15.06.2021 Views

Queer Ecologies at Tower Hamlets Cemetery Park

An artist residency exploring how we live, grow, love, make kin and stand in allyship with the ecologies we are a part of. We’re telling new stories about nature and our connection to it, empowering interspecies collaborations, and honouring the inherently queer patterns and relations found throughout nature. From June—September 2021 we are offering gatherings around a campfire, workshops, performances, and—for the finale—a Microbe Disco where you can dance with the smallest members of the Cemetery Park’s ecosystem! People of all genders and sexual orientations are welcome, with a particular welcome for queer, trans, sick, disabled and Queer, Trans, Intersex, Black folks, and people of colour (QTIBPOC) folks. All events are ticketed - some are free, and some on a sliding scale with free tickets available. To book, please go to: http://tiny.cc/queerecologies

An artist residency exploring how we live, grow, love, make kin and stand in allyship with the ecologies we are a part of. We’re telling new stories about nature and our connection to it, empowering interspecies collaborations, and honouring the inherently queer patterns and relations found throughout nature.

From June—September 2021 we are offering gatherings around a campfire, workshops, performances, and—for the finale—a Microbe Disco where you can dance with the smallest members of the Cemetery Park’s ecosystem!

People of all genders and sexual orientations are welcome, with a particular welcome for queer, trans, sick, disabled and Queer, Trans, Intersex, Black folks, and people of colour (QTIBPOC) folks.

All events are ticketed - some are free, and some on a sliding scale with free tickets available.

To book, please go to: http://tiny.cc/queerecologies

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Six days until Dawn. Six Earth days, that

is.

The sky had started to lighten. Infinitesimally.

Living on Aborellum gave one a new

sense of time. Of ages. Of slowing down.

Duas who finished up their twenty-five

year residency and decided to return to

earth, rather than one of the easy-living

gestation planets, often struggled with the

pace. Their internal ecologies somehow irreversibly

altered: attuned not to other humans,

but to the trees. But for Thea, isolation

from her own species was one of the

reasons she’d applied for the job.

turday 7th August, 3-4pm

ckets £5-£15, with some free tickets

ailable

An uncanny story of interspecies codependence,

sensuality and isolation in the

wake of climate catastrophe. This is a reading

from Ama Josephine Budge’s new novella, with

installations, soundscapes, and an arboreal silks

performance.

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