Programmes

Gather at 42 Waterloo Street and join us in cooking up care practices across Singapore’s arts ecosystem.

DAY 1 – 28 June, Friday

29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari 29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari

Gentle Ferocities

 
BRING YOUR PLATE (GATHERINGS)

29 June, Saturday
8.00-10.00 PM 
Rehearsal Studio 

How are we listening to each other, our environments, our bodies, our creaturely companions, and reconfigured rhythms of time and disembodied sounds from virtual realms? What might we witness and what is animated when we situate ourselves in places that ask for your whole body to listen? How can we allow and trust our senses and instincts to lead us in times of crises, transition, healing, dreaming and transformation?

Come sit and unfold these questions for yourself and others through the sharing of food, storytelling and the crafting of a small handmade effigy/talisman (made from a recipe of organic materials, soil, selected spices, aromatics and flowers).


ABOUT THE ARTS WORKERS

RUMAH RIMAU DAPOR

Rumah Rimau Dapor (Zarina Muhammad) is a peculiar habitat and shelter that invites and welcomes delight, softness, ferocity, and the quiet pauses and spaces of multispecies cohabitation. Zarina Muhammad (she/her) is an artist, educator and researcher whose practice is deeply entwined with a critical re-examination of oral histories, ethnographic literature and other historiographic accounts about Southeast Asia. 

IG: @girlsandghostsintrees
girlsandghostsintrees.com

PORT OF RECIPROCITY

Port of Reciprocity (Irfan Kasban) is a space and time shared to alleviate the aches of being a burnt-out artist. Irfan Kasban (he/him) is a transdisciplinary artist who writes, directs, performs and designs, as a way to create intricate universes to honour space and time. 

IG: @irfan.kasban
irfankasban.wordpress.com

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29 JUNE CITRUS practices 29 JUNE CITRUS practices

Introduction to Intimacy in Performance

 
BRING YOUR SOCKS (WORKSHOPS)

29 June, Saturday
7.30-9.30 PM
Black Box

*Free with Expression-of-Interest by 7 June
20 spaces available

What kinds of structures and practices help keep performers physically, emotionally and mentally safe? This joint workshop by accredited Intimacy Coordinator Rayann Condy and The Consent Collaborative will cover the fundamentals of care and intimacy in and around performance. Weaving together theoretical insights and experiential learning, participants will be led through improvisation tasks, embodied exercises and learn to navigate care and consent dynamics. By working in pairs, attendees can try out diverse ways of expression, refining their attunement to and enactment of embodied communication.


ABOUT THE ARTS WORKERS

RAYANN CONDY

Rayann Condy (she/her) is the first qualified Intimacy Coordinator in Singapore (as far as she knows:). Having trained in the USA with Intimacy Directors and Coordinators (IDC), she is keen to continue adapting the processes that she’s learnt within a greater South East Asian context. Through her work, Rayann hopes to help foster accountable and consent-informed spaces that allow storytelling to flourish.

IG: @rayann_condy
rayanncondy.com
LinkedIn

The Consent Collaborative (Chew Lihong and Prescott Gaylord)

Chew Lihong (she/her) and Prescott Gaylord (he/him) are part of The Consent Collaborative, which is an affiliation of artists, actors, and directors who are working to make the performing arts more safe and consensual. They share experiences, techniques, and education around intimacy work with the arts and performance community in Singapore.

IG: @consent_collaborative_sg
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29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari 29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari

Conflict & Communication 101 

 
BRING YOUR SOCKS (WORKSHOP)

29 June, Saturday
5.00-7.00 PM
Black Box

*Free with Expression-of-Interest by 7 June
10 spaces available

What do we need to foster connection through conflict and communication? In this workshop, Teo Xiao Ting will lead participants to explore how they communicate and ways to navigate conflict to facilitate repair. Drawing upon frameworks from CITRUS practices’ Library of Care online resource, as well as principles from embodied nonviolent communication and trauma-informed therapeutic modalities like Internal Family Systems, participants will have the opportunity to understand themselves amidst tension. Through interactive exercises, workshop attendees will engage in paired activities, deepening their understanding of themselves and what they need to feel grounded during conflict.

Note: Participants will be sent some reading material before the workshop. In the event of oversubscription, these materials will be shared on CITRUS fest’s website. 


