An unexpected work from all-migrant Vandens Karta Ensemble, The Cathedral delves into the deepest corners of misogyny, religion and female shame and empowerment. The Cathedral Two women pray and sing religious songs. A femme de joie cleans a church somewhere near Marseille. A lost tourist gives up her search for Michelangelo and instead attempts… what […]
A meta-theatrical response to Waiting for Godot, Nothing Happens (Twice) is so witty and honest that for me it surpasses the original entirely and will become the yardstick by which I measure Beckett. Nothing Happens (Twice) What do you do when you want to perform Waiting for Godot but you can’t get the rights because […]
The first visual arts exhibition by the Kakilang festival team, State-less 無國界 confronts visitors with art that delves into the specificities of place and home, but also the commonalities of human experience. State-less 無國界 Kakilang festival is in full swing! Regular readers will remember my review of HOME X some weeks ago, a global event […]
An experiment in theatrical writing, Flies subverts, deconstructs and analyses the male gaze, misogyny and the patriarchy. A lot to tackle in a short 70 minutes. Flies I came to see Flies for two reasons. Firstly and inconsequentially I like trying out new venues, and had never been to the Shoreditch Town Hall before. Verdict: […]
Leighton House’s reopening exhibition helps to resituate it within a community of artists – The Holland Park Circle. A Welcome Return To Leighton House I had not been to Leighton House for a number of years, and have never written about it on the Salterton Arts Review. West London always seems like a bit of […]
Tim Edge’s darkly comic work Under the Black Rock, set in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, is a reminder of what’s at stake and a study in the long-reaching effects of violence. Content warning: mentions of violence, torture, suicide. Under The Black Rock In a month where the political arrangements in Northern Ireland are back […]
A fresh and unexpected approach to storytelling from theatre company Unleash the Llama at VAULT Festival with their fictionalised, historic monologue Five Years With The White Man. A. B. C. Merriman-Labor I had a feeling I was going to like this play when I first read the description. The press release promises “a kaleidoscope of […]
Joseph Charlton’s play Brilliant Jerks at the Southwark Playhouse Borough explores how human nature both shapes and is shaped by technological developments. Brilliant Jerks The Salterton Arts Review has a day job, in which I work in technology. Or at least I have done for a little while now. I found myself wondering as I […]
A fabulously warm-hearted celebration of love, friendship and finding your way in the world, Matilda Feyiṣayọ Ibini’s Sleepova is a joy to behold. Content warning: living with illness, LGBT ‘conversion therapy’, grief and bereavement. Sleepova I was excited going into Sleepova at the Bush Theatre. I had seen glowing feedback on social media from people who had […]
A little play that dreams big, Someone of Significance is my latest outing at London’s VAULT Festival. Someone of Significance As I continue my foray into VAULT Festival, making the most of it while it’s still in its Waterloo home, I have the pleasure of discovering a range of voices, stories, and styles. Today’s post […]