Party for Freedom (2013). A project by London-based artist, a performance and moving-image work for anyone to host and experience. To accompany the Party hires, the project will also host a series of special events across London exploring themes in the work such as immigration, visas and state control, the right to insult and be insulted, and the right to own.
Somewhere between a travelling cinema and theatre troupe, a kiss-a-gram and a takeaway delivery service, London-based artist Oreet Ashery’s Party for Freedom is an itinerant work that combines live performance with moving-image and an original album soundtrack.
An invitation for self-organised gatherings to host and experience the work - anywhere from a sitting room and work place to public spaces and venues - it will also appear at venues across London including The Swedenborg Society in Bloomsbury, Millbank Media Centre at Millbank Tower and OrganicLea, a workers cooperative on the edge of the Lea Valley.
Party for Freedom is loosely based on Vladimir Mayakovsky’s 1921 play Mystery-Bouffe, telling the story of the Clean and the Unclean. It explores performances of liberation and political nakedness; and responds to the changing landscape of Dutch politics following the assassinations of controversial Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn in 2001 and film director Theo van Gogh in 2004, and the ensuing popularity of Geert Wilders, the Dutch politician and leader of the far-right Partij voor de Vrijheid [Party for Freedom].
Somewhere between a travelling cinema and theatre troupe, a kiss-a-gram and a takeaway delivery service, London-based artist Oreet Ashery’s Party for Freedom is an itinerant work that combines live performance with moving-image and an original album soundtrack.
An invitation for self-organised gatherings to host and experience the work - anywhere from a sitting room and work place to public spaces and venues - it will also appear at venues across London including The Swedenborg Society in Bloomsbury, Millbank Media Centre at Millbank Tower and OrganicLea, a workers cooperative on the edge of the Lea Valley.
Party for Freedom is loosely based on Vladimir Mayakovsky’s 1921 play Mystery-Bouffe, telling the story of the Clean and the Unclean. It explores performances of liberation and political nakedness; and responds to the changing landscape of Dutch politics following the assassinations of controversial Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn in 2001 and film director Theo van Gogh in 2004, and the ensuing popularity of Geert Wilders, the Dutch politician and leader of the far-right Partij voor de Vrijheid [Party for Freedom].
Including newly commissioned punk, experimental and contemporary classical music by Finnish composer Timo-Juhani Kyllönen, all-girl post-punk band Woolf, and London-based musician Morgan Quaintance, the Party for Freedom moving-image work features an irreverent array of characters and scenarios, developed through workshops and filmed in the lush setting of a 13th-century church in the English countryside. Questioning the currencies of perceived Western freedom, the work draws on trash aesthetics, leftist sentiments grounded in the 1960s and 1970s avant-garde, the hippy movement and far-right populist claims positing Islam and immigration as a threat.
Party for Freedom will appear at four ticketed public London events exploring themes of the work. To launch the project there will be a live concert of the moving-image work with the original album soundtrack on May 1 at Millbank Media Centre, Millbank Tower.
Members of the public wishing to invite the Party to their venue should visit this page for instructions. A dedicated Party Line Operator will then get in touch to discuss the request.
Note: Party for Freedom performances and events include full nudity, flashing lights and sexual content. It is not suitable for those under the age of 18.
Artangel and Oreet Ashery would like to thank Millbank Media Centre, Millbank Tower; Kone Foundation; Performance Matters; London College of Communication; and Home Live Art for their generous support of Party for Freedom.
Artangel is supported by Arts Council England, Special Angels and The Company of Angels.
For all other press inquiries and image requests, or if you’re a journalist and would like to join our press mailing list, please email Anna Larkin anna@artangel.org.uk or Emily Bromfield emily@artangel.org.uk or call 020 77131400
Different venues
London