Program + Events

2 – 4 September

  • Please gather at meet up points 10mins prior to session time
  • COVID-19 protective measures, including mask wearing and attendance limits for small studio spaces, will be part of this year’s Adhocracy experience – more info at adhocracy.com.au
  • All sessions are up to 45mins unless otherwise stated
  • Bar and snacks available 3pm-11pm, venues close at 11pm
  • Program and schedule are subject to change

3pm

National Networks & Opportunities

Information workshop

3 – 4.30pm

Featuring speakers from Adelaide Fringe, Australia Council, Next Wave Festival, World Pride, and more! This opportunity is one not to miss!

5pm

Adhocracy Opening

Welcome to Country & guest speakers

Please join us at 5pm at Waterside for our official opening, with Senior Kaurna man Uncle Mickey Kumatpi Marrutya O’Brien, Minister for Arts Andrea Michaels MP, and Head of Community and Experimental at the Australia Council for the Arts Zohar Spatz.

6pm

Calendar Days

showing

A theatre performance built from crowd sourced testimonials of gig work, exploring the experience of precarity in people’s working and private lives. The work will use accumulating, satellite narratives in search for a deeper vocabulary for precarious work and the creation of a log of claims.

 

The Two Body Problem

artist talk / showing

An experimental performance lecture that starts from the provocation: what if we had not one, but two bodies? Detouring through queer theory and political philosophy via pop music about the materiality of the body, the work playfully imagines the body as a multiplicity, cared for collectively rather than by individuals alone.

 

We Loot

open studio / drop in

A documentary and exchange project, seeking to unravel the worldview of ‘the looter’, to make tangible the concepts of cultural theft and auto-destruction, and to explore the profoundly intimate, embodied and deeply felt experience of the carnivorous destruction of one’s own cultural heritage.

 

We The People

open studio / drop in

A new multimedia performance for large-scale public screens. The project explores how traditional public demonstration can intersect with the digital realm, carving out space for different forms of participation in a political conversation, and expanding our understandings of emancipatory, hybrid, public space.

 

7pm

I Don’t Owe You

artist talk / showing

A durational, endurance-based performance that invites conversation about care alongside violence and extraction, queer labour, and socio-cultural debt. Drawing on the ancestral, cultural traditions, lived experience, and poetic practice of the artist, this project dives into bodily integrity, agency, and control.

 

Margaret and the Grey Mare

artist talk / showing

A multi-channel video work, harnessing and subverting the high culture of opera and classical theatre, and the image of the horse – both its sacred role in ancient Celtic paganism, and as a metaphor for the coloniser. The libretto for this project will be generated through an AI chatbot, trained to act as an oracle.

 

30-50 Feral Hogs

artist talk / showing

A site-specific theatrical game where audiences play as wildlife reclaiming a built environment. Drawing on the popularity of ‘nature is healing’ memes, and genuine rewilding experiences in Australia, the work interrogates our relationship to public and ‘green’ space, in a tech-lite and tactile participatory performance.

 

8pm

Death of a Bitcoin Server Repairman

showing

A theatre work about climate, capitalism, and crypto. Taking Arthur Miller’s ‘Death of a Salesman’ as its starting point, the show reflects on how productivity, purpose, and personhood have changed since 1949, exploring the role of technology in both destroying and supporting our chances of survival.

 

Undoing Kingdoms & The Practice of Being Close

artist talk

Undoing Kingdoms – A project of experimental methodology and long-term collaboration between the artists, utilising adaptative ritual movement practice and its documentation. The process features embodiment, poetics, remoteness, silence and listening, and a radical regard for the concept of rest/withdrawal in relation to decolonisation and visibility.

The Practice of Being Close – A collaborative dance and video project creating intimate, participatory and site-specific performance experiences for artists and publics, foregrounding the themes of care, closeness, proximity, survival, and the spaces between bodies and the inhabited environment, as we emerge from isolation and live with the pandemic.

 

9pm

Brag Drunch

artist talk / showing

A food-based drag event that will communicate key stories of queer history and culture, through the lens of hospitality and the popular, accessible format of the drag brunch. The project is inspired by activism such as the creation of the Anita Bryant cocktail and boycott of orange juice from Florida in the 1970s.

