KENSINGTON AND CHELSEA FESTIVAL RETURNS FOR THIRD YEAR

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Kensington and Chelsea Festival is delighted to announce that it is set to return for a third consecutive year.

Spanning the summer – from Saturday 1 July to Thursday 31 August 2023 – the festival will take place across the borough in a reimagining of its spaces. From the best-known cultural venues to the less discovered areas and outdoor spaces, Kensington and Chelsea Festival will make use of every inch of the borough to host a multitude of live art performances, large and small, showcasing exceptional established artists alongside the very best emerging talent.

With a cultural offering that spans theatre, circus, opera, dance, music, outdoor arts, family shows, participatory activities, talks, walks and public art pieces, the festival was born out of a desire to lift spirits by celebrating culture and creativity.

Kensington and Chelsea Festival was established in 2021 with a firm goal of ensuring the myriad events offer everyone in the borough and beyond a chance to experience the widest variety of culture on their doorsteps. The Festival is run and funded by Kensington and Chelsea Council.

FESTIVAL MAIN PROGRAMME HIGHLIGHTS
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LUKE JERAM’S MARS: One of the most exciting projects to appear at the Festival will be Mars, the touring artwork by UK artist Luke Jerram.

Measuring seven metres in diameter, the artwork features 120dpi detailed NASA imagery of the Martian surface. At an approximate scale of 1:1 million, each centimetre of the internally lit spherical sculpture represents 10 kilometres of the surface of Mars.

The artwork allows us to view Mars from the air, as though we are a satellite mapping and studying the surface in perfect detail. Every valley, crater, volcano, and mountain are laid bare for us to inspect. We are transported to this desert wasteland, to imagine what it’s like to step foot on this incredible planet and in comparison, really value our life on Earth.

Mars was named by the ancient Romans for their god of war because its reddish colour was reminiscent of blood. Accompanying the Mars sculpture is a specially created sound composition by BAFTA and Ivor Novello award winning composer Dan Jones. Featuring the sounds of seas, deserts and clips from NASA missions to Mars, it also incorporates the sounds of distant bombing and people marching, as if to war. This new soundtrack allows viewers the opportunity to reflect on the current conflict in Ukraine and the history and notion of war.

“Mars: War & Peace follows on from my other touring astronomical artworks Museum of the Moon and Gaia, allowing a close encounter with the Martian planet. Presented with a new soundtrack for the first time at Kensington & Chelsea Festival, I hope that visitors will feel transported to its inhospitable desert wasteland, whilst also being faced to contemplate the bleak realities of war on our planet.”
– Luke Jerram

The installation is a fusion of Mars imagery, light and surround sound composition. Each venue also programmes their own series of events to contemplate not just the beauty of the red planet and wonder of space science, but also to highlight injustice and the effects of war.

Mars follows the hugely successful appearance of Luke Jerram’s previous works at the Kensington and Chelsea Festival each attracted up to 3,000 visitors per day. This summer will be the first time that Mars has been installed in a Church setting and a new soundscape has been created especially for the festival.

The installation will appear at three different sites across the festival:
St John the Baptist Church (W14 8AH) from Saturday 22 to Sunday 30 July 2023
All Saints’ Church (W11 1JS) from Monday 31 July to Tuesday 8 August
Jubilee Square (W8 7NX) – an outdoor setting on from Thursday 10 August to Sunday 13 August
Tickets will be required, but all locations will be free to visit.
EXTENSIVE OUTDOOR ARTS PROGRAMME: Another key exciting strand to the festival’s programme is its extensive and free to attend outdoor arts programme, which has been carefully curated to be suitable for – and appeal to – all ages.

