zeitung.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
Purity, innocence and perfection – these are the attributes of the Virgin Mary. In a solo filled with humour and sensuality Teresa Vittucci searches for the feminist potential in this icon. She shows how the myth of a woman being sealed until she first has sex continues to influence notions of femininity to this day.
12.06. in person at TanzFaktur, live stream + chat (in English language)
Language: English
Suitable for ages 18 and above
In Christianity, Mary is seen as the ideal woman – because she unites what cannot be united, as both a virgin and a mother. Real women can never live up to this ideal. For them, the cult of Mary presents them with an impossible challenge. This makes Mary a source of self-hatred and of misogyny. But Mary is also merciful, vulnerable and filled with love. Teresa Vittucci creates images that respectfully grant space to these qualities – while unsparingly highlighting all the lies and false expectations that surround female virginity. A single silent image grows into a furious indictment. Vittucci sweeps away the story of the virgin’s hymen as a seal that guarantees freshness until it is pierced the first time she has sex. The icon empowers herself.
Concept and Performance: Teresa Vittucci
Dramaturgical Advice: Benjamin Egger, Veza Fernández, Rafał Pierzyński
Scenography: Jasmin Wiesli, Teresa Vittucci
Production Management: groundworkers // Kira Koplin
Production: OH DEAR Zürich
Contact for touring enquiries: Kira Koplin, kira[a]groundworkers.at
Co-Production: Tanzhaus Zürich, Zürcher Theaterspektakel. Developed as part of the PREMIO Prize for Emerging Artists in Theatre and Dance, Espacion do Tempo Montemor. Funded by Migros-Kulturprozent, Pro Helvetia, Ernst Göhner Stiftung.
With special thanks to Julia Haenni, Gina Gurtner and Simone Aughterlony
Teresa Vittucci is a choreographer and performer. She is a graduate of the Conservatoire in Vienna, the Ailey School and the Salzburg Experimental Academy of Dance (SEAD) and completed her M.A. at the Academy of Fine Arts in Berne. Since 2013 she has worked as a solo performer and has devised such pieces as ‘UNLEASH’ (2012), ‘LUNCHTIME’ (2015), ‘ALL EYES ON’ (2017) and ‘HATE ME, TENDER’ (2018). She has collaborated with numerous artists including Simone Aughterlony, Marie-Caroline Hominal, Trajal Harrell and Nils Amadeus Lange. Teresa Vittucci is the Young Associate Artist (YAA!) at Tanzhaus Zürich for 2019/20. In 2019 she won the Swiss Dance Prize for HATE ME, TENDER.
Theatrical Community, Protest and International Collaboration in a Disembodied Age
10.–12.06., Conference programme online via Zoom, Workshops in various locations
Language: English
The pandemic has hit theatres hard all over the world. Places that were built for bodies to gather and share meaningful experiences together have spent most of the last year empty. The Impulse Academy takes a closer look at this situation. What is lost when performances and working processes take place in the digital space? And what is gained?
The three days of the ACADEMY will take place in a hybrid format, both online and in person in Düsseldorf and Cologne, Berne, Johannesburg and Minsk:
The lectures and discussions in the mornings will focus on the role of the body in creating communities, political protest and international collaboration. These will take place online via Zoom.
In a workshop held over multiple afternoons, participants will explore the art of touching, smell, intimacy and vulnerability. The workshop will take place in person in Düsseldorf.
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important is physical togetherness to the theatrical experience and what do we lose when the audience is sitting at home watching on a laptop or mobile phone? How has our perception of intimacy and touch changed in times of physical distance?
10:00 Welcome
10:10 Bodies in solidarity
Keynote and discussion: Mazda Adli, Clinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy at the Charité Hospital, Berlin. Chaired by: Eva Neklyaeva
In his keynote speech the psychiatrist Mazda Adli shows why theatre has an existential importance as a place of assembly: collective emotional and cognitive experience makes a significant contribution to overcoming everyday stress and mental well-being, creates solidarity between people, thereby reinforcing social cohesion within society. In short: theatre keeps our souls healthy. But what role does the body play here? Do these effects occur when we are gathering in front of screens?
11:00 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:15 Intimacy at a distance
Samara Hersch and Damian Rebgetz, input and discussion. Chaired by: Eva Neklyaeva
In their artistic practice, the director Samara Hersch and the actor and performer Damian Rebgetz intensively explore voice and sound as well as intimacy and distance. Both sets of themes have attracted increased attention as a result of Covid- 19. Samara and Damian recount their personal and artistic experiences. Samara Hersch is also represented in the Impulse SHOWCASE with the interactive online performance BODY OF KNOWLEDGE (AT HOME).
Video
12:00 h a p t i c a f f i n i t i e s – a study group on touch, haptic aesthetics and intimacy in the arts
Breakout rooms with:
Joshua Wicke
Antonia Rohwetter
Carolina Mendonca
Bryana Fritz und Henry Andersen
Sofie Luckhardt, Anneliese Ostertag and Rahel Spöhrer
Siegmar Zacharias
Anna Zett
In conversations and exercises in an informal and participatory setting, participants are invited to explore the desire for and loss of intimacy together with the ambivalence and reciprocity of touch. The hosts are practitioners from the fields of art and theory who are working on the theme of touch and intimacy in the arts.
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important is the visibility and vulnerability of the body to the effectiveness of political protest movements? What influence has COVID-19 had on this?
10:00 Dance in Protest
Keynote and discussion: Kirsten Maar, Free University Berlin, Institute of Theatre Studies. Chaired by: Irina Bârcă
What potential do choreographic interventions have for protest movements in the age of the pandemic – whether in the context of Black Lives Matter, in Belarus, Poland or Hungary? In her keynote speech, Kirsten Maar will demonstrate choreography’s inherent potential to create a public sphere through assembly and intervention. Resilient and enduring bodies rehearse collectivity together by using the emancipatory potential of reciprocal touching.
Video
10:45 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:00 Appelation, Ideology and the Weird
Joana Tischkau and Julian Warner, inputs and discussion Chaired by: Irina Bârcă
Joana Tischkau talks about visualising BLM protests in the last year. How were the resistant bodies staged in the media and which images are left over in the end? In his input, ‘The Discourse That Made Me’, Julian Warner appeals to us to rid ourselves of the false consciousness of a neoliberal diversity paradigm: “Instead of succumbing to analogies of African-American suffering, we must endeavour to create our own archaeologies in order to produce knowledge of specific oppressions. We will need our material bodies and a sense of the weird and the eerie in order to break free from the appellations of platform capitalism.”
Both artists are also represented in the Impulse SHOWCASE: Joana Tischkau with PLAYBLACK and Julian Warner with THE HISTORY OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY AS TOLD BY FEHLER KUTI UND DIE POLIZEI.
12:00 “It’s all so bad, even complete introverts go out.“*
Discussion in co-operation with the Goethe Institut Belarus with Mikhail Gulin, Sophia Sadovskaya, Igor Shugaleev. Chaired by: Tania Arcimovich
Artists and activists from Belarus describe the role of the body in the public sphere as part of the protest movement. Which strategies were used and what effect did the pandemic have on these? What were the consequences for the cultural scene and the performing arts in particular?
*Placard slogan during the protests in Minsk in August 2020
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important are physical meetings to collective creative processes and developing good working relationships? To what extent can we replace them with online tools? And what does this mean for the future of a climate friendly, decolonial international collaboration?
10:00 Disembodied collaboration in creative processes – where does even the best digital tool reach its limits? Findings in media psychology after a year with Covid-19
Keynote and discussion: Maren Urner, HMKW, University of Applied Sciences for Media, Communication and Management, Cologne. Chaired by: Marta Keil
From one day to the other, the pandemic forced us to move our private, professional and cultural communication to the digital world. What are the risks, what the chances of "online lectures,” ”onlne meetings” and ”online gatherings”? What do we miss and what do we gain? How does it affect our well-being?
Video
10:45 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:00 Travelling for Art
Ant Hampton and Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez (Lagartijas tiradas al sol, Mexico), inputs and discussion. Chaired by: Marta Keil
Ant Hampton is currently working on the project ‘Showing Without Going – live performance options without air travel’. Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez has responded with an open letter to Jerôme Bel’s call to refrain from the use of air travel in the performing arts. Both performance artists discuss the necessity of travel, talk about privileges and the luxury of abstention as well as about how their views have changed as a consequence of Covid-19.
Video
12:00 Disembodied co-operations
Jayachandran Palazhy (Attakkalari Center for Movement Arts, Bangalore) and Clara Vaughan (Market Theatre Laboratory, Johannesburg), inputs and discussion. Chaired by: Ogutu Muraya
Jayachandran Palazhy, Artistic Director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts in Bangalore, and the Head of the Market Theatre Laboratory in Johannesburg, Clara Vaughan, talk about their experiences of rehearsal, performances and co-operation projects in the last year. What positive effects might there have been, but also where did the challenges lie – both locally and in an international context?
