Festival Premiering New Performance Works Announced

Festival of New Work will see five artists unleash new performance works on the Blue
Robert Frost

Mountains Theatre stage from 4pm until late on Saturday 13 April following months of

creative development and rehearsals.

All artists presenting work are part of the City of the Arts First Nations Development

Residency or the Propel Projects Emerging Performers Residency.

Showcasing a range of artforms, the artists have had complete freedom to experiment and

create, and Festival of New Work will be their opportunity to premiere their performances.

Festival of New Work is the evolution of last year’s Propel Projects Showcase. With a fifth

artist in the line-up – the First Nations Development Resident Jo Clancy – plus Hub

activations and an afterparty, the program offers even more to audience members.

Blue Mountains Mayor, Cr. Mark Greenhill, said: “I am thrilled that Blue Mountains City

Council is supporting emerging artists to create, rehearse, connect and collaborate with

industry peers, and perform in a professional venue.

“By attending this showcase, you will be directly supporting a new generation of Blue

Mountains artists. You will also enjoy a fabulous evening of performances. I am excited by

the diverse talents of these artists and ask you to join me supporting their creative journey

by attending the Festival of New Work.”

Katrina Noorbergen, Acting Manager Arts & Cultural Services said: “This is the first ever

Festival of New Work in our region, offering a diverse cross-section of performance works

across folk music, immersive and participatory sound work, theatre making and First Nations

choreographic storytelling. This is an event you should not miss if you want to support these

amazing local artists at a crucial point in the development of their performance practice.”

The festival line-up includes:

First Nations Development Resident:

Jo Clancy \ Warriwal ~ Milky Way

Wiradjuri dancer and choreographer Jo Clancy presents Warriwal. Developed by Jo and

Dharug and Gubbi Gubbi cultural man Stuart McMinn, Warriwal is a window into songs

and dances that have been kept eternally and shared through the sky, the land, wind

and water. Powerful dance storytelling by a full First Nations cast.

Propel Projects Emerging Performers Residents:

Mx Robert Frost \ Resonant Frequency Scanning

Enter into an immersive soundscape to explore what resonates, as the theatre itself and

each person’s unique experience transform into a living instrument.

Old Folk \ Home Grown Jam

Sprouted from Old Timey music, Old Folk are making new Blue Mountains sound from

old Appalachian mountain roots. Old Folk are Isabelle, Sophia, Madison and John,

bringing big bass, mandolin, fiddle, guitar and banjo.

Cecilia Morrow \ Cow

Cow is a dynamic staged reading of an in-development one-woman play. It follows

Daisy’s weekend escape to the countryside and her unexpected encounter with a

persistent cow, delving into grief, femininity, vulnerability and self-discovery.

Shana O’Brien \ Invisible Strings

What invisible strings connect us to people, places, our future and our memories? First

Nations visual artist/dancer and choreographer Shana O’Brien and Dust youth dance

company explore these ideas through movement and mixed media.

The event will also include interactive Hub activations by Robert Frost and the Wagana

Weavers:

Mx Robert Frost \ interactive electronic instrument playground

Play with absurd instruments that make silly sounds. Including electronic instruments

designed and built during the course of Robert’s residency, this activation is an

invitation to play without requirements or expectation.

Wagana Weavers \ Gulay-dhuradhu

Witness Wagana Weaver Amie Smith making a Gulay (fishing net) with young Wagana

dancers Bella and Charlotte.

General public tickets will be $42 and available from Wednesday 6 March from

www.bluemountainstheatre.com.au or on 4780 5050.

The First Nations Development Residency is coordinated by the Blue Mountains City

Council’s Cultural Development service in partnership with the Blue Mountains Theatre, and

with generous support from the City of the Arts Trust. Warriwal’s creative development was

supported by the Mawambul project, which was funded through the NSW Government’s

Aboriginal Languages Trust.

The Propel Projects Emerging Performers Residencies are coordinated by the Blue

Mountains City Council’s Cultural Development service in partnership with the Blue

Mountains Theatre and MTNS MADE.

Photo: Propel Projects Emerging Performers Resident artist Mx Robert Frost, photographed

by Maja Baska.

/Public Release. View in full here.