Photo: George Alley
Photo: George Alley

QUEER SCHOOL in Session

Ellen Chenoweth

9:45 – GENDER 301 – CLASSROOM – instructor: SMITH

Do you think gender is more of a kinesphere than a ‘spectrum’? Gender 301 is an interactive performance lecture, built to suit. It is for people who already know that gender is not only a social construct but is a performance that is contextual.  This fake lecture will include break-out groups, pop quizzes, and brief nudity.      

Prerequisite: Leaving your assumption[s] at the door.

This sample offering from the Collage Festival website lists a prerequisite that is good advice for attending any part of the festival. Collage is a freewheeling and scrappy annual event where even the organizers aren’t entirely sure what will bubble up from the mix of art and artists brought under the same festival tent. Joy Mariama Smith, one of the festival’s founders and curators, revels in this unpredictability: “One way I measure success is by being surprised. If I knew what was going to happen, I don’t think I would do it.”

Collage is the brainchild of Philip Moore (aka Toby Celery) and Joy Mariama Smith. Friends since 5th grade, Moore and Smith created the festival with the intention of creating an artist-friendly, affordable, and accessible event, partially responding to changing priorities of other festivals in the city. The multi-disciplinary arts festival that features dance, video, installation art, and hybrid forms is celebrating its fifth year, and this year the party location is Headlong Studios. Each year the festival happens at a different Philadelphia venue, highlighting the neighborhood and the surrounding community, and also encouraging a migratory fan base. “We have no interest in being insular,” Smith points out.

This year’s theme is “QUEER SCHOOL!” a site-responsive nod to the Headlong Performance Institute that riffs off the idea of education. The theme situates “the art show as a site of knowledge production,” and Moore stresses that the festival-goers are a key part of that production: “we subscribe to the Maurizio  Cattelan  school of thought which basically suggests that the art is completed by the audience.” The QUEER SCHOOL! theme leads to all kinds of cleverness: performer bios are listed as faculty bios, and the performance schedule becomes a ‘queer school course catalog.’ It reads like sexy summer camp crossed with artistic anarchist merrymaking: there are assemblies, zine-making, nudity, and a Family Feud-style game show co-hosted by quintessential Philadelphia flâneur Jorge Alberto Navarrete.

With events stretching out over three days, and a $5 daily entry fee, Collage encourages casual sampling. Some chaos and confusion comes with the territory of a collage, and audience members are encouraged to keep an open mind. Collage Festival’s QUEER SCHOOL! is an experiential learning experience, and, just as in more traditional educational settings, what you get out of it often depends on what you put in.  Classes start on Thursday; those who attend all three days of the festival will be eligible for graduation on Saturday.

Collage Festival, multiple artists, Headlong Studios, May 7-9, 7pm, collagefestival.com

Share this article

Ellen Chenoweth

Ellen Chenoweth relocated back to Philadelphia after 5 years as the Director of the Dance Presenting Series at the Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago. As a freelancer, she has worked with Nichole Canuso Dance Company, Christopher K. Morgan & Artists, the Lumberyard, and Headlong Dance Theater, among others. She is a former Executive Director, staff writer and editor with thINKingDANCE.

PARTNER CONTENT

Keep Reading

Mujeres in Motion

Caedra Scott-Flaherty

Ballet Hispánico’s 56th season is an exciting women-led tour of the Latine diaspora.

Three dancers, two men and one woman, stand on a stage covered in bright autumn leaves. The background is black. They stand in a wide stance, holding thick black rolls over their heads. The man on the left, in gray pants and a t-shirt, looks up at the roll. The brunette woman wearing green pants and a brown tunic stares directly out. The man on the right, dressed in a red suit and white dress shirt, also looks straight forward.
Photo: Steven Pisano - Courtesy of Ballet Hispánico New York

Douglas Dunn’s Post-modern Pastoral

Brendan McCall

An intrepid choreographer examines classical forms through a post-modern lens

Douglas Dunn stands wearing a bright yellow mask which covers his eyes. His right arm is extended to his side while his other rests on a wooden chair painted with yellow flowers. He wears a grey vest, red tie, and dark pants--a contrast to dancers Dongri Suh and Janet Charleston who stand behind him weaering flowered garlands around their heads and wear tulle skirts. A video of two waterfalls is projected onto the wall behind them.
Photo: Jacob Burckhardt