Video
12:45 Conclusions
from 14:30–17:30 h each day, Düsseldorf in person
By registration only (for further information see below)
Hosts: Sibylle Peters with Charlotte Pfeifer and Ansuman Biswas, and guest Moritz Frischkorn
Working language: English
What it means to be alone and what it means to be connected have changed because of the pandemic. Coronavirus is a shared problem that keeps us apart from each other. But the safety of isolation is accompanied by its own dangers: if our bodies cannot smell and touch other bodies, our stress levels remain high. Fear and depression take the place of shared vulnerability. Hedges of thorns start springing up around our castles. At the same time digital gatherings have replaced real get-togethers and connected people with each other – even globally – in new ways. Against this background, theatre and performance appear in a new light: as arts of intimacy that bring people close to each other and invite them to communicate and share their vulnerabilities.
EXERCISES IN SOCIAL INTIMACY will bring together 90 participants locally and globally, physically and digitally. Groups in Düsseldorf and Cologne, Bangalore, Berne, Johannesburg and Minsk will meet while each observing the public health regulations that apply in their location and conduct exchanges through video conferencing. They will explore the art of touching, smell and intimacy and experiment with the relationship between intimacy and distance.
“Pleasure Activism is called for in order to rediscover trust between bodies. Let us be the Princess who forces her way through the hedge of thorns and kisses Sleeping Beauty awake!” Sibylle Peters
It is only possible to take part in the workshop locally.
To participate in the workshop group in Düsseldorf you can register at email hidden; JavaScript is required. No particular previous experience is required. The cost of the workshop for three afternoons including catering is 30 Euro.
The
workshop will take place in compliance with the public health
regulations in force at the time. Participants agree to take a rapid
Covid test each day that will be organized by the producers.
International co-hosts:
Bern University of the Arts, Theatre Division (Switzerland)
The Market Theatre Laboratory, Johannesburg (South Africa)
Universität zu Köln, Institut für Kunst & Kunsttheorie
Goethe Institut Belarus
Mazda Adli is a psychiatrist and stress researcher. He runs the Fliedner Klinik in Berlin and the research group into affective disorders at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin. He founded the Interdisciplinary Forum on Neuro-Urbanism that examines the influence of city living on emotions and mental health and is the founder of the “Singing Shrinks”, the world’s only choir of psychiatrists. His book ‘Stress and the City: Why cities make us ill and why they are still good for us’ was published in 2017.
Tania Arcimovich is a writer, director and curator from Minsk. She graduated in Theatre Studies from the Belarus State Academy of the Arts in Minsk and has a Master’s in Cultural Studies from the European Humanities University in Vilnius. Since 2014, Tania Arcimovich has curated exhibitions, and produced a range of cultural and educational projects with institutions including the Gallery for Contemporary Art, Lohvinau publishing house, Minsk Photography Month and the TEART theatre festival. She taught at the European College of Liberal Arts in Belarus from 2016 to 2019. She is a co-founder of the ziErnie Performative Arts Platform and editor of the magazine pARTisan / pARTisanka. She is currently studying for a doctorate at the International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture (GCSC) at the Justus-Liebig University in Gießen.
Irina Bârcă is the Dramaturg at the FFT Düsseldorf with responsibility for children’s and youth theatre. Born and raised in Sibiu, Romania, she studied Acting in Bucharest and Theatre as Education at the University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück. From 2014 – 2017 she was Education Officer at the Theater an der Parkaue. She devises, produces and curates theatre projects principally for and with children and young people. At the FFT her work includes evolving formats in which theatres, schools and artists to encounter and co-operate with each other and theatre by digital natives. She is a member of numerous juries, the curatorial board of the Fonds Darstellende Künste and also curated the festival Augenblick mal! 2021.
Ansuman Biswas was born in India and trained in the UK. He has an international practice encompassing music, film, live art, installation, writing and theatre. He is interested in hybridity and interdisciplinarity – often working between science, art and industry, for instance, or between music, dance and visual art. Improvisation and play are key elements of his practice and at its core is the discipline of vipassana meditation.
Moritz Frischkorn has worked in the field of contemporary performing arts as a choreographer, performer and theoretician since 2014. His artistic and curatorial practice addresses choreographies of things and their social and political dimensions. In 2021 he was awarded his Doctorate at HafenCity University Hamburg for a thesis on the topic of “More-than-human Choreographies”. In recent years he has presented a series of his own works. His interdisciplinary research project ‘The Great Report’ on the relationship between choreography and logistics was premiered at Kampnagel in 2020.
Stacie CC Graham is a management consultant, executive coach, founder, speaker and writer. In her work, she uses practices and tools such as mindful leadership, intersectional attunement as well as emotional and social intelligence. Her holistic wellness brand, OYA: Body-Mind-Spirit Retreats, is dedicated to underrepresented communities typically underserved by the mainstream wellness industry. With an MS in economics and a PhD in psychology as well as experience living and working in different parts of the world, she continues to cultivate a nuanced understanding of underlying drivers of human motivation and behaviour.
Mikhail Gulin is an artist and curator. Since the 2000s, he has been one of the most influencing Belarusian artists making artistic interventions in public, focusing on how the public sphere works in Belarus. His artworks have been presented in galleries in Minsk, Brest, Eindhoven, Vilnius, Moscow, Warsaw, Kiev and other cities. Gulin participated in artistic symposiums and performance festivals in Lithuania, North Ossetia-Alania and Kazakhstan.
Ant Hampton is a performance artist. His works are characterised by a clear tension between strictly formal and structural elements and other elements that are lived and negotiated in the moment of performance. He has developed small-scale, intimate projects that involve members of the audience themselves and take place in cafés (‘Etiquette’) or libraries (‘The Quiet Volume’). His recent works encourage the public to take risks with genuine consequences (‘Someone Else’, ‘The Thing’).
The political and ethical implications of touch have come to the foreground within our current intensified experience of both the loss and the dangers of personal contact. Intimacies are both given and chosen that elude our control. Here touch manifests itself as the fundamental requirement of a vulnerable existence. It is a feature of reciprocal dependencies, porous physical boundaries, brutal intimacies and cross-species collaborations. The study group h a p t i c a f f i n i t i e s was initiated by Anneliese Ostertag, Sofie Luckhardt, Belle Santos and Rahel Spöhrer, meeting every week since the middle of April against this background to ask: what forms of touch take place in the performative arts that are noticed and unnoticed? How can we address the performativity and mediality of touch? And how can the manifold haptic encounters in the arts be understood on a consensual basis?
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.
Marta Keil is a performing arts curator, dramaturg and researcher. She focuses her curatorial and research practice on possible alternative processes of instituting and on redefining modes of working transnationally. Since 2019 she co-runs Performing Arts Institute in Warsaw, an independent organisation that aims at developing the independent performing arts field in Poland. Since 2019 she cooperates as a facilitator with the RESHAPE project that proposes instruments for transition towards an alternative, fairer, and unified arts ecosystem across Europe and the Southern Mediterranean.
Kirsten Maar has been Junior Professor for Dance Studies at the Free University Berlin since 2018 and works as a dramaturg. Her research focusses on choreographic practices in the 20th century, the removal of boundaries between choreography, architecture and the visual arts as well as intersectional discourses and canonical issues.
Ogutu Muraya is a writer and theater maker whose work is embedded in the practice of Orature. In his work, he searches for new forms of storytelling where socio-political aspects merge with the belief that art is an important catalyst for questioning certainties. He studied International Relations at USIU-Africa and graduated in 2016 with a Master in Arts at DAS Theatre. His texts have been published internationally. His performative works and storytelling have been featured in theatres and festivals around the globe. Ogutu is based in Nairobi where he continues his artistic practice and also teaches part time at the department of film and performing arts at KCA University.
Eva Neklyaeva is a curator concerned with the questions of freedom and is exploring these questions across performing art, politics and sexuality. At the moment, she is co-curating Samara Editions – performances by post; as well as Spielart Festival 2021. Previously, she has, amongst others, curated Santarcangelo Festival (2017–2019), and was Director of Baltic Circle International Contemporary Theatre Festival for six years. Under her leadership, the festival became an acclaimed international platform and laboratory for emerging multidisciplinary performance.
Jayachandran Palazhy is the Founder and Artistic Director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts in Bangalore and an internationally sought-after dancer and choreographer. He graduated in Physics from Kerala and then started his training started in India with Bharatanatyam, Kathakali, Indian folk dances and the martial art form of Kalarippayattu. He also trained at the London Contemporary Dance School and studied Classical Ballet, Tai Chi, Capoeira and African Dance. He collaborated with international artists on multimedia dance productions involving digital arts and interactive technology. At Attakkalari he has directed the research and documentation project “NAGARIKA” – on the movement principles of Indian physical traditions. He has also worked on the “Role of Interactive Technology and Telematics in Performance” as part of a collaborative project at the Arizona State University.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
Charlotte Pfeifer is interested in extending the stage situation in an interplay of art, music, audio drama and performance. She began work as an actor and subsequently became a dramaturg and director. She now amalgamates various roles for projects on everyday topics, science fiction and rubbish and likes to devise these as part of a group. PMS-LOUNGE – HULDIGUNG EINES ZUSTANDS(PMS-LOUNGE – TRIBUTE TO A CONDITION) won the Audience Prize and the Jury Prize at the Hauptsache Frei Festival in 2018. Pfeifer produces self-devised children’s plays and happenings with the interdisciplianry group of artists TRAUMMASCHiNE Inc.
