Difference between revisions of "Mladi levi Festival"
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Revision as of 22:17, 18 December 2009
The Junge Hunde Network is dedicated to the presentation, promotion, exchange and development of young contemporary performance artists, their new ideas and new works, by providing them with the necessary resources, support and continuity across and beyond European borders. Every year several public events, festivals and single presentations are organised, along with residences, co-productions, artist exchanges, workshops, seminars and debates, in the various cities of the network.
The Mladi Levi Festival is presented in various old buildings of Ljubljana (first at the Railway Museum of Slovenia, later in Stara Elektrarna - Old Power Station and also Tovarna Rog) with the aim of presenting new contemporary productions in juxtaposition with historic heritage. In order to create the circumstances where artists and audiences can meet, exchange experiences and develop future collaborations, the festival invites artists to stay in Ljubljana for the entire length of the festival, giving them a chance to see each other's work, to have the time and opportunity to talk to other artists and audience members in an informal way, and to plan future collaborations.
In 2007 Young Lions was staged for the 10th time, presenting a total of 15 performances, the guests included the Swiss Stefan Kaegi of the theatre group Rimini Protokoll with the performance Mnemopark. A Mini Train World; Hiroaki Umeda from Japan; Tunisian actor Radhouane El Meddeb; the Norwegian theatre group De Utvalgate; Saša Asentić, and two Slovene projects: Sebastijan Horvat's Before/After and Barbara Novakovič Kolenc's Rodin II. The programme was rounded off with a concert of the group Mildreds, turning back time with old hits from the Balkans. The English theatre company Stan's Cafe was invited by the Festival to set up the installation Of All The People in All The World using grains of rice to materialise some world and Slovene statistics.