Various members of Buffalo, New York's arts community have come together to organize the first annual Buffalo infringement Festival -- An eleven-day event designed to promote eclectic, independent, experimental, and politically charged productions of a wide array of artistic projects including theater, performance art, live installations, street theater, and multi-media presentations.
The "buffalo infringement festival" is the result of six months of planning by an ad hoc collection of volunteers from the local theater and arts community and is a part of the international infringement festival circuit which holds similar events in cities throughout North America including Halifax (June 2-12), Montreal (June 16-26), Ottawa (June 30-July 10, Toronto (July 14-24), and New York City (August 25-September 4). Further information on the international component of the infringement festival can be found at www.infringementfestival.com
We are excited to announce that this event will be held at various venues in the Allentown area.
Thursday, July 28 to Sunday, August 7, 2005
Local writers, directors, and performers – as well as artists from New York City and Montreal – have answered an open call to present their work as part of this new festival. The resulting assortment of activities includes world premieres of one-person shows, gender-reversed productions of classical theatrical pieces, street theatre, political cabaret, puppetry, experimental work, virtual reality simulation, hip-hop, slam poetry, interpretive dance, outdoor screenings of family-oriented films, presentations of poetry readings by area high school students, and much more. No single style or aesthetic predominates; some events
Here is a list of performances
Venues
- 1. Rust Belt Books (202 Allen St)
- 2. Nietzsche's Bar (248 Allen Street)
- 3. Allen/College Promenade (Parking Lot at Allen & College)
- 4. Day's Park
- 5. Allen Street Dance Studio (85 Allen Street)
- 6. Squeaky Wheel Media Arts Center (175 Elmwood)
- 7. Coit House (414 Virginia Street)
- 8. New Phoenix Theatre on the Park (95 North Johnson Park)
- 9. Hallwalls (700 Main Street)
- 10. SoundLab (110 Pearl Street)
Or poor people like us who have two people on one computer network.
Of course, any one clever enough to network a couple of computers or, heaven forbid, has two or more people sharing the same computer just isn't the Artvoice's target audience I reckon.
I would say more but my dear departed mom taught me that sometimes it is better to say nothing than to say something mean especially if it is true.