Damian Rebgetz studied classical voice, music theatre and has an MA in Sound Studies. He has performed in various theatre, music theatre, dance and performance contexts and was a member of the acting ensemble of Münchner Kammerspiele 2015–2020. His own performances are inspired by listening practices and memory as well as notions of music, noise, voice, sound, identity and materiality. In 2013, his performance “Something for the Fans” was coproduced by Impulse Theater Festival and HAU Hebbel am Ufer.
Lázaro Gabino Rodriguez holds a master degree in theater from the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten (AHK). His work consists in explorations around notions of true and false, emerging from personal memories and their relation to fiction. In 2003 he founded with Luisa Pardo Lagartijas tiradas al sol, an artists collective dedicated to contemporary creation, with which they have developed projects that take their final form as theater pieces, texts, films, pedagogical processes and radio productions. Their work has been presented all across México and internationally.
Sophia Sadovskaya is an independent curator and art educator from Minsk. From 2012–2021, she curated the “EVAA project” (Environmental Visual Audial Art Project) which combines environmental activism and contemporary art practices. Additionally to her curatorial projects, Sadovskaya is the co-author of a series of books, “The Art of Belarus of the 20th century for kids”.
Igor Shugaleev is an independent actor and performer. He collaborated with TOKtheatre in Minsk and HUNCHTheatre Belarus. In 2019, Igor began to work on solo projects. Cooperating with artists across creative disciplines, he searches for his artistic language at the intersection of dance, theatre and performance.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party. This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation production for her Master’s degree.
Maren Urner is Professor of Media Psychology at the HMKW University of Applied Sciences for Media, Communication and Management in Cologne. She has studied Cognitive Science and Neuroscience and took her Doctorate in Neuroscience at University College London. She founded the online magazine ‘Perspective Daily’ for constructive journalism in 2016 and was its editor until March 2019. Her first book ‘Schluss mit dem täglichen Weltuntergang’ was a bestseller and her second, ‘Raus aus der ewigen Dauerkrise’, will be published in 2021.
Clara Vaughan is the Head of the Market Theatre Laboratory in Johannesburg, South Africa, and a theatre-maker, arts facilitator, arts manager, and writer. At the Market Lab she brings together diverse theatre-practitioners and other artists to collaborate in various learning/making/experimenting/researching processes, with an emphasis on emerging artists, and subaltern experiences, voices and identities.
Julian Warner works as a cultural anthropolgist in the
fields of curating, music, performance art and research. He is Artistic
Director of the Festival der Kulturregion Stuttgart 2022 and curator of
the Spielart festival in Munich. Under the alias Fehler Kuti he also
releases discursive pop. Warner has worked as a research assistant at
the Institute of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Göttingen.
The anthology he has edited AFTER EUROPE – Beiträge zur dekolonialen Kritik is published by Verbrecher Verlag in April 2021.
Direction ACADEMY #2: Anne Schulz
Direction Workshop: Sibylle Peters
Production Management: Lena Busse
The ACADEMY #2 – LOST IN SPACE? is funded by the Goethe Institut and the International Visitors Programme of the NRW KULTURsekretariat.
“Take my hand as we collect money for old cans” Fehler Kuti und die Polizei urge. In their stage show they scramble together music, theatre and theory. What emerges is a danceable, quasi-religious ritual that reveals the racist and capitalist power relations of a country in which there have never been equal rights and opportunities for all.
11.06. 22:00-24:00 h: Live stream and chat with Julian Warner
12.06. 00:00–24:00 h: Video on demand
Language: German and English
Die Polizei start playing. Frontman Fehler Kuti sings about the German need for security and policies of nativism and law and order: ranging from the transfiguration of the German forests, passing through deindustrialisation and the class struggle to the information society and racial profiling. Together they reveal the racist and capitalist power structures of a country which has never had the same rights and opportunities for everyone. Who are the police here – who enforces the prevailing order, who keeps it alive?
By and with Markus Acher, Micha Acher, Cico Beck, Fehler Kuti, Theresa Loibl, Sascha Schwegeler
Dramaturgy: Adele Mike Dittrich Frydetzki
Scenography: Jana Schützendübel
Costumes: Katharina Böhringer
Light: Jonaid Khodabakhshi
Sound: Nicolas Sierig
Camera: Nicole Marianna Wytyczak, Joel Heyd
Cut: Su Steinmassl
Production Management: Veronika Heinrich
A production by Julian Warner in co-production with the Münchner Kammerspiele. Funded by the Department of Culture of the State Capital Munich.
Julian Warner works as a cultural anthropolgist in the fields of curating, music, performance art and research. He is Artistic Director of the Festival der Kulturregion Stuttgart 2022 and curator of the Spielart festival in Munich. Under the alias Fehler Kuti he also releases discursive pop. Warner has worked as a research assistant at the Institute of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Göttingen. The anthology he has edited AFTER EUROPE – Beiträge zur dekolonialen Kritik is published by Verbrecher Verlag in April 2021.
Markus Acher is a singer, percussionist and composer. With his brother Micha Acher he is part of Weilheim band The Notwist. In addition to other band projects Acher also makes music for films, audio dramas and theatre. Together with Micha Acher he curated the festival ‘Alien Disko’ that was held four times at the Münchner Kammerspiele.
Micha Acher is a composer and musician and member of The Notwist. Since 2018 he has performed and composed in a trio with the jazz saxophonist Johannes Enders and the jazz percussionist Günther ‘Baby’ Sommer. Acher also makes music for theatre and films.
Cico Beck is a freelance composer and musician. He trained at Münster University of Music. In addition to his studies, Beck also worked on electronic, experimental and pop music and their intersections. Beck writes and performs music for theatre and dance productions, cinema and TV films and is active in several bands (including The Notwist).
Theresa Loibl studied clarinet at Nuremberg University of Music and also plays tuba, keyboard instruments, percussion and bass clarinet. As an instrumentalist she commutes for various band projects between Munich and New Orleans.
Sascha Schwegeler, born in Cologne, is a graphic designer and musician. He has been playing percussion in bands for as long as he can remember. Schwengeler is co-manager of the Munich record label Gutfeeling.
People die, but the online content they create lives on. DARUM’s hyperlink installation reveals which virtual remnants continue to tell people about us even after our deaths. An internet archive that evokes death and urban loneliness in an essayistic manner.
Hyperlink installation
Language: German
Millions of websites are not only constantly being created but also taken down again. Initiatives such as the “Internet Archive” pursue the objective of preserving information on the World Wide Web from virtual death. But what happens when the originators die – while their digital legacies continue to live on?
404-DEADLINK is inspired by the largely lost, colourful and often trashy websites of the 90s and early 00s. From a large number of interlinked of individual pages, a complex archive has been created that comprises documents, photographs and videos with evidence of those who have died in solitude in Vienna as well as highlighting issues of urban loneliness and the impenetrable nature of human existence. A sprawling associative labyrinth with a logic of its own, with no beginning and no end, that encourages visitors to search for their own clues and get lost there – while encountering both the familiar and the unexpected.
As part of the project, DARUM has invited numerous guest artists to help them co-devise this labyrinth: writers, musicians, visual artists, scenographers, but also experts such as funeral speakers and cooks extend the network of multiple perspectives on the theme and contribute works using text, images and sound.
In their debut performance in Vienna UNGEBETENE GÄSTE, DARUM examined what had been left behind by the dead: five individual, one-off performances went in search of what had happened to people who were buried without any loved ones present. These focussed not only on the deceased themselves but also the impossibility of reconstructing their life stories. Invited to the Impulse Theater Festival 2020, the work was intended to be performed in 2021 in the world premiere of a specially developed Cologne version, which cannot now be realized due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
A project by DARUM, Artistic realisation and Programming: Victoria Halper, Kai Krösche
Artistic Associates: Laura Andreß, Matthias Krische, Clara Hirschmanner
With guest contributions from: Emre Akal, Shabnam Chamani, Simon Dietersdorfer, Franz Hammerbacher, hoelb/hoeb, Andrea Imler, Nora Jacobs, Kristof Kepler, Hannes Benedetto Pircher, Roland Rauschmeier, Mario Schlembach, Andres Stirn, Simon Windisch et. al.
Game dramaturgy: Philipp Ehmann & Clara Hirschmanner (Play:Vienna)
Concept: Kai Krösche
UNGEBETENE GÄSTE is a production by DARUM in co-operation with WERK X-Petersplatz (Wien). Funded by SHIFT, the City of Vienna's Department of Culture as well as Bezirk Innere Stadt.
