It Could Only Happen Here: Jim Dahl’s unreal Boat tour
- Year
- 2013
Thursday to Saturday, 1 to 3 August 2013
Prince Albert Road, Regent’s Canal, London
£12 / £10 concs
5pm, 6.30pm, 8.00pm
It Could Only Happen Here: Jim Dahl’s unreal Boat tour is a new live work by Tim Bromage, commissioned in partnership with the Live Art Development Agency, Somewhere and UP Projects for the Floating Cinema 2013.
Inspired by the site of Regent’s Canal, this new commission playfully explores the facts and folklore of the London waterways. Using costume, text and song, the unreal boat tour is an exploration and celebration of a life upon the water.
The Floating Cinema 2013 is a unique cultural space based on London’s waterways during the summer months. The 2013 programme theme is ‘Extra-Ordinary’ and events will range from a Horror Marathon to Micro-Chat shows to diverse special commissions and educational events. www.floatingcinema.info
View the call for artists’ proposals here
Information on the 2011 Floating Cinema/Agency commission A Smaller Sound, A Bigger Crowd by Ian Giles.
Banner image credit:
Floating Cinema, Photograph: Jack Hobhouse
We are looking for a better quality image for this page or to replace it if it's missing.
Also
Falafel Road Residency
A food based investigation by Oreet Ashery and Larissa Sansour into Palestinian/Israeli cultural collaborations.
Read moreCollaborative Arts Partnership Programme
A transnational partnership on collaborative arts funded by Creative Europe, 2014-18
Read moreCuratorial Projects, Programme Partnerships and Screening Programmes: 2016
A list of projects hosted and coordinated by LADA
Read moreActivations London and Liverpool, October 2004
Launching Live: Art and Performance and The Performance Pack at Tate Modern and Tate Liverpool.
Read moreLADA Unpacked
Bespoke opportunities for international presenters and artists to engage with Live Art
Read moreReimagining Care
LADA’s latest project Reimagining Care focuses on contemporary discourses about care and care practices, exploring how they can contribute to transforming the art sector.
Read more