Difference between revisions of "International Feminist and Queer Festival Red Dawns"
(→Overview: added by request) |
|||
Line 41: | Line 41: | ||
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
− | Red Dawns annually invites women and queer artists who actively voice their visions, politics, opinions and feelings through any media. It supports women and queers who express their creativity in self-organised ways, capturing the do-it-yourself ethic of constructive rebellion against capitalist consumption. The festival's ideal ground is to unite the strength of women and queer activists as well as artists in order to demonstrate the possibility of a festival that is produced, organised, and performed by women and queer men. | + | Red Dawns annually invites women and queer artists who actively voice their visions, politics, opinions and feelings through any media. It supports women and queers who express their creativity in self-organised ways, capturing the do-it-yourself ethic of constructive rebellion against capitalist consumption. The festival's ideal ground is to unite the strength of women and queer activists as well as artists in order to demonstrate the possibility of a festival that is produced, organised, and performed by women and queer men. The festival evolves around March 8, addressing the International Women’s Day in a non-hierarchical, non-exploitative and anti-capitalistic manner, with all organizational work done voluntarily. |
==Programme== | ==Programme== |
Revision as of 10:13, 28 August 2015
Background
The festival was instigated by the requestioning of the position of women in an inseparable intertwinement of art, culture, politics, activism, and everyday life. The title and motto of Red Dawns festival is taken from Kurt Held's 1941 novel The Red Zora and Her Gang. Red Zora had beautiful red hair and her daringly witty, anarchist attitude inspired many struggles, including the militant feminist organisation Rote Zora of West Germany, which stood against patriarchy, biotechnology, and nuclear power, among other things. Zora means "dawn" in Slovenian language. The Red Dawns festival hosts artists and activists whose work is subversively beautiful in their brave-hearted questioning of the supposed natural and social determinants of women's femininity and supposed men's masculinity.
The Revolting Women Social Workers present their calendar I Want My Part Of The History! at the Metelkova mesto Autonomous Cultural Zone, A - Infoshop, in the scope of the International Feminist and Queer Festival Red Dawns in 2014
Overview
Red Dawns annually invites women and queer artists who actively voice their visions, politics, opinions and feelings through any media. It supports women and queers who express their creativity in self-organised ways, capturing the do-it-yourself ethic of constructive rebellion against capitalist consumption. The festival's ideal ground is to unite the strength of women and queer activists as well as artists in order to demonstrate the possibility of a festival that is produced, organised, and performed by women and queer men. The festival evolves around March 8, addressing the International Women’s Day in a non-hierarchical, non-exploitative and anti-capitalistic manner, with all organizational work done voluntarily.
Programme
Each year the festival presents from 20 to 30 different events. The 2009 edition of the festival, for instance, featured the first exhibition of Slovene feminist art Women Are Coming [Ženske prihajajo], presenting Slovene feminist video, photography, and other visual art works, performances by Liad Kantorowitz (Israel/Palestine), Noa Reshef (Israel), and Sara Filipovič (Slovenia), concerts by Kombinat Choir and Cherry Sunkist (Austria), etc.
{{#oembed:http://vimeo.com/11167507%7C576}}
The festival also organises intriguing workshops, such as a DIY workshop of clothes recycling, a workshop on Internet security and privacy, a workshop on preventing burn-out, a workshop on DIY sex toys, etc.
Bodeča Neža Award
The Bodeča Neža (Barbed Flower) Award points out sexist statements of public persons, which usually are, after being published or declared, neither reflected upon nor criticized. The first Barbed Flower award was bestowed on 8 March 2013. Since 2015 the Red Dawns cooperates with the web portal spol.si in the making of the Barbed Flower Award.
Partners
The first edition of the Red Dawns festival presented artists and activists working at the Metelkova mesto Autonomous Cultural Zone. In 2001 the festival already joined up with political allies from the Balkans and Central European neighbourhood. The Red Dawns was supported also by the ACU (Utrecht) and the Global Fund for Women, it is cofunded by the Ministry of Culture and the Municipality of Ljubljana. A few cultural centres round Slovenia, e.g. MC Podlaga (Sežana), Pekarna Magdalena Network (Maribor) and Mostovna Cultural Centre (Nova Gorica) widened the circle of contributors.
Many individuals and other associations have joined and continue to support the Red Dawns, among them Alkatraz Gallery, KUD Anarhiv, Radio Študent, DZAC, CrossConversationCut, kamera REVOLTA, Cinema iNVISIBLE, the feminist debate club of the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Klub Gromka, MKC Koper Youth and Culture Centre, MIKK Youth Information Cultural Club, Murska Sobota, Klub Menza pri koritu, the ŠKUC Q Cultural Centre, Infoshop Metelkova, Klub SOT 24,5, SCCA-Ljubljana Centre for Contemporary Arts, Nočna izložba Pešak and the Spol.si web portal.
The crew of the International Feminist and Queer Festival Red Dawns in 2014
See also
- KUD Mreža Arts and Culture Association
- Metelkova mesto Autonomous Cultural Zone
- City of Women International Festival of Contemporary Arts
External links
- Red Dawns International Festival website
- Red Dawns blog
- From Queer and Feminism to the Social Rights of Women, a conversation between Lidija Radojević and Tea Hvala
- Rdečke razsajajo! book with interviews with the Red Dawns Festival organisers (2010, excerpts in English)