South Leeds Life 83 February 2022

Page 16

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South Leeds Life | February 2022

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16 Art Life

Slung Low at The Holbeck presents ... F

rom the beauty salon to the football terraces, via a onenight stand and some chamber music - it’s all going on at The Holbeck. Slung Low present a series of visiting shows upstairs at The Holbeck, starting on Saturday 5 February with My Jerusalem by Avital Raz. My Jerusalem is a solo performance derived from a song. A politically-charged tale of a drunken one-night stand between an Israeli woman and a Palestinian man in Edinburgh infused with stories of growing up in the turmoil of 1980s Israel. A nuanced exploration of the politics of division, from internal checkpoints and separation walls to gender norms. With the escalation in violence after Trump declared Jerusalem to be the Jewish capital; questions of antisemitism in the Labour Party; rising levels of awareness of the Palestinian cause — this performance feels very timely. A work about Raz’s ethnicity, gender, racism, and the underlying fear that perpetuates it. Can we surmount divisions imposed by occupation? Can we go beyond the blame game and really see each other’s all too vulnerable humanity? Please note: Contains adult themes, the content of which may cause distress. In particular, issues of political turmoil and child abuse. On Saturday 12 February it’s Too Pretty To Punch. A comedy spoken word show about gender, the media and not fitting any of the boxes, full of explosive movement, original songs and kickass video projection. Edalia Day is a banjo wielding, poetry slam winning, trans warrior, taking on the world one troll at a time. The show Too Pretty To Punch is a hilarious and uplifting journey through what it means to be trans in 21st century Britain. It reminds all of us (regardless of who we are) of the power of celebrating our existence. How To Be A Better Human: A spoken word comedy about grief, loss and self-acceptance is on Saturday 19 February. “In 2019...I lost my Dad. “Well, I didn't lose him. I

knew exactly where he was – in the coffin at the front of the crem.” How to Be a Better Human is a spoken word comedy about grief, loss and self-acceptance. It tells Chris' story of losing two of the biggest relationships in his life - Dad and Wife - in the space of a few months. It finds the lightness and humour in death, loss and divorce, exploring how they help us become better at empathising, connecting and understanding. How we can lose everything and still find the strength to rebuild. How growing a beard can be the best decision of your life, and why some hedgehogs are absolute d*******s. Performed by Chris Singleton and directed by Tom Wright, How to Be A Better Human uses powerpoint comedy, poetry, autobiographical storytelling, original music by Reece Jacob and animation by Huckleberry Films to open accessible conversations about grief, loss and mental health. ENG-ER-LAND is on 26 February. “Walking up to Highfield Road for the first time was mind blowing. Seeing all the other people with their shirts and scarfs, feeling like you’re part of that, feeling that excitement in the air.” 1997. Last year England made it to the semi-finals of Euro 96, Gina G came third in Eurovision and 13 year-old Lizzie went to her first in-person football game: Coventry vs. Manchester City. Not the Man City of today, oil and superstars, but the old Man City - a bit rubbish, but with good fans. Lizzie fell in love with the beautiful game that day, and she’s been obsessed ever since. But then something happens to make her question her place in the stands. ENGER-LAND is an energetic play about who’s really on your team. And finally in February, on 27th Winterreise by Schubert: A Concert. Katherine Broderick – soprano; Kathryn Stott - piano; Performance Ensemsble and local community performers; Paul Whittaker – BSL interpreter. The songs of Franz Schubert’s song-cycle Winterreise have long been the sole territory of the male singer,

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Exhibition: Justin Fitzpatrick’s ‘Alpha Salad’ at The Tetley J

ustin Fitzpatrick presents Alpha Salad, his first major solo exhibition in a public gallery, exploring decadence, food and bodily consumption. Alongside new and existing works by Fitzpatrick, the exhibition includes a selection of artworks and archival material from Leeds University Library Galleries and Special Collections. Alpha Salad presents a narrative from soil to table, that extends beyond pleasure and the aesthetic and sensory understanding of taste, to highlight the tension between the surreal theatre of germination, food preparation and service and the underlying biological necessities and risks of eating. In Alpha Salad, Fitzpatrick considers the bodies created, consumed and at work throughout the food and hospitality industry, and invites us to reconsider their complex, but often overlooked, relations and their implications in our everyday lives. The exhibition will incorporate both Fitzpatrick’s painting and sculpture, and his curated selection of works from Leeds University Library

Alpha Salad is exhibited at The Tetley, Hunslet’s own art gallery Galleries and Special Collections, including work by Wendy Abbott, Duncan Grant and Käthe Kollwitz as well as photographs from the Leeds Archive of Vernacular Culture. Responding to The Tetley’s unique architectural spaces, the exhibition is imagined in a series of chapters, moving through sexual reproduction and photosynthesis to the afterlife of food presentation

and consumption. Fitzpatrick’s Alpha Salad serves up anthropomorphic plants coming of age and queer readings of hospitality workers, from existentially troubled chefs to tuxedoed flushed waiters. Against the contemporary backdrop of food poverty, the wide-reaching impacts of industrial meat farming and social media’s unhealthy obsession with

‘clean’ eating , Fitzpatrick invites us to this neurotic feast to contemplate the grotesque nature of decadence and its underlying sensitivities. Justin Fitzpatrick: Alpha Salad is supported by the Henry Moore Foundation and Fluxus Art Projects. The exhibition is open 10am5pm Wednesday-Sunday at The Tetley art gallery on Hunslet Road until 8 May.

Also featuring short creative responses to the theme of winter journeys developed by community groups in Beeston and Holbeck, Chapeltown, and Seacroft, working with Performance Ensemble. All shows at the Holbeck are pay-what-you-decide (or can

afford) - you pay after you’ve seen the show. But you need to book tickets in advance. Go to www.slunglow.org/shows and follow the links. The Holbeck, the oldest working men’s club in Britain, is on Jenkinson Lawn, Leeds, LS11 9QX.

Alpha Salad: The Demiurge and the Seed by Justin Fitzpatrick 2020 yet the themes of displacement, loneliness and isolation could not be more universally relevant. Feeling adrift, whether it be literally; the displaced person seeking asylum in foreign lands, or metaphorically; the loneliness of being connected to the rest

of the world via the internet yet having no real live connection, is a universal issue. Part of the human experience is to crave to be understood and this outsider, having accepted their solitary fate, walks on. “I arrived a stranger, A stranger I depart.“


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South Leeds Life 83 February 2022 by South Leeds Life - Issuu