LA POCHA NOSTRA WORKSHOP
by CAFKA - Contemporary Art Forum Kitchener and AreaSaturday, 4 May 2019 from 4:00 PM (EDT) to Sunday, 5 May 2019 11:01 PM (EDT)THEMUSEUM 10 King Street West, Kitchener, ON N2G 1A3Ticket Information
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Overview
On Saturday, May 4 and Sunday, May 5, Guillermo Gómez-Peña, Saula Garcia Lopez and Balitronica Gomez will conduct a two-day cross-cultural/cross-disciplinary/cross-generational workshop for performance artists, actors, dancers and students from diverse ethnic communities, generations and artistic backgrounds.
The Pocha Nostra performance workshop follows "An evening with Guillermo Gómez-Peña with cameos by Pocha Nostra members Saula Garcia Lopez and Balitronica" on Friday, May 3, 2019, 7 PM at THEMUSEUM, 10 Kings Street West, KITCHENER. Admission is free.
Details
Workshops will run from 4 PM to 10 PM on May 4 & 5 at THEMUSEUM, 10 King Street West, Kitchener, ON N2G 1A3.
Two-day registration fee is $150, $75 for students.
The objectives of the Pocha Nostra workshops are:
- To feed / stretch emerging artists and inquisitive students, helping them to sharpen and develop their performance and analytical skills in dialogue with like-minded cultural radicals.
- To create temporary communities of rebel artists from different disciplines, ages, ethnic backgrounds, gender persuasions, and nationalities, in which difference and experimentation are not only accepted but encouraged
- To develop new models for relationships between artists and communities, mentor and apprentice, which are neither colonial nor condescending.
- To find new modes of relating laterally to the ‘other' in a less-mediated way, bypassing the myriad borders imposed by our professional institutions, our religious and political beliefs, and pop-cultural affiliations. To experience this, even if only for the duration of the workshop, can have a profound impact in the participant’s future practice.
- To discover new ways of relating to our own bodies. By decolonizing and then re-politicizing our bodies, they can become sites for activism and embodied theory; for memory and reinvention; for pleasure and penance.
- To raise crucial questions: Why do we do what we do? Which borders do we wish to cross and why? Which are the hardest borders to cross both in the workshop and in our personal lives? How do we define our multiple communities, and why do we belong to them? What is the relationship between performance, activism, pedagogy and our everyday lives? What about the relationship between the physical body and the social body?
- To seek a new hybrid and interdisciplinary aesthetic, reflective of the spirit and tribulations of our times, and of the concerns of each participant.
- To empower participants as individuals to become civic-minded artists.
- To make performance art pertinent to a new generation of potential activist-artists. They may eventually have to save us from the very monsters and pitfalls that we, their arrogant forefathers, have either created or allowed to happen.