The new digital version 404–TOTLINK is a co-production between DARUM and Impulse Theater Festival. Funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture, Civil Service and Sports.
The collective DARUM. Darstellende Kunst und Musik
(Performing Arts and Music), founded in 2018, operates at numerous
intersections between artistic disciplines. It is made up by Laura
Andreß, Victoria Halper and Kai Krösche, who have operated in between
independent and institutional structures in the performing arts for
several years. This core team bring together expertise in numerous
artistic disciplines including film and theatre direction, dramaturgy,
music, literature, video and media arts, acting and performance. Der
Formensuche von DARUM’s search for form is always preceded by the big
question “why?” However, questions prove to be the best answers: as a
result in its artistic projects DARUM attempts to fail productively in
its quest for answers. UNGEBETENE GÄSTE (UNINVITED GUESTS) is DARUM’s
debut performance. The performative installation ‘Ausgang: Offen’ was
presented in Vienna in April 2020.
Laura Andreß studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies in Vienna. After working as an intern and assistant at several theatres, performance venues and festivals and for independent theatre productions in Vienna she completed a Masters in Dramaturgy at the HfS Ernst Busch in Berlin. In 2018 her graduation project was given its world premiere as part of the Berlin Performing Arts Festival. Laura Andreß has since worked as a freelance dramaturg and production manager (for artists including Florentina Holzinger). Her work has been presented at venues including the Volksbühne Berlin, Festspielhaus Hellerau and the Münchner Kammerspielen. In 2019 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Victoria Halper studied Acting and Directing at the University of Toronto. She emigrated to Austria in 2010 in search of her roots in the Burgenland and worked as an Assistant Director at numerous theatres. From 2013 to 2016 she worked as a director and editor for several films including the detective story ‘Kommissar Taler’, for which she was awarded the City of Traun Prize for Culture in 2015. Since 2016 she has operated as a freelance director in an experimental field between different forms of the performing arts: contemporary circus, essay-performance, video art installations and ludification theatre in public spaces. In 2018 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Kai Krösche is a director and musician. He studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies and Philosophy in Vienna. Since 2005 he has worked as a director, musician and video artist on his own theatre projects as well as in the fields of music, video, dramaturgy and performance at venues including Schauspiel Köln, Landestheater Niederösterreich, WUK Vienna, Volkstheater Vienna, WERK X in Vienna and HochX in Munich. As a screenwriter and director he has produced numerous short film projects since 2002. In 2018 he was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office. Between 2010 and 2016 he worked as a theatre and film critic for outlets including nachtkritik.de and the Wiener Zeitung.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
Theatre visits the audience at home! The listeners are connected with each other and eight teenagers from Australia by phone. In physical isolation a touching dialogue ensues between generations – about intimacy, sexuality, fears for the future and grief.
SOLD OUT
06.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
11.06.21 22:30–23:45SOLD OUT
13.06.21 11:00–12:15SOLD OUT
13.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
Phone call + video conference
Language: English
The original version of this piece successfully toured the stages of Australia and Europe in 2019. Against the background of the pandemic Samara Hersch has devised a new version of her work that enables members of the audience to participate from home. Connected by digital signals, young people and grown ups exchange knowledge and experiences and, protected by anonymity, accept the uncertain terms of an encounter with strangers.
To participate in the performance, you need a computer and a telephone with access to WhatsApp. You will also receive a package of props by post. To ask for the number that you can be contacted on by WhatsApp and your postal address, we will send you an email after you have bought your ticket. If necessary, please check your spam folder.
Lead Artist: Samara Hersch
Creative Technology: Fred Rodrigues, Nathan Fain
Artistic Associate: Cassandra Fumi
Dramaturgy: Maria Rößler
Production Support: Bec Reid
Photography: Pier Carthew
BODY OF KNOWLEDGE was produced as part of Be SpectACTive! in co-production with the SICK! Festival, Liveworks Festival of Experimental Art and Carriageworks. The “At Home” version is a co-production by the International Summer Festival Kampnagel, Hamburg and the Zurich Theater Spektakel.
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.
Theatrical Community, Protest and International Collaboration in a Disembodied Age
10.–12.06., Conference programme online via Zoom, Workshops in various locations
Language: English
The pandemic has hit theatres hard all over the world. Places that were built for bodies to gather and share meaningful experiences together have spent most of the last year empty. The Impulse Academy takes a closer look at this situation. What is lost when performances and working processes take place in the digital space? And what is gained?
The three days of the ACADEMY will take place in a hybrid format, both online and in person in Düsseldorf and Cologne, Berne, Johannesburg and Minsk:
The lectures and discussions in the mornings will focus on the role of the body in creating communities, political protest and international collaboration. These will take place online via Zoom.
In a workshop held over multiple afternoons, participants will explore the art of touching, smell, intimacy and vulnerability. The workshop will take place in person in Düsseldorf.
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important is physical togetherness to the theatrical experience and what do we lose when the audience is sitting at home watching on a laptop or mobile phone? How has our perception of intimacy and touch changed in times of physical distance?
10:00 Welcome
10:10 Bodies in solidarity
Keynote and discussion: Mazda Adli, Clinic for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy at the Charité Hospital, Berlin. Chaired by: Eva Neklyaeva
In his keynote speech the psychiatrist Mazda Adli shows why theatre has an existential importance as a place of assembly: collective emotional and cognitive experience makes a significant contribution to overcoming everyday stress and mental well-being, creates solidarity between people, thereby reinforcing social cohesion within society. In short: theatre keeps our souls healthy. But what role does the body play here? Do these effects occur when we are gathering in front of screens?
11:00 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:15 Intimacy at a distance
Samara Hersch and Damian Rebgetz, input and discussion. Chaired by: Eva Neklyaeva
In their artistic practice, the director Samara Hersch and the actor and performer Damian Rebgetz intensively explore voice and sound as well as intimacy and distance. Both sets of themes have attracted increased attention as a result of Covid- 19. Samara and Damian recount their personal and artistic experiences. Samara Hersch is also represented in the Impulse SHOWCASE with the interactive online performance BODY OF KNOWLEDGE (AT HOME).
Video
12:00 h a p t i c a f f i n i t i e s – a study group on touch, haptic aesthetics and intimacy in the arts
Breakout rooms with:
Joshua Wicke
Antonia Rohwetter
Carolina Mendonca
Bryana Fritz und Henry Andersen
Sofie Luckhardt, Anneliese Ostertag and Rahel Spöhrer
Siegmar Zacharias
Anna Zett
In conversations and exercises in an informal and participatory setting, participants are invited to explore the desire for and loss of intimacy together with the ambivalence and reciprocity of touch. The hosts are practitioners from the fields of art and theory who are working on the theme of touch and intimacy in the arts.
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important is the visibility and vulnerability of the body to the effectiveness of political protest movements? What influence has COVID-19 had on this?
10:00 Dance in Protest
Keynote and discussion: Kirsten Maar, Free University Berlin, Institute of Theatre Studies. Chaired by: Irina Bârcă
What potential do choreographic interventions have for protest movements in the age of the pandemic – whether in the context of Black Lives Matter, in Belarus, Poland or Hungary? In her keynote speech, Kirsten Maar will demonstrate choreography’s inherent potential to create a public sphere through assembly and intervention. Resilient and enduring bodies rehearse collectivity together by using the emancipatory potential of reciprocal touching.
Video
10:45 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:00 Appelation, Ideology and the Weird
Joana Tischkau and Julian Warner, inputs and discussion Chaired by: Irina Bârcă
Joana Tischkau talks about visualising BLM protests in the last year. How were the resistant bodies staged in the media and which images are left over in the end? In his input, ‘The Discourse That Made Me’, Julian Warner appeals to us to rid ourselves of the false consciousness of a neoliberal diversity paradigm: “Instead of succumbing to analogies of African-American suffering, we must endeavour to create our own archaeologies in order to produce knowledge of specific oppressions. We will need our material bodies and a sense of the weird and the eerie in order to break free from the appellations of platform capitalism.”
Both artists are also represented in the Impulse SHOWCASE: Joana Tischkau with PLAYBLACK and Julian Warner with THE HISTORY OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY AS TOLD BY FEHLER KUTI UND DIE POLIZEI.
12:00 “It’s all so bad, even complete introverts go out.“*
Discussion in co-operation with the Goethe Institut Belarus with Mikhail Gulin, Sophia Sadovskaya, Igor Shugaleev. Chaired by: Tania Arcimovich
Artists and activists from Belarus describe the role of the body in the public sphere as part of the protest movement. Which strategies were used and what effect did the pandemic have on these? What were the consequences for the cultural scene and the performing arts in particular?
*Placard slogan during the protests in Minsk in August 2020
from 10:00–13:00 h, online (Zoom + live stream)
Please register if you want to take part via Zoom.
Link to the live stream (no registration necessary)
How important are physical meetings to collective creative processes and developing good working relationships? To what extent can we replace them with online tools? And what does this mean for the future of a climate friendly, decolonial international collaboration?
