Dance & Physical Theatre

The Bloom

A provocative contemporary dance work that dives into the queer nature of reproduction.

$30.00
Sessions & Tickets View Comments
A dynamic and intense image of three people against a dark background.. They are wearing aprons and have vibrant makeup with red coloured cheeks and long hair. Each of them is biting on a yellow or red glove, their eyes closed, and their bodies appear to be in motion.
A woman in a butchers apron and purple underwear swings a garden hoe in front of her body.
A woman stands bent over a photocopier, in dim light, a fleshy image stretches across the wall behind her.

Image Credit: Jinki Cambronero

A dynamic and intense image of three people against a dark background.. They are wearing aprons and have vibrant makeup with red coloured cheeks and long hair. Each of them is biting on a yellow or red glove, their eyes closed, and their bodies appear to be in motion.
A woman in a butchers apron and purple underwear swings a garden hoe in front of her body.
A woman stands bent over a photocopier, in dim light, a fleshy image stretches across the wall behind her.
  • Created by: Jessie McCall

  • In Collaboration with: RDYSTDY studio

  • Performed by: Sofia McIntyre, Raven Afoa-Purcell & Sasha Matsumoto

Imagine being a fig wasp - born pregnant.

Imagine the sex of mould.

Imagine intimacies outside of the gaze of the nation state.

Imagine mothering as a botanical project that broke its banks.

A new dance work by choreographer Jessie McCall leaning into the generative glitches of queer propagation and motherhood. Made in Aotearoa in collaboration with creative production studio RDYSTDY, and performers Sofia McIntyre, Raven Afoa-Purcell & Sasha Matsumoto.

“I stand for a queerness that is inextricably informed by interspecies solidarity — by lichen, dusk chorus, swamps, coral and cryptobiotic soil.” - Pinar Sinopoulos-Lloyd

"Calculated failure prompts the violent socio-cultural machine to hiccup, sigh, shudder, buffer. We want a new framework and for this framework, we want new skin" - Legacy Russell
jessiemccall.co.nz

You may also like…