Industry Updates

The Sick of the Fringe: celebrating science, health and art at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

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10 August 2015

Brian Lobel - you have to forgive me - sm

Science and health are to be front and centre stage in a mini-festival of events during this years’ Edinburgh Festival Fringe. The Sick of the Fringe is bringing together scientists, doctors and performers to explore and debate major issues in research, medicine and the human condition, as well as celebrating the shows in the Fringe that do the same.

The Sick of the Fringe (TSOTF) culminates in two main events at theSpace @ Symposium Hall (V43) on 27 and 28 August, headlined by keynote speakers, neuroscientist Sir Colin Blakemore and actor, comedian and disability rights activist Liz Carr. Over the first two weeks of the Fringe, Brian Lobel will be working with a team of guest curators to pick the most innovative artists from the Festival to present their work as Opening Acts at these events.

Other TSOTF events at Summerhall and Forest Fringe will include Open Meetings featuring Bryony Kimmings and Tim Grayburn, Simon McBurney, Laura Dannequin and many others.

TSOTF has been conceived by artist, performer and Wellcome Trust Engagement Fellow Brian Lobel, whose work on the body and illness has shown at the Edinburgh Science Festival, Edinburgh Festival and Forest Fringe. The programme has been commissioned by the Trust as a way of highlighting the diverse range of biomedical themes and topics inspiring Fringe artists every year.

Brian Lobel said: “I am so excited to be working with the Wellcome Trust to celebrate the voices of artists in scientific and medical inquiry. The Fringe is all about surprising sources of inspiration – a play that challenges your political opinion, a devastating cabaret act, a comedian who makes you cry – and, just like a scientific discovery, these sources of inspiration have the most impact when they are nourished, shared and given appropriate platforms. The Sick of the Fringe might just be one such platform, and we look forward to collaborating with emerging and established artists from the Fringe, and sharing their radical ideas for both medicine and performance.”

TSOTF is also running a series of Wellcome Trust surgeries for Fringe performers and attendees. These surgeries will provide the opportunity to find out more about the Trust’s work in theatre and arts funding, with staff on hand to talk about collaborations between artists and scientists as well as to answer specific project related questions.

Simon Chaplin, Director of Culture & Society at the Wellcome Trust, added: “We’re passionate about collaborative projects which bring together the arts and sciences. Each year we support a host of fantastic shows and performances at the Fringe, and are always thrilled to see many others that work with similar ideas. This year, Brian Lobel’s TSOTF programme provides a unique platform for drawing out these connections and celebrating the different kinds of creativity that underpin art and science. We can’t wait to see who or what will be the Sick of the Fringe!”

Further details are available on the Sick of the Fringe website.
Follow @TSOTFringe on Twitter using #TSOTF15
 

Brian Lobel, ‘You Have to Forgive Me, You Have to Forgive Me, You Have to Forgive Me’, Credit: Julie Bauer

The Sick of the Fringe programme of events

Monday 10 August | 12.00-13.00 | Summerhall
Open Meeting with Bryony Kimmings and Tim Grayburn

Monday 17 August | 12.00-13.00 | Summerhall
Open Meeting with Simon McBurney

Monday 24 August | 10.30-11.30 | Forest Fringe
Open Meeting – the Sick of the Forest Fringe

Tuesday 25 August | 09.00-11:00 | Summerhall
Wellcome Trust surgery

Wednesday 26 August | 09.00-11.00 | Summerhall
Wellcome Trust surgery

Thursday 27 August | 10.30-11.30 | theSpace @ Symposium Hall
Main Event feat. Sir Colin Blakemore

Friday 28 August | 10.30-11.30 | theSpace @ Symposium Hall
Main Event feat. Liz Carr

Contact
Emily Philippou
Media Officer, Wellcome Trust
T 020 7611 8726
E e.philippou@wellcome.ac.uk

About the Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust is a global charitable foundation dedicated to improving health. We provide more than £700 million a year to support bright minds in science, the humanities and the social sciences, as well as education, public engagement and the application of research to medicine.

About theSpaceUK
theSpaceUK is a production company specialising in live theatre, music and event production.

We have 20 years’ experience in producing an array of live production across all genres of performance art. Our Award winning Edinburgh Festival venues have become widely established and continue to host some of the festivals most talked about shows. We have extensive knowledge of all aspects that go into producing a show at the fringe.

About Summerhall
Summerhall is open to the public all year round and hosts events in all the City’s major festivals. Visitors will find theatre and gallery spaces, libraries and small museums, educational and research programmes, studios and workshops. It’s a new kind of community: a cross cultural village where arts and sciences talk to each other, where high tech rubs shoulders with all the arts including film and television and a craft brewer has revived a three hundred year old tradition of brewing on the site. Most importantly Summerhall is a work in progress – as more space is developed more ideas emerge. Here the possibilities are endless, “everyone is an artist”.
About Forest Fringe
Forest Fringe is a community of performance artists working together to make festivals and events happen across the UK and internationally. Since 2007 we have hosted an award-winning venue at the Edinburgh festival, a home for the unusual and the adventurous that is totally free for artists and audiences alike.

Source: Wellcome Press Release

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