 

It’s Already Happened, We’re Just in the Past

artist talk / showing

A live performance and video work for galleries where untrained, queer bodies borrow from the body-assist stunts and effects of action film craft, stripped of their behind-the-scenes aesthetic, to examine the destabilising experience of witnessing and living within this time of multiple, simultaneous global disasters.

3pm

We the People

workshop

2 hours, 3 – 5pm

A new multimedia performance for large-scale public screens. The project explores how traditional public demonstration can intersect with the digital realm, carving out space for different forms of participation in a political conversation, and expanding our understandings of emancipatory, hybrid, public space.

 

The Practice of Being Close

artist talk / showing

A collaborative dance and video project creating intimate, participatory and site-specific performance experiences for artists and publics, foregrounding the themes of care, closeness, proximity, survival, and the spaces between bodies and the inhabited environment, as we emerge from isolation and live with the pandemic.

 

4pm

30-50 Feral Hogs

showing

A site-specific theatrical game where audiences play as wildlife reclaiming a built environment. Drawing on the popularity of ‘nature is healing’ memes, and genuine rewilding experiences in Australia, the work interrogates our relationship to public and ‘green’ space, in a tech-lite and tactile participatory performance.

5pm

Collectivism, Care & Cultural Organising

panel

In conversation with curators and artists

6pm

Death of a Bitcoin Server Repairman

showing

A theatre work about climate, capitalism, and crypto. Taking Arthur Miller’s ‘Death of a Salesman’ as its starting point, the show reflects on how productivity, purpose, and personhood have changed since 1949, exploring the role of technology in both destroying and supporting our chances of survival.

 

Undoing Kingdoms

artist talk / showing

A project of experimental methodology and long-term collaboration between the artists, utilising adaptative ritual movement practice and its documentation. The process features embodiment, poetics, remoteness, silence and listening, and a radical regard for the concept of rest/withdrawal in relation to decolonisation and visibility.

 

7pm

It’s Already Happened, We’re Just in the Past

artist talk / showing

A live performance and video work for galleries where untrained, queer bodies borrow from the body-assist stunts and effects of action film craft, stripped of their behind-the-scenes aesthetic, to examine the destabilising experience of witnessing and living within this time of multiple, simultaneous global disasters.

 

The Two Body Problem

artist talk / showing

An experimental performance lecture that starts from the provocation: what if we had not one, but two bodies? Detouring through queer theory and political philosophy via pop music about the materiality of the body, the work playfully imagines the body as a multiplicity, cared for collectively rather than by individuals alone.

 

8pm

Brag Drunch

artist talk / showing

A food-based drag event that will communicate key stories of queer history and culture, through the lens of hospitality and the popular, accessible format of the drag brunch. The project is inspired by activism such as the creation of the Anita Bryant cocktail and boycott of orange juice from Florida in the 1970s.

 

We Loot

artist talk / showing

A documentary and exchange project, seeking to unravel the worldview of ‘the looter’, to make tangible the concepts of cultural theft and auto-destruction, and to explore the profoundly intimate, embodied and deeply felt experience of the carnivorous destruction of one’s own cultural heritage.

 

9pm

Calendar Days

showing

A theatre performance built from crowd sourced testimonials of gig work, exploring the experience of precarity in people’s working and private lives. The work will use accumulating, satellite narratives in search for a deeper vocabulary for precarious work and the creation of a log of claims.

 

I Don’t Owe You

artist talk / showing

A durational, endurance-based performance that invites conversation about care alongside violence and extraction, queer labour, and socio-cultural debt. Drawing on the ancestral, cultural traditions, lived experience, and poetic practice of the artist, this project dives into bodily integrity, agency, and control.

 

Margaret and the Grey Mare

artist talk / showing

A multi-channel video work, harnessing and subverting the high culture of opera and classical theatre, and the image of the horse – both its sacred role in ancient Celtic paganism, and as a metaphor for the coloniser. The libretto for this project will be generated through an AI chatbot, trained to act as an oracle.