10:00 Disembodied collaboration in creative processes – where does even the best digital tool reach its limits? Findings in media psychology after a year with Covid-19
Keynote and discussion: Maren Urner, HMKW, University of Applied Sciences for Media, Communication and Management, Cologne. Chaired by: Marta Keil
From one day to the other, the pandemic forced us to move our private, professional and cultural communication to the digital world. What are the risks, what the chances of "online lectures,” ”onlne meetings” and ”online gatherings”? What do we miss and what do we gain? How does it affect our well-being?
Video
10:45 Stacie CC Graham: 15 minutes of mindfulness
Adviser and yogini Stacie CC Graham helps the audience to focus attention on their own bodies through short exercises.
11:00 Travelling for Art
Ant Hampton and Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez (Lagartijas tiradas al sol, Mexico), inputs and discussion. Chaired by: Marta Keil
Ant Hampton is currently working on the project ‘Showing Without Going – live performance options without air travel’. Lázaro Gabino Rodríguez has responded with an open letter to Jerôme Bel’s call to refrain from the use of air travel in the performing arts. Both performance artists discuss the necessity of travel, talk about privileges and the luxury of abstention as well as about how their views have changed as a consequence of Covid-19.
Video
12:00 Disembodied co-operations
Jayachandran Palazhy (Attakkalari Center for Movement Arts, Bangalore) and Clara Vaughan (Market Theatre Laboratory, Johannesburg), inputs and discussion. Chaired by: Ogutu Muraya
Jayachandran Palazhy, Artistic Director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts in Bangalore, and the Head of the Market Theatre Laboratory in Johannesburg, Clara Vaughan, talk about their experiences of rehearsal, performances and co-operation projects in the last year. What positive effects might there have been, but also where did the challenges lie – both locally and in an international context?
Video
12:45 Conclusions
from 14:30–17:30 h each day, Düsseldorf in person
By registration only (for further information see below)
Hosts: Sibylle Peters with Charlotte Pfeifer and Ansuman Biswas, and guest Moritz Frischkorn
Working language: English
What it means to be alone and what it means to be connected have changed because of the pandemic. Coronavirus is a shared problem that keeps us apart from each other. But the safety of isolation is accompanied by its own dangers: if our bodies cannot smell and touch other bodies, our stress levels remain high. Fear and depression take the place of shared vulnerability. Hedges of thorns start springing up around our castles. At the same time digital gatherings have replaced real get-togethers and connected people with each other – even globally – in new ways. Against this background, theatre and performance appear in a new light: as arts of intimacy that bring people close to each other and invite them to communicate and share their vulnerabilities.
EXERCISES IN SOCIAL INTIMACY will bring together 90 participants locally and globally, physically and digitally. Groups in Düsseldorf and Cologne, Bangalore, Berne, Johannesburg and Minsk will meet while each observing the public health regulations that apply in their location and conduct exchanges through video conferencing. They will explore the art of touching, smell and intimacy and experiment with the relationship between intimacy and distance.
“Pleasure Activism is called for in order to rediscover trust between bodies. Let us be the Princess who forces her way through the hedge of thorns and kisses Sleeping Beauty awake!” Sibylle Peters
It is only possible to take part in the workshop locally.
To participate in the workshop group in Düsseldorf you can register at email hidden; JavaScript is required. No particular previous experience is required. The cost of the workshop for three afternoons including catering is 30 Euro.
The
workshop will take place in compliance with the public health
regulations in force at the time. Participants agree to take a rapid
Covid test each day that will be organized by the producers.
International co-hosts:
Bern University of the Arts, Theatre Division (Switzerland)
The Market Theatre Laboratory, Johannesburg (South Africa)
Universität zu Köln, Institut für Kunst & Kunsttheorie
Goethe Institut Belarus
Mazda Adli is a psychiatrist and stress researcher. He runs the Fliedner Klinik in Berlin and the research group into affective disorders at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin. He founded the Interdisciplinary Forum on Neuro-Urbanism that examines the influence of city living on emotions and mental health and is the founder of the “Singing Shrinks”, the world’s only choir of psychiatrists. His book ‘Stress and the City: Why cities make us ill and why they are still good for us’ was published in 2017.
Tania Arcimovich is a writer, director and curator from Minsk. She graduated in Theatre Studies from the Belarus State Academy of the Arts in Minsk and has a Master’s in Cultural Studies from the European Humanities University in Vilnius. Since 2014, Tania Arcimovich has curated exhibitions, and produced a range of cultural and educational projects with institutions including the Gallery for Contemporary Art, Lohvinau publishing house, Minsk Photography Month and the TEART theatre festival. She taught at the European College of Liberal Arts in Belarus from 2016 to 2019. She is a co-founder of the ziErnie Performative Arts Platform and editor of the magazine pARTisan / pARTisanka. She is currently studying for a doctorate at the International Graduate Centre for the Study of Culture (GCSC) at the Justus-Liebig University in Gießen.
Irina Bârcă is the Dramaturg at the FFT Düsseldorf with responsibility for children’s and youth theatre. Born and raised in Sibiu, Romania, she studied Acting in Bucharest and Theatre as Education at the University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück. From 2014 – 2017 she was Education Officer at the Theater an der Parkaue. She devises, produces and curates theatre projects principally for and with children and young people. At the FFT her work includes evolving formats in which theatres, schools and artists to encounter and co-operate with each other and theatre by digital natives. She is a member of numerous juries, the curatorial board of the Fonds Darstellende Künste and also curated the festival Augenblick mal! 2021.
Ansuman Biswas was born in India and trained in the UK. He has an international practice encompassing music, film, live art, installation, writing and theatre. He is interested in hybridity and interdisciplinarity – often working between science, art and industry, for instance, or between music, dance and visual art. Improvisation and play are key elements of his practice and at its core is the discipline of vipassana meditation.
Moritz Frischkorn has worked in the field of contemporary performing arts as a choreographer, performer and theoretician since 2014. His artistic and curatorial practice addresses choreographies of things and their social and political dimensions. In 2021 he was awarded his Doctorate at HafenCity University Hamburg for a thesis on the topic of “More-than-human Choreographies”. In recent years he has presented a series of his own works. His interdisciplinary research project ‘The Great Report’ on the relationship between choreography and logistics was premiered at Kampnagel in 2020.
Stacie CC Graham is a management consultant, executive coach, founder, speaker and writer. In her work, she uses practices and tools such as mindful leadership, intersectional attunement as well as emotional and social intelligence. Her holistic wellness brand, OYA: Body-Mind-Spirit Retreats, is dedicated to underrepresented communities typically underserved by the mainstream wellness industry. With an MS in economics and a PhD in psychology as well as experience living and working in different parts of the world, she continues to cultivate a nuanced understanding of underlying drivers of human motivation and behaviour.
Mikhail Gulin is an artist and curator. Since the 2000s, he has been one of the most influencing Belarusian artists making artistic interventions in public, focusing on how the public sphere works in Belarus. His artworks have been presented in galleries in Minsk, Brest, Eindhoven, Vilnius, Moscow, Warsaw, Kiev and other cities. Gulin participated in artistic symposiums and performance festivals in Lithuania, North Ossetia-Alania and Kazakhstan.
Ant Hampton is a performance artist. His works are characterised by a clear tension between strictly formal and structural elements and other elements that are lived and negotiated in the moment of performance. He has developed small-scale, intimate projects that involve members of the audience themselves and take place in cafés (‘Etiquette’) or libraries (‘The Quiet Volume’). His recent works encourage the public to take risks with genuine consequences (‘Someone Else’, ‘The Thing’).
The political and ethical implications of touch have come to the foreground within our current intensified experience of both the loss and the dangers of personal contact. Intimacies are both given and chosen that elude our control. Here touch manifests itself as the fundamental requirement of a vulnerable existence. It is a feature of reciprocal dependencies, porous physical boundaries, brutal intimacies and cross-species collaborations. The study group h a p t i c a f f i n i t i e s was initiated by Anneliese Ostertag, Sofie Luckhardt, Belle Santos and Rahel Spöhrer, meeting every week since the middle of April against this background to ask: what forms of touch take place in the performative arts that are noticed and unnoticed? How can we address the performativity and mediality of touch? And how can the manifold haptic encounters in the arts be understood on a consensual basis?
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.
Marta Keil is a performing arts curator, dramaturg and researcher. She focuses her curatorial and research practice on possible alternative processes of instituting and on redefining modes of working transnationally. Since 2019 she co-runs Performing Arts Institute in Warsaw, an independent organisation that aims at developing the independent performing arts field in Poland. Since 2019 she cooperates as a facilitator with the RESHAPE project that proposes instruments for transition towards an alternative, fairer, and unified arts ecosystem across Europe and the Southern Mediterranean.
Kirsten Maar has been Junior Professor for Dance Studies at the Free University Berlin since 2018 and works as a dramaturg. Her research focusses on choreographic practices in the 20th century, the removal of boundaries between choreography, architecture and the visual arts as well as intersectional discourses and canonical issues.