Highlights include:
LUNGS OF OUR CITY by 2Faced Dance – An emotional, athletic, and timely work featuring a striking 4m tall scaffold tree, three male performers inhabit a futuristic space where wanderers of a desolate world come together to breathe in our polluted cities. London Premiere
FORESTS by Rogue Play – A family-friendly show that challenges forestry practices, our over-consumption of timber, the destruction of rainforests, the displacement of Indigenous peoples and the systemic racism driving the creation of ‘treeless land.’ This highly visual spectacle sees acrobatic performers climb and manipulate the tree, throwing, clambering, and trampling. London Premiere
LANCE MOI by Joli Vyann – A show about the sensitivity and connection between two people which brings about compatible contradictions. Can we be strong whilst relaxed? Heavy whilst light? Grounded whilst levitated? Can we be dropped into the air?
THE SWINGS by All of Nothing Aerial – Part performance and part installation, The Swings is both an aerial dance duet – the performers arrive to fly high throughout the day – and an open invitation for the public to swing high and free on two magnificent, larger than life, five-metre-high swing sets. The Swings are open for the public to sit and swing on, triggering a sound installation as they swing. For little ones, it’s unusual and fun – for grown-ups, it’s a time-machine that allows them to travel back to childhood… London Premiere
SPURTING MAN by Avanti Display – This street theatre spectacle wordlessly and hilariously introduces us to the pompous Spurting Man who appears on his pedestal and demonstrates a series of bizarre displays to Ravel’s Bolero as 200 litres of water fall from his very body.
CRAWDADDY by Gravity and Levity – an aerial dance trio played out to live music from Scott Smith whose taut steel guitar strings release raucous blues and swampy atmospheric loops for the piece’s imagined setting of backyard Americana. The three veteran performers dance, tumble, spin, and glide through a looming wooden and metal aerial rig, using the tensile strain of their connecting ropes to expose both vulnerability and interdependency as they navigate the nature of human relationships, both literally & metaphorically. World Premiere
THE CROW by Avanti Display – An outdoor multimedia piece, featuring video projection, live music, and fascinating gadgetry, designed around featuring new compositions from Seaming To, Lou Glandfield and George Khan. The show begins at twilight when three musicians arrive at a gig, but as the evening darkens the atmosphere begins to change. Will they ever discover the secret of the egg? Perched above it all is Crow and she may well have all the answers, there is really no way to tell.
EARTH AND SKY by The Bullzini Family Circus – World class high-wire walker Chris Bullzini leads an intrepid troupe of aerial artists and musicians to take an audience on a journey with circus. This is a new show created in light of a climate emergency, an invitation to an invocation. With a nod to our ancestral roots and giving voice to Mother Earth, The Bullzini Family Circus use circus combined with ritual to lift audiences out of your ordinary and up into “active hope”. London Premiere
CHOOGH CHOOGH by Beeja – This dance company performance work is inspired by the joy for travelling through India on a train. It combines classical Indian dance with contemporary movement, theatre, and play, sharing with audiences a world full of colour, invention, and flow.
CIRCUS FLAVOURS by Upswing – This collection of short, high-quality circus performances showcases the breadth of talent from Upswing’s pool of diverse, energetic, and highly skilled Associate Artists. Each performance is followed by an open circus skills workshop led by the company’s artists, where the public has a chance to ‘have a go.’ For anyone who’s dreamt of joining the circus.
GRASSHOPPERS by Circus Katoen (Flanders) – A reproduction of the resilience and vulnerability of nature and the role that we as humans play in it. Grass is a living material and recognisable to everyone. On the one hand very vulnerable and on the other hand it can really take a few knocks. In Grasshoppers, Circus Katoen remove a piece of green from its natural habitat and bring it above ground level using trestles, planks, rope, and their bodies. The audience follows the artists transforming the grass into an object that is literally mobilized, manipulated, and controlled. A portion of nature ends up in unnatural situations, a specialty of mankind. London Premiere
Captive: DANCING FOR SURVIVAL by Motionhouse – Four performers use an exciting blend of dance, acrobatics, and aerial work inside a large cage. Disorientated and shaken, they use their skill and instinct to survive in this emotionally charged and athletic piece.
Knot: DIVING INTO HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS by Motionhouse – Motionhouse’s second show sees two dancers using extreme physicality, complex lifts, and contact choreography to explore the many facets of human relationships through physical expression. Twisting and turning, the balance shifts from one dancer to the other as they use their physicality to express their emotions. Inspired by Salvador Dali’s ‘Metamorphosis of Narcissus,’ Knot asks questions about who we are; delving into our inner lives and our relationships with others.
CASTAWAY by Highly Sprung – A stunning outdoor performance that explores the impact of today’s throwaway society on our waterways. Featuring a unique gyroscopic flying machine, the all-female cast immerses audiences in an underwater world where performers dive, twist, and float over 26 feet in the air to delight, inspire and captivate audiences of all ages. CastAway responds to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch – a floating island of everlasting plastic that has now grown to 6½ times the size of the UK. It presents an alternative, sustainable and more compassionate way of being and challenges us to consider our own actions in the face of climate change. With the weight of plastic now greater than the weight of humanity, what better time than now to take action?
CODE by Justice in Motion – A spectacular blend of physical theatre, parkour and trial bike stunts with live rap music that shines a light on issues of child criminal exploitation and county lines (the mobile phone lines that criminal gangs use to organise, store, and sell drugs). Vulnerable young people are particularly at risk of exploitation. They are often recruited by the gangs using drug debts, grooming or threats. A very poignant topic, in particular for younger audiences, but relevant and engaging for all ages. London Premiere
ROLL PLAY by Simple Cypher – Three performers blur the boundaries between hip hop and circus, using intricate moves and virtuosic agility to give a captivating, cheeky and effortlessly cool performance. A folding bench is the meeting point for three strangers from different walks of life: a park bench, a bus stop, a waiting room. What unfolds is a series of playful interactions challenging identity, status, and societal roles. Building on Simple’s Cypher’s recognisable fusion of circus and hip hop, Roll Play features breath-taking Cyr wheel, dextrous group juggling, and feel-good choreographies performed to a pulsing urban soundtrack.
BONDED by Alleyne Dance is an outdoor production that explores the construct of human dependency especially that of siblings – and how time and external conditions can affect the synergetic connection. Performed by twin sisters, Kristina and Sadé, the work takes the audience through a transitional journey of inter-and-independency through abstract dance narrative.