3pm

We the People

workshop

2 hours, 3 – 5pm

A new multimedia performance for large-scale public screens. The project explores how traditional public demonstration can intersect with the digital realm, carving out space for different forms of participation in a political conversation, and expanding our understandings of emancipatory, hybrid, public space.

 

The Practice of Being Close

artist talk / showing

A collaborative dance and video project creating intimate, participatory and site-specific performance experiences for artists and publics, foregrounding the themes of care, closeness, proximity, survival, and the spaces between bodies and the inhabited environment, as we emerge from isolation and live with the pandemic.

 

4pm

30-50 Feral Hogs

showing

A site-specific theatrical game where audiences play as wildlife reclaiming a built environment. Drawing on the popularity of ‘nature is healing’ memes, and genuine rewilding experiences in Australia, the work interrogates our relationship to public and ‘green’ space, in a tech-lite and tactile participatory performance.

 

5pm

We Loot

artist talk / showing

A documentary and exchange project, seeking to unravel the worldview of ‘the looter’, to make tangible the concepts of cultural theft and auto-destruction, and to explore the profoundly intimate, embodied and deeply felt experience of the carnivorous destruction of one’s own cultural heritage.

 

Brag Drunch

showing

A food-based drag event that will communicate key stories of queer history and culture, through the lens of hospitality and the popular, accessible format of the drag brunch. The project is inspired by activism such as the creation of the Anita Bryant cocktail and boycott of orange juice from Florida in the 1970s.

 

6pm

Margaret and the Grey Mare

artist talk / showing

A multi-channel video work, harnessing and subverting the high culture of opera and classical theatre, and the image of the horse – both its sacred role in ancient Celtic paganism, and as a metaphor for the coloniser. The libretto for this project will be generated through an AI chatbot, trained to act as an oracle.

 

Undoing Kingdoms

artist talk / showing

A project of experimental methodology and long-term collaboration between the artists, utilising adaptative ritual movement practice and its documentation. The process features embodiment, poetics, remoteness, silence and listening, and a radical regard for the concept of rest/withdrawal in relation to decolonisation and visibility.

 

7pm

Calendar Days

showing

A theatre performance built from crowd sourced testimonials of gig work, exploring the experience of precarity in people’s working and private lives. The work will use accumulating, satellite narratives in search for a deeper vocabulary for precarious work and the creation of a log of claims.

 

I Don’t Owe You

artist talk / showing

A durational, endurance-based performance that invites conversation about care alongside violence and extraction, queer labour, and socio-cultural debt. Drawing on the ancestral, cultural traditions, lived experience, and poetic practice of the artist, this project dives into bodily integrity, agency, and control.

 

8pm

It’s Already Happened, We’re Just in the Past

artist talk / showing

A live performance and video work for galleries where untrained, queer bodies borrow from the body-assist stunts and effects of action film craft, stripped of their behind-the-scenes aesthetic, to examine the destabilising experience of witnessing and living within this time of multiple, simultaneous global disasters.

 

The Two Body Problem

showing

An experimental performance lecture that starts from the provocation: what if we had not one, but two bodies? Detouring through queer theory and political philosophy via pop music about the materiality of the body, the work playfully imagines the body as a multiplicity, cared for collectively rather than by individuals alone.

 

9pm

Death of a Bitcoin Server Repairman

showing

A theatre work about climate, capitalism, and crypto. Taking Arthur Miller’s ‘Death of a Salesman’ as its starting point, the show reflects on how productivity, purpose, and personhood have changed since 1949, exploring the role of technology in both destroying and supporting our chances of survival.

 

 

Vitalstatistix, and our home Waterside, are on Kaurna Country, its sovereignty never ceded. Yerta Bulti, Port Adelaide, always was and always will be Aboriginal land. We acknowledge the Kaurna Nation as the continuing custodians of the Adelaide Plains who have a spiritual relationship with this Country, and we respect their cultural authority. We thank and pay respects to Kaurna Elders, both past and present, and to First Nations leaders including emerging leaders, in our community and in the arts.

Vitalstatistix, and Adhocracy, is generously supported by the South Australian Government, the City of Port Adelaide Enfield, the Australia Council for the Arts, and our many program partners. Our communications and design partner is Freerange Future.

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