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Performance Art: Love, Lust and Longing at the The Freud Museum

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Time 18:30
Date 27/11/14
Price £10

An evening inspired by the eponymous exhibition, featuring S.A.G., Katherine Nolan, Quilla Constance and Terese Longva

Single Activity Group (S.A.G) (International) - Jack Catling, Daniella Valz Gen, Jenna Finch, Jordan McKenzie, Kate Mahony, Simon Raven, Holly Slingsby, Lili Spain and Aaron Williamson. The SAG’s performances reference the economic/historical phenomenon of labour-exploitation filtered through an evergreen, aesthetically acclaimed artistic trope - of minimalist-conceptual performance art redolent of the 1950s -70s. Typically, the SAG’s work is repetitive and mind numbing. The duration of one hour suggests the pay-system of repetitive labour.The ambition is to evoke, through artist’s performances, an image of a factory of operatives that doesn’t make any productive sense. To reflect the work theme, a SAG performance is un/paid by the hour.

Katherine Nolan (Ireland) is a performance artist and lecturer at UAL, London. She is performance curator at MART, Irish Arts organization. Her practice is currently concerned with states of inhabiting the body and processes of becoming, with a particular focus on tensions between the lived and the spectacular body. The work seeks to subvert normative codifications of the body and human experience through strategies of pleasure, resistance and disruption. She has performed and exhibited internationally in Europe, America and Asia.

Quilla Constance (UK) - Jennifer Allen (as Quilla Constance) will give a lecture on Freud's notion of the Oedipus Complex with reference to texts by Darian Leader, Judith Butler, Karen Horney and Natasha Walter. The event will also screen QC's spoof pop video 'VJAZZLED' and Allen's 2006 video piece 'Happy Christmas Mom and Dad' which sees Allen allegedly perform a seductive dance as a gift for her parents on Christmas day.

Terese Longva (Norway) is an interdisciplinary artist that looks at different aspects of the human condition such as: how we construct different selves in reaction to varied expectations of society and how we constantly struggle to learn our social roles and at the same time break out of them to discover the new that is constantly becoming in and around us. She explores what comes from the things you do not talk about, the unspeakable, and how is the unspeakable present in us and in society.

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