When an Activist Becomes an Artist - Artist Talk and Q & A with Whiskey Chow

Location
Performing Arts Studio
Date(s)
Monday 5th February 2018 (17:00-18:00)
Contact
Email: Hongwei.bao@nottingham.ac.uk
Description
EVE-254855-4x3-ArtActivist-LGBT-NJT-JAN18

Image courtesy of Amber Cheng

As part of LGBT History Month 2018 the Department of Culture, Film and Media presents:

An artist talk with Whiskey Chow, who will share her experience as a queer and feminist activist and her performance art pieces to explore how art and activism interact with each other.

Speaker: Whiskey Chow

Chair: Linda Pittwood (CLAS)

Time: 5 February, 17:00-18:00

Venue: Trent Building LG18 Performing Arts Studio

About the artist:

Whiskey Chow is a London-based artist and Chinese drag king. Coming from an activist background in China, Whiskey has been engaging with political issues in her practice, Whiskey also explores female masculinity, stereotypes and cultural projections of Chinese/Asian identity, interdisciplinarily making performance, moving image and experimental sound piece.

Whiskey has been involved in feminist and LGBTQ activism in China since she was 20. She has worked closely with local queer communities in Guangzhou and contributed as actor, co-playwright and sound designer in the production of ‘For Vaginas’ Sake’ (將陰道獨白到底,the original Chinese version of The Vagina Monologues). Whiskey has also taught gender education in community theatres in south China and has participated in a number of queer cultural events, including curating China’s first LGBTQ music festival (愛人同志音樂會 Lover Comrades Concert) in Guangzhou in 2013.

Whiskey's recent performances include: Purely Beautiful New Era (featuring Haocheng Wu), Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Workshop - Receiving, Reenacting, Rescripting” (in collaboration with Erika Tan, Jess Heritage, and Michael Taiwo), Live Art Development Agency, London; Great Conversation, Uppsala Konstmuseum, Uppsala; Whiskey the Conqueror, Toynbee Studios (Artsadmin), London(2017); Long Live American, Galeria Labirynt, Lublin;Look Like Myself Enough?, Liverpool Biennial Fringe, Liverpool (2016).

Free public event, booking not required.  

Event updates: WAGIC: Women and Gender in China (https://www.wagic.org/lgbthistorymonth)

Contact: Hongwei.bao@nottingham.ac.uk

Department of Cultural, Media and Visual Studies

University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

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