Ogutu Muraya is a writer and theater maker whose work is embedded in the practice of Orature. In his work, he searches for new forms of storytelling where socio-political aspects merge with the belief that art is an important catalyst for questioning certainties. He studied International Relations at USIU-Africa and graduated in 2016 with a Master in Arts at DAS Theatre. His texts have been published internationally. His performative works and storytelling have been featured in theatres and festivals around the globe. Ogutu is based in Nairobi where he continues his artistic practice and also teaches part time at the department of film and performing arts at KCA University.
Eva Neklyaeva is a curator concerned with the questions of freedom and is exploring these questions across performing art, politics and sexuality. At the moment, she is co-curating Samara Editions – performances by post; as well as Spielart Festival 2021. Previously, she has, amongst others, curated Santarcangelo Festival (2017–2019), and was Director of Baltic Circle International Contemporary Theatre Festival for six years. Under her leadership, the festival became an acclaimed international platform and laboratory for emerging multidisciplinary performance.
Jayachandran Palazhy is the Founder and Artistic Director of the Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts in Bangalore and an internationally sought-after dancer and choreographer. He graduated in Physics from Kerala and then started his training started in India with Bharatanatyam, Kathakali, Indian folk dances and the martial art form of Kalarippayattu. He also trained at the London Contemporary Dance School and studied Classical Ballet, Tai Chi, Capoeira and African Dance. He collaborated with international artists on multimedia dance productions involving digital arts and interactive technology. At Attakkalari he has directed the research and documentation project “NAGARIKA” – on the movement principles of Indian physical traditions. He has also worked on the “Role of Interactive Technology and Telematics in Performance” as part of a collaborative project at the Arizona State University.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
Charlotte Pfeifer is interested in extending the stage situation in an interplay of art, music, audio drama and performance. She began work as an actor and subsequently became a dramaturg and director. She now amalgamates various roles for projects on everyday topics, science fiction and rubbish and likes to devise these as part of a group. PMS-LOUNGE – HULDIGUNG EINES ZUSTANDS(PMS-LOUNGE – TRIBUTE TO A CONDITION) won the Audience Prize and the Jury Prize at the Hauptsache Frei Festival in 2018. Pfeifer produces self-devised children’s plays and happenings with the interdisciplianry group of artists TRAUMMASCHiNE Inc.
Damian Rebgetz studied classical voice, music theatre and has an MA in Sound Studies. He has performed in various theatre, music theatre, dance and performance contexts and was a member of the acting ensemble of Münchner Kammerspiele 2015–2020. His own performances are inspired by listening practices and memory as well as notions of music, noise, voice, sound, identity and materiality. In 2013, his performance “Something for the Fans” was coproduced by Impulse Theater Festival and HAU Hebbel am Ufer.
Lázaro Gabino Rodriguez holds a master degree in theater from the Amsterdamse Hogeschool voor de Kunsten (AHK). His work consists in explorations around notions of true and false, emerging from personal memories and their relation to fiction. In 2003 he founded with Luisa Pardo Lagartijas tiradas al sol, an artists collective dedicated to contemporary creation, with which they have developed projects that take their final form as theater pieces, texts, films, pedagogical processes and radio productions. Their work has been presented all across México and internationally.
Sophia Sadovskaya is an independent curator and art educator from Minsk. From 2012–2021, she curated the “EVAA project” (Environmental Visual Audial Art Project) which combines environmental activism and contemporary art practices. Additionally to her curatorial projects, Sadovskaya is the co-author of a series of books, “The Art of Belarus of the 20th century for kids”.
Igor Shugaleev is an independent actor and performer. He collaborated with TOKtheatre in Minsk and HUNCHTheatre Belarus. In 2019, Igor began to work on solo projects. Cooperating with artists across creative disciplines, he searches for his artistic language at the intersection of dance, theatre and performance.
Joana Tischkau dances. One of her first memories is of dancing to Kaoma’s 1989 hit ‘Lambada’ at a children’s birthday party. This motivated her to register for lessons in jazz dance, street dance and videoclip dancing at the dance school next door. She subsequently studied Dance and Acting at Coventry University in Great Britain and Choreography and Performance at the Institute of Applied Theatre Studies in Gießen. Her artistic practice is a hybrid mess where the writings of bel hooks meet beatboxing, where a fitness workout can be produced based on white movement material and Roberto Blanco is worshipped as the king of Black German entertainment. PLAYBLACK is the graduation production for her Master’s degree.
Maren Urner is Professor of Media Psychology at the HMKW University of Applied Sciences for Media, Communication and Management in Cologne. She has studied Cognitive Science and Neuroscience and took her Doctorate in Neuroscience at University College London. She founded the online magazine ‘Perspective Daily’ for constructive journalism in 2016 and was its editor until March 2019. Her first book ‘Schluss mit dem täglichen Weltuntergang’ was a bestseller and her second, ‘Raus aus der ewigen Dauerkrise’, will be published in 2021.
Clara Vaughan is the Head of the Market Theatre Laboratory in Johannesburg, South Africa, and a theatre-maker, arts facilitator, arts manager, and writer. At the Market Lab she brings together diverse theatre-practitioners and other artists to collaborate in various learning/making/experimenting/researching processes, with an emphasis on emerging artists, and subaltern experiences, voices and identities.
Julian Warner works as a cultural anthropolgist in the
fields of curating, music, performance art and research. He is Artistic
Director of the Festival der Kulturregion Stuttgart 2022 and curator of
the Spielart festival in Munich. Under the alias Fehler Kuti he also
releases discursive pop. Warner has worked as a research assistant at
the Institute of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Göttingen.
The anthology he has edited AFTER EUROPE – Beiträge zur dekolonialen Kritik is published by Verbrecher Verlag in April 2021.
Direction ACADEMY #2: Anne Schulz
Direction Workshop: Sibylle Peters
Production Management: Lena Busse
The ACADEMY #2 – LOST IN SPACE? is funded by the Goethe Institut and the International Visitors Programme of the NRW KULTURsekretariat.
“Take my hand as we collect money for old cans” Fehler Kuti und die Polizei urge. In their stage show they scramble together music, theatre and theory. What emerges is a danceable, quasi-religious ritual that reveals the racist and capitalist power relations of a country in which there have never been equal rights and opportunities for all.
11.06. 22:00-24:00 h: Live stream and chat with Julian Warner
12.06. 00:00–24:00 h: Video on demand
Language: German and English
Die Polizei start playing. Frontman Fehler Kuti sings about the German need for security and policies of nativism and law and order: ranging from the transfiguration of the German forests, passing through deindustrialisation and the class struggle to the information society and racial profiling. Together they reveal the racist and capitalist power structures of a country which has never had the same rights and opportunities for everyone. Who are the police here – who enforces the prevailing order, who keeps it alive?
By and with Markus Acher, Micha Acher, Cico Beck, Fehler Kuti, Theresa Loibl, Sascha Schwegeler
Dramaturgy: Adele Mike Dittrich Frydetzki
Scenography: Jana Schützendübel
Costumes: Katharina Böhringer
Light: Jonaid Khodabakhshi
Sound: Nicolas Sierig
Camera: Nicole Marianna Wytyczak, Joel Heyd
Cut: Su Steinmassl
Production Management: Veronika Heinrich
A production by Julian Warner in co-production with the Münchner Kammerspiele. Funded by the Department of Culture of the State Capital Munich.
Julian Warner works as a cultural anthropolgist in the fields of curating, music, performance art and research. He is Artistic Director of the Festival der Kulturregion Stuttgart 2022 and curator of the Spielart festival in Munich. Under the alias Fehler Kuti he also releases discursive pop. Warner has worked as a research assistant at the Institute of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Göttingen. The anthology he has edited AFTER EUROPE – Beiträge zur dekolonialen Kritik is published by Verbrecher Verlag in April 2021.
Markus Acher is a singer, percussionist and composer. With his brother Micha Acher he is part of Weilheim band The Notwist. In addition to other band projects Acher also makes music for films, audio dramas and theatre. Together with Micha Acher he curated the festival ‘Alien Disko’ that was held four times at the Münchner Kammerspiele.
Micha Acher is a composer and musician and member of The Notwist. Since 2018 he has performed and composed in a trio with the jazz saxophonist Johannes Enders and the jazz percussionist Günther ‘Baby’ Sommer. Acher also makes music for theatre and films.
Cico Beck is a freelance composer and musician. He trained at Münster University of Music. In addition to his studies, Beck also worked on electronic, experimental and pop music and their intersections. Beck writes and performs music for theatre and dance productions, cinema and TV films and is active in several bands (including The Notwist).
Theresa Loibl studied clarinet at Nuremberg University of Music and also plays tuba, keyboard instruments, percussion and bass clarinet. As an instrumentalist she commutes for various band projects between Munich and New Orleans.
Sascha Schwegeler, born in Cologne, is a graphic designer and musician. He has been playing percussion in bands for as long as he can remember. Schwengeler is co-manager of the Munich record label Gutfeeling.
