Becky Cremin and Ryan Ormonde perform a piece from Theatre of Objects by Seekers of Lice.
Month: December 2012
Christmas Countdown: #10
Ryan Ormonde reading and interview from June 2012’s The Other Room in Leeds
Videos from Ryan Ormonde’s performance in Leeds for The Other Room
Ryan Ormonde reading
Ryan Ormonde The Other Room Interview
Christmas Countdown: #11
Adrian Slatcher reviews The Other Room 36 – Alec Newman, Nata Raha and Seekers of Lice
Even though the Other Room frequently features three performers from the more experimental end of the poetry spectrum,
its rare that you can find more than cursory connections between them. On the surface, Alec Newman, Nat Raha and Seekers of Lice (actually a solo artist, called, I think, Anne), hadn’t much in common either but coincidentally all read sequences, and had some element of the improvisational in work that was otherwise very structured.
Christmas Countdown: #12
Flick, then spree – Sarah Crewe & Nia Davies Manchester pamphlet launch
Thomas Restaurant & Bar, 49-51 Thomas Street, Manchester, M4 1NA. Thursday, January 10, 2013, 7:00pm. Sarah Crewe and Nia Davies celebrate the launch of their pamphlets in Manchester, with readings from Richard Barrett and Anna Percy also. More here.
Binders Full of Women: LIVE
Christmas Countdown: #13
Aurelia Lassaque London book launch with Amy Key, SJ Fowler, Jessica Pujol and Nia Davies
Housmans Radical Booksellers, 5 Caledonian Road, London, N1 9DX. Thursday, December 13, 7:00pm. A rare chance to hear Occitan poet Aurelia Lassaque read her poems from her new book – Solstice and other poems, translated into English by James Thomas. Featuring guest readings from Martin Solotruk, Amy Key, Jessica Pujol, SJ Fowler, Nia Davies and others tbc. Join Francis Boutle Publishing, Literature Across Frontiers and Maintenant for an evening of poetry at Housman’s radical bookshop, Kings Cross, London.
Christmas Countdown: #14
Thompson’s Live
A series of podcasts from Chris Goode & Company, focusing on theatre and performance, poetry and music, arts and ideas with guests including Andrea Brady, John Hall, and Francesca Lisette.
Christmas Countdown: #15
Scott Thurston On Clarinda Mac Low’s 40 Dancers do 40 Dances for the Dancers
Stepping into the space of St Mark’s Church-in-the-Bowery for the first time on Thursday September 13th 2012 for the first of three nights of performance, I realized that I had completely misconceived the production of this piece in my mind’s eye. The usual boundaries between audience and performers were not be drawn as tightly, nor the progression of linear time to be adhered to as stringently as I had expected. When I entered, the performance had already started, with dancers dispersed, improvising, along the risers around the perimeter of the room and moving among the audience. It was intriguing to watch the audience’s reactions to this—ranging from delighted participation to outright denial—and to sense how this intervention formed part of the meaning of the whole.
The Other Room tonight
Christmas Countdown: #16
Christmas Countdown: #17
Depart: Tim Allen
New work by Other Room reader Tim Allen is now online at Depart.
Christmas Countdown: #18
The Other Room’s countdown to Christmas gather pace and nothing says “Christmas” more than an argument. Here we see Simone calling Jean Paul “un clochard” and “un punk” after a dispute about whether to watch Moonraker or The Cannonball Run. Jean Paul later spent a long time with his hand on a door knob wondering if he existed. That Croft Original is strong stuff.
The warm, the cold and the homeless
Homeless people in Manchester have been telling their stories with needle and thread – embroidering the words onto a patchwork quilt, exhibited at Holden Gallery, Manchester 4-18th December.
the warm /&/the cold is a project run by arts organisation arthur+martha, led by poet Phil Davenport and artist Lois Blackburn, who have spent many months working with the homeless community, alongside students from MMU.
Davenport said: ‘The quilt was created by asking simple questions which don’t have simple answers. When were you warm? When were you cold? People talked about being physically cold, but also emotional warmth and cold. Some of the stories were brutal, others funny, or angry – or wise. People outside society can often have great insight.’
The project was devised to help homeless people develop new life skills, socialise and build their confidence. Volunteer student helpers from the Embroidery Department at Manchester Metropolitan University helped to stitch the work and also made quilts in reply. Volunteers from the Women’s Institute also lent their needles and expertise, embroidering the epic 9 feet by 12 feet patchwork poem.
Blackburn said: ‘Some of the students have put heart and soul into this – enthusiastic and very open-minded. Homelessness is a taboo, but it is likely to get more common in this time of economic hardship. We’ve met people from many walks of life and of many abilities. Often their family life has been disrupted and they spiral down from there. We hope that bringing students into the project will help promote acceptance of homeless people and wider understanding.’
The project challenges stereotypes about homelessness, combating hate crime against homeless people and emphasizing needs shared by us all – especially shelter and acceptance. arthur+martha use experimental writing techniques in their collaborations with marginalised people, especially cut-up and poems ‘found’ in conversation; the final pieces are often presented in public spaces and art galleries. This project is simultaneously an art exhibition and a sequence of text animations being shown by the BBC on Big Screens in Manchester and Liverpool.
A long-running project diary describing this and other arthur+martha work with homeless people in Manchester – particularly at The Big Issue in the North office, The Booth Centre and The Red Door – is to be found at the blog http://arthur-and-martha.blogspot.co.uk
the warm /&/the cold is funded by Arts Council England and Bury Arts Service. It is partnered by The Booth Centre, The Big Issue in the North, BBC, Salford University Media Department, Manchester Metropolitan University Embroidery Department.
Media contact: Philip Davenport
philipjohndavenport@hotmail.com













