Expanding upon findings from 300 Tapes and relay, Public Recordings asks: "What can we say about our future and how do we say it together?" Using language and movement to explore new perspectives of our world and each other, an assembly of performers responds to uncertainty, potential danger, and possibility in an open performance space.
This series of live performances is the world premiere of what we are saying from the acclaimed Toronto based company Public Recordings. This new work creates the conditions for communication to emerge as spontaneous choral conversation, illuminating the radical possibility of a leaderless togetherness.
Using language and movement to explore new perspectives on our world and each other, an assembly of performers responds to uncertainty, potential danger and possibility in an open performance space.
Established in 2003, Public Recordings is an atelier that explores and shares choreographic experimentation through artistic research, performance creation, publication and education. The company has a history of presenting works in a diversity of performance contexts. Guided by the choreographer Ame Henderson, the company initiates cross-disciplinary projects that situate collaboration as both a political and aesthetic interest.