People die, but the online content they create lives on. DARUM’s hyperlink installation reveals which virtual remnants continue to tell people about us even after our deaths. An internet archive that evokes death and urban loneliness in an essayistic manner.
Hyperlink installation
Language: German
Millions of websites are not only constantly being created but also taken down again. Initiatives such as the “Internet Archive” pursue the objective of preserving information on the World Wide Web from virtual death. But what happens when the originators die – while their digital legacies continue to live on?
404-DEADLINK is inspired by the largely lost, colourful and often trashy websites of the 90s and early 00s. From a large number of interlinked of individual pages, a complex archive has been created that comprises documents, photographs and videos with evidence of those who have died in solitude in Vienna as well as highlighting issues of urban loneliness and the impenetrable nature of human existence. A sprawling associative labyrinth with a logic of its own, with no beginning and no end, that encourages visitors to search for their own clues and get lost there – while encountering both the familiar and the unexpected.
As part of the project, DARUM has invited numerous guest artists to help them co-devise this labyrinth: writers, musicians, visual artists, scenographers, but also experts such as funeral speakers and cooks extend the network of multiple perspectives on the theme and contribute works using text, images and sound.
In their debut performance in Vienna UNGEBETENE GÄSTE, DARUM examined what had been left behind by the dead: five individual, one-off performances went in search of what had happened to people who were buried without any loved ones present. These focussed not only on the deceased themselves but also the impossibility of reconstructing their life stories. Invited to the Impulse Theater Festival 2020, the work was intended to be performed in 2021 in the world premiere of a specially developed Cologne version, which cannot now be realized due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
A project by DARUM, Artistic realisation and Programming: Victoria Halper, Kai Krösche
Artistic Associates: Laura Andreß, Matthias Krische, Clara Hirschmanner
With guest contributions from: Emre Akal, Shabnam Chamani, Simon Dietersdorfer, Franz Hammerbacher, hoelb/hoeb, Andrea Imler, Nora Jacobs, Kristof Kepler, Hannes Benedetto Pircher, Roland Rauschmeier, Mario Schlembach, Andres Stirn, Simon Windisch et. al.
Game dramaturgy: Philipp Ehmann & Clara Hirschmanner (Play:Vienna)
Concept: Kai Krösche
UNGEBETENE GÄSTE is a production by DARUM in co-operation with WERK X-Petersplatz (Wien). Funded by SHIFT, the City of Vienna's Department of Culture as well as Bezirk Innere Stadt.
The new digital version 404–TOTLINK is a co-production between DARUM and Impulse Theater Festival. Funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture, Civil Service and Sports.
The collective DARUM. Darstellende Kunst und Musik
(Performing Arts and Music), founded in 2018, operates at numerous
intersections between artistic disciplines. It is made up by Laura
Andreß, Victoria Halper and Kai Krösche, who have operated in between
independent and institutional structures in the performing arts for
several years. This core team bring together expertise in numerous
artistic disciplines including film and theatre direction, dramaturgy,
music, literature, video and media arts, acting and performance. Der
Formensuche von DARUM’s search for form is always preceded by the big
question “why?” However, questions prove to be the best answers: as a
result in its artistic projects DARUM attempts to fail productively in
its quest for answers. UNGEBETENE GÄSTE (UNINVITED GUESTS) is DARUM’s
debut performance. The performative installation ‘Ausgang: Offen’ was
presented in Vienna in April 2020.
Laura Andreß studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies in Vienna. After working as an intern and assistant at several theatres, performance venues and festivals and for independent theatre productions in Vienna she completed a Masters in Dramaturgy at the HfS Ernst Busch in Berlin. In 2018 her graduation project was given its world premiere as part of the Berlin Performing Arts Festival. Laura Andreß has since worked as a freelance dramaturg and production manager (for artists including Florentina Holzinger). Her work has been presented at venues including the Volksbühne Berlin, Festspielhaus Hellerau and the Münchner Kammerspielen. In 2019 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Victoria Halper studied Acting and Directing at the University of Toronto. She emigrated to Austria in 2010 in search of her roots in the Burgenland and worked as an Assistant Director at numerous theatres. From 2013 to 2016 she worked as a director and editor for several films including the detective story ‘Kommissar Taler’, for which she was awarded the City of Traun Prize for Culture in 2015. Since 2016 she has operated as a freelance director in an experimental field between different forms of the performing arts: contemporary circus, essay-performance, video art installations and ludification theatre in public spaces. In 2018 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Kai Krösche is a director and musician. He studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies and Philosophy in Vienna. Since 2005 he has worked as a director, musician and video artist on his own theatre projects as well as in the fields of music, video, dramaturgy and performance at venues including Schauspiel Köln, Landestheater Niederösterreich, WUK Vienna, Volkstheater Vienna, WERK X in Vienna and HochX in Munich. As a screenwriter and director he has produced numerous short film projects since 2002. In 2018 he was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office. Between 2010 and 2016 he worked as a theatre and film critic for outlets including nachtkritik.de and the Wiener Zeitung.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
Purity, innocence and perfection – these are the attributes of the Virgin Mary. In a solo filled with humour and sensuality Teresa Vittucci searches for the feminist potential in this icon. She shows how the myth of a woman being sealed until she first has sex continues to influence notions of femininity to this day.
12.06. in person at TanzFaktur, live stream + chat (in English language)
Language: English
Suitable for ages 18 and above
In Christianity, Mary is seen as the ideal woman – because she unites what cannot be united, as both a virgin and a mother. Real women can never live up to this ideal. For them, the cult of Mary presents them with an impossible challenge. This makes Mary a source of self-hatred and of misogyny. But Mary is also merciful, vulnerable and filled with love. Teresa Vittucci creates images that respectfully grant space to these qualities – while unsparingly highlighting all the lies and false expectations that surround female virginity. A single silent image grows into a furious indictment. Vittucci sweeps away the story of the virgin’s hymen as a seal that guarantees freshness until it is pierced the first time she has sex. The icon empowers herself.
Concept and Performance: Teresa Vittucci
Dramaturgical Advice: Benjamin Egger, Veza Fernández, Rafał Pierzyński
Scenography: Jasmin Wiesli, Teresa Vittucci
Production Management: groundworkers // Kira Koplin
Production: OH DEAR Zürich
Contact for touring enquiries: Kira Koplin, kira[a]groundworkers.at
Co-Production: Tanzhaus Zürich, Zürcher Theaterspektakel. Developed as part of the PREMIO Prize for Emerging Artists in Theatre and Dance, Espacion do Tempo Montemor. Funded by Migros-Kulturprozent, Pro Helvetia, Ernst Göhner Stiftung.
With special thanks to Julia Haenni, Gina Gurtner and Simone Aughterlony
Teresa Vittucci is a choreographer and performer. She is a graduate of the Conservatoire in Vienna, the Ailey School and the Salzburg Experimental Academy of Dance (SEAD) and completed her M.A. at the Academy of Fine Arts in Berne. Since 2013 she has worked as a solo performer and has devised such pieces as ‘UNLEASH’ (2012), ‘LUNCHTIME’ (2015), ‘ALL EYES ON’ (2017) and ‘HATE ME, TENDER’ (2018). She has collaborated with numerous artists including Simone Aughterlony, Marie-Caroline Hominal, Trajal Harrell and Nils Amadeus Lange. Teresa Vittucci is the Young Associate Artist (YAA!) at Tanzhaus Zürich for 2019/20. In 2019 she won the Swiss Dance Prize for HATE ME, TENDER.
Language: German
Entry is free of charge.
THE GREAT DIVIDE has been the talk of the town in Mülheim for weeks now. An unveiling ceremony will mark the completion of the festival. In a special event of celebration at the Ringlokschuppen Ruhr, the artists of Club Real will provide insights into how the project came about and describe the exciting process of making this complex artistic action a reality: Why Mülheim? Why a giant pair of scissors? And what effect can this action have on society in the city?
People die, but the online content they create lives on. DARUM’s hyperlink installation reveals which virtual remnants continue to tell people about us even after our deaths. An internet archive that evokes death and urban loneliness in an essayistic manner.
Hyperlink installation
Language: German
Millions of websites are not only constantly being created but also taken down again. Initiatives such as the “Internet Archive” pursue the objective of preserving information on the World Wide Web from virtual death. But what happens when the originators die – while their digital legacies continue to live on?
404-DEADLINK is inspired by the largely lost, colourful and often trashy websites of the 90s and early 00s. From a large number of interlinked of individual pages, a complex archive has been created that comprises documents, photographs and videos with evidence of those who have died in solitude in Vienna as well as highlighting issues of urban loneliness and the impenetrable nature of human existence. A sprawling associative labyrinth with a logic of its own, with no beginning and no end, that encourages visitors to search for their own clues and get lost there – while encountering both the familiar and the unexpected.
As part of the project, DARUM has invited numerous guest artists to help them co-devise this labyrinth: writers, musicians, visual artists, scenographers, but also experts such as funeral speakers and cooks extend the network of multiple perspectives on the theme and contribute works using text, images and sound.