ABOUT THE ARTS WORKER

TEO XIAO TING

Teo Xiao Ting (they/she/it) works in intimate and sometimes invisible spaces. Presently, its practice materialises as art criticism, workshops and one-to-one therapy sessions. They are an affiliate clinical mental health and somatic therapist at Sol Therapy, and are committed to CITRUS practices. She co-created the Library of Care online resource.

txting.space
LinkedIn

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29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari 29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari

The Artist Is Apparent – dialogue on parenting and caregiving

 
BRING YOUR QUESTIONS (CONVERSATIONS)

29 June, Saturday
3.00–4.30PM 
Black Box

 

How have we made it work? How have arts workers in Singapore made decisions and created structures of support for parenting in our workplace? This conversation focuses on informal and formal strategies and hacks that have made it more possible for parenting (and caregiving) arts workers to maintain or grow aspects of their practice, including but not limited to creative work, residencies, networking and touring. The dialogue will start with sharing from interviews and research conducted by Faye Lim and arts researcher Dr. Hoe Su-Fern. Thereafter, invited panellists will kick off a broader conversation with audiences. 


Panellists

  • Julie Wee, Checkpoint Theatre (Actress and Voiceover Artist)

  • Michele Lim (Independent Producer, Arts Management Consultant and Educator)

  • Dr. Natalie Alexandra Tse, SAtheCollective & LittleCreatures®️ (Performer, Educator and Researcher) / @sathecollective, @hellolittlecreatures

Moderator

  • Dr. Nidya Shanthini Manokara (Dance and Theatre Practitioner-Researcher, Educator, Performer and Dramaturg)

Interviewees

  • Hasyimah Harith and Norhaizad Adam

  • Saiful Amri

  • Titisa Jeamsakul (Ice)

This dialogue is part of The Artist Is Apparent, a project that welcomes artists, producers and arts workers to consider support structures for parenting /caregiving artists and arts workers in Singapore. It was first conceptualised by a few local parenting artists and is currently run by Faye Lim.

Three interviews were conducted with local parenting artists as part of the project. They complement existing interviews with parenting artists in Singapore. This offers supportive possibilities for parenting artists and a network of peers to reference from one another.

Note: Speech-to-text interpretation (by Equal Dreams) and child minding services will be provided for this programme.


ABOUT THE ARTS WORKERS

FAYE LIM

Faye Lim (she/her) is a dance and teaching artist, with a background in research, training and sexuality education. As co-director of Rolypoly Family, she produces body-based art, programmes and body safety education, and leads the team’s training, professional development and consulting projects. Her advocacy work includes expanding on care practices in the arts through CITRUS practices and safeguarding children’s rights to safety, health, education and joy. 

IG: @fayeminlim

DR HOE SU-FERN

Dr Hoe Su-Fern (she/her) is an arts researcher and educator. She specialises in the engaged and ecological analysis of cultural policy, comprising three strands. The first focuses on the impact of cultural governance on the conditions of creative labour. The second is cultural value-based, and looks at how the arts shape urban and community development. The third is concerned with policy from below, particularly mutual aid, care and solidarity.

IG: @sfhoe_

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29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari 29 JUNE Izyanti Asaari

Rehearsing for ‘Better’

Adib & Gua Khee

 
BRING YOUR SOCKS (WORKSHOPS)

29 June, Saturday
12:30–2:30 PM 
Black Box

*Free with Expression-of-Interest by 7 June
24 spaces available

When we are told 'this is just how things are done here' or 'this is how things are', how might we respond? What are some small steps we can take to change our surroundings for the better? In this workshop, Adib Kosnan and Chong Gua Khee adapt a forum theatre script about working conditions in the arts into an intimate discussion and roleplay exercise. Participants will get to try out their own scripts for change, as well as watch and learn from other folks' experiments. By rehearsing together in a safe space, participants will build their own vocabularies for making a difference in their own contexts, regardless of art form or role!


ABOUT THE ARTS WORKERS

ADIB KOSNAN

 Adib Kosnan (he/him) is a theatre actor, director and playwright passionate about creating platforms for communication through theatre. He believes in creating works in environments that prioritise mutual respect and understanding of each collaborator's strengths and needs whilst not shying away from healthy conflicts that challenge them. 

IG: @adibkosnan 

Photo credit: Boban James

CHONG GUA KHEE

Chong Gua Khee (she/her) is a director, dramaturg and facilitator who wants to create art that is as 'shiok' as possible for herself, the team, audiences and the environment. She sees the work of CITRUS practices as deeply crucial to finding the 'shiok' in artmaking for everyone involved, and is excited to collectively dream up more playful and sustainable ways of caring for each other. 

IG: @togentlerdays
guakhee.com

Photo credit: Shirlene Loo
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DAY 2– 29 June, Saturday