In their debut performance in Vienna UNGEBETENE GÄSTE, DARUM examined what had been left behind by the dead: five individual, one-off performances went in search of what had happened to people who were buried without any loved ones present. These focussed not only on the deceased themselves but also the impossibility of reconstructing their life stories. Invited to the Impulse Theater Festival 2020, the work was intended to be performed in 2021 in the world premiere of a specially developed Cologne version, which cannot now be realized due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
A project by DARUM, Artistic realisation and Programming: Victoria Halper, Kai Krösche
Artistic Associates: Laura Andreß, Matthias Krische, Clara Hirschmanner
With guest contributions from: Emre Akal, Shabnam Chamani, Simon Dietersdorfer, Franz Hammerbacher, hoelb/hoeb, Andrea Imler, Nora Jacobs, Kristof Kepler, Hannes Benedetto Pircher, Roland Rauschmeier, Mario Schlembach, Andres Stirn, Simon Windisch et. al.
Game dramaturgy: Philipp Ehmann & Clara Hirschmanner (Play:Vienna)
Concept: Kai Krösche
UNGEBETENE GÄSTE is a production by DARUM in co-operation with WERK X-Petersplatz (Wien). Funded by SHIFT, the City of Vienna's Department of Culture as well as Bezirk Innere Stadt.
The new digital version 404–TOTLINK is a co-production between DARUM and Impulse Theater Festival. Funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Arts and Culture, Civil Service and Sports.
The collective DARUM. Darstellende Kunst und Musik
(Performing Arts and Music), founded in 2018, operates at numerous
intersections between artistic disciplines. It is made up by Laura
Andreß, Victoria Halper and Kai Krösche, who have operated in between
independent and institutional structures in the performing arts for
several years. This core team bring together expertise in numerous
artistic disciplines including film and theatre direction, dramaturgy,
music, literature, video and media arts, acting and performance. Der
Formensuche von DARUM’s search for form is always preceded by the big
question “why?” However, questions prove to be the best answers: as a
result in its artistic projects DARUM attempts to fail productively in
its quest for answers. UNGEBETENE GÄSTE (UNINVITED GUESTS) is DARUM’s
debut performance. The performative installation ‘Ausgang: Offen’ was
presented in Vienna in April 2020.
Laura Andreß studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies in Vienna. After working as an intern and assistant at several theatres, performance venues and festivals and for independent theatre productions in Vienna she completed a Masters in Dramaturgy at the HfS Ernst Busch in Berlin. In 2018 her graduation project was given its world premiere as part of the Berlin Performing Arts Festival. Laura Andreß has since worked as a freelance dramaturg and production manager (for artists including Florentina Holzinger). Her work has been presented at venues including the Volksbühne Berlin, Festspielhaus Hellerau and the Münchner Kammerspielen. In 2019 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Victoria Halper studied Acting and Directing at the University of Toronto. She emigrated to Austria in 2010 in search of her roots in the Burgenland and worked as an Assistant Director at numerous theatres. From 2013 to 2016 she worked as a director and editor for several films including the detective story ‘Kommissar Taler’, for which she was awarded the City of Traun Prize for Culture in 2015. Since 2016 she has operated as a freelance director in an experimental field between different forms of the performing arts: contemporary circus, essay-performance, video art installations and ludification theatre in public spaces. In 2018 she was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office.
Kai Krösche is a director and musician. He studied Theatre, Film and Media Studies and Philosophy in Vienna. Since 2005 he has worked as a director, musician and video artist on his own theatre projects as well as in the fields of music, video, dramaturgy and performance at venues including Schauspiel Köln, Landestheater Niederösterreich, WUK Vienna, Volkstheater Vienna, WERK X in Vienna and HochX in Munich. As a screenwriter and director he has produced numerous short film projects since 2002. In 2018 he was awarded a Starting Scholarship for the Performing Arts by the Austrian Federal Chancellor’s Office. Between 2010 and 2016 he worked as a theatre and film critic for outlets including nachtkritik.de and the Wiener Zeitung.
For a short time in February 2020 St. Pauli was made richer by an additional attraction: the Queens, a club exclusively for women who desire men. Treading a fine balance between art, sex work and care work, in 1:1 encounters with male performers its female visitors experienced what many people have painfully missed since the pandemic began: being touched. In the Impulse SHOWCASE, the Queens team is represented with a video message.
Video on demand (free of charge)
Language: German
Concept: Sibylle Peters
Camera: Ansuman Biswas u.a.
Cut: Nils Loefke, Sibylle Peters
Text and performance: Sibylle Peters, Charlotte Pfeifer, Ansuman Biswas,
Nina Klöckner, Nils Loefke, Simon Mantei, Maik Reif, Michael von
Schönberg, Bakary Trawally, Eidglas Xavier.
Thanks to Katharina Duve, Matthias Anton and the MS Stubnitz.
A co-production with Kampnagel, Hamburg. Funded by a grant from the City of Hamburg’s Elbkulturfonds.
Sibylle Peters is a performance artist and cultural scientist. She is also the Artistic Director of FUNDUS THEATER/THEATRE OF RESEARCH in Hamburg and co-founder of the doctoral research programme Performing Citizenship. She often collaborates with the performance collective geheimagentur. Her most recent projects include QUEENS. THE HETERACLUB, which was selected for the Impulse SHOWCASE 2021.
30 years after reunification Tanja Krone visits her home town in Saxony and asks: What was actually going on in 89/90? Krone and the musician Friedrich Greiling put the voices of her former companions together with a mixture of pop, rock, techno, disco and trance. A personal concert-performance that offers profound insights into East German realities.
04.06. Open air at TanzFaktur / live stream
05.–13.06. Video on demand
Language: German
On Stage: Tanja Krone, Friedrich Greiling
Backstage: Johanna-Yasirra Kluhs, Eva Lochner, Leonie Kusterer
With texts by: Ulla, Manu, Herr H., Carmen K., Randy, Herr N., Frau M., Eric, Marco, Josi, Kati, Verena, Katja, Antje
With thanks to HELLERAU – European Centre for the Arts, Dresden.
Tanja Krone is a director, curator, performer and musician. In her works she focusses on art as a space for possibilities, the aspect of social participation and searching for the poetic within the documentary. Since 2019 in her “Real” series MIT ECHTEN REDEN she has enabled voices of the past to be heard in a broad range of ways. Krone has been touring the provinces since 2020 together with Friedrich Greiling and the concert performance MIT ECHTEN SINGEN.
Friedrich Greiling is a musician who works both as a composer, lyricist, producer and performer and as a singer and songwriter for theatre, pop, film and clubs. In artistic projects such as VÖLKERWANDERUNG (Turbo Pascal, Theater Freiburg), WECHSELSTUBE (Deutsches Theater Berlin), UNTERSCHEIDET EUCH! (Theater an der Parkaue) and the European expedition FROM A TO BE – TRANSPORT/ART FOR FREE cast members devise and perform pieces of music under his direction. He produces electronic music, amongst other things, together with Jan Hohmann under the name Mittekill.
Theatre visits the audience at home! The listeners are connected with each other and eight teenagers from Australia by phone. In physical isolation a touching dialogue ensues between generations – about intimacy, sexuality, fears for the future and grief.
SOLD OUT
06.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
11.06.21 22:30–23:45SOLD OUT
13.06.21 11:00–12:15SOLD OUT
13.06.21 13:00–14:15SOLD OUT
Phone call + video conference
Language: English
The original version of this piece successfully toured the stages of Australia and Europe in 2019. Against the background of the pandemic Samara Hersch has devised a new version of her work that enables members of the audience to participate from home. Connected by digital signals, young people and grown ups exchange knowledge and experiences and, protected by anonymity, accept the uncertain terms of an encounter with strangers.
To participate in the performance, you need a computer and a telephone with access to WhatsApp. You will also receive a package of props by post. To ask for the number that you can be contacted on by WhatsApp and your postal address, we will send you an email after you have bought your ticket. If necessary, please check your spam folder.
Lead Artist: Samara Hersch
Creative Technology: Fred Rodrigues, Nathan Fain
Artistic Associate: Cassandra Fumi
Dramaturgy: Maria Rößler
Production Support: Bec Reid
Photography: Pier Carthew
BODY OF KNOWLEDGE was produced as part of Be SpectACTive! in co-production with the SICK! Festival, Liveworks Festival of Experimental Art and Carriageworks. The “At Home” version is a co-production by the International Summer Festival Kampnagel, Hamburg and the Zurich Theater Spektakel.
Samara Hersch is a theatre-maker, director and artist whose practice explores the intersections of contemporary performance and social engagement. She recently completed her Masters degree at Das Theatre in Amsterdam. She has a particular interest in cross-generational discourse and non-hierarchical forms of exchanging knowledge. Her work WE ALL KNOW WHAT’S HAPPENING, created with Lara Thoms and seven children from Melbourne, won the ZKB Encouragement Award and the Audience Prize at the Zürcher Theater Spektakel 2019 as well as the Green Room Award for the best contemporary and experimental performance in Melbourne.