DDFI40: DaDaFest @ The Bluecoat

The Bluecoat has a long relationship with deaf and disability arts organisation DaDa, which has been based in the building since 2008. As part of DaDa’s 40th birthday year, this archive exhibition charts the various festivals, events and exhibitions hosted at the arts centre.

Access: Venue access information can be found here: https://www.thebluecoat.org.uk/plan-your-visit/accesibility

Cost: FREE

About DDFI40:

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.

DDFI40: Bluecoat Hub and Quiet Space

Head along and join them at the DDFI40 Hub at the Bluecoat in the Bistro. A central sanctuary open to artists and audiences for networking, informal meetings, chill time, discussion and reflection, and taking time out. Open all day, no booking necessary.

Access: Venue access information can be found here: https://www.thebluecoat.org.uk/plan-your-visit/accesibility

Cost: FREE

About DDFI40:

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.

Street Dreams: Urban Struggle Disabili...

Join disabled artists and their collaborators from Java & Bali – Indonesia, Cardiff and Liverpool to talk about mark making in the places that disempower us and the value of mural and street art as hyper-local radical activism. Artists contributing include: Sukri Budi Dharma, Winda Karunadhita, Nano Warsono and Andrew Bolton

Access:

The session will be interpreted simultaneously from English to Bahasa and vice versa. Please mention when booking your language preference. BSL will also be available along with captions and audio description.

If you have any difficulty booking via eventbrite, please do contact our team via info@dadafest.co.uk and we can help you to book.

About DDFI40

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.

Ignite: Imagine Better Futures For Peo...

What could health care look like if it was designed by people with energy limiting conditions (ELCs)? How can creative workshops feed into research? How can the creative research process be made as accessible as possible?

This roundtable includes 5 artists involved in a research project using creative workshops to ideas about better futures of care for people with ELCs. The project built on research by Chronic illness Inclusion which demonstrated the harm done by medical professional disregarding or disbelieving people’s accounts of living with ELCs.

Online creative workshops were facilitated for
Muslim women
LGBTQIA+ people
People of marginalised gender (cis and trans women, trans men, non-binary, intersex and gender nonconforming people)

Workshops involved zine making, creative writing, fairytale writing, drawing, collage and mixed-media. Workshops were designed to be accessible for people with ELC and asynchronous workshop options were hosted to maximise opportunities to participate.

Each workshop was led by a l creative practitioners and artists with a participatory approach and together each group co-produced an artefact that spoke to their needs. The results are zines, podcasts, stories, comics, animations and creative non-fiction.

The artists involved were Khizra Ahmed Khairani Barokka (Okka), Julian Gray, Mish Green and Louise Kenward. The project was led by Professor Bethan Evans at The University of Liverpool, working with Morag Rose and Ana Bê Pereira, Chronic Illness Inclusion, Liverpool Hope University, Stephanie Davis, Healing Justice London, and a team of independent researchers: Dr Aaliyah Shaikh Dr Alison Allam and Dr Anna Ruddock. Everyone in the team has their own experiences of disability and / or chronic illness.

About DDFI40:

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.

Trans Film Night: The People’s Joker...

Paraphysis Theatre are very happy to announce their next screening in partnership with MatchBox Cine: Vera Drew’s debut The People’s Joker.

“This revolutionary DIY parody film and hilarious reimagining of the classic autobiographical coming-of-age story follows an unconfident, closeted trans girl as she moves to Gotham City to make it big as a comedian by joining the cast of UCB Live – a government-sanctioned late night sketch show in a world where comedy has been outlawed.

As mainstream success eludes our heroine, leading her to unite with a ragtag team of rejects, misfits, and a certain love interest named Mister J, “Joker the Harlequin” is born again as a confident (and psychotic) joker on a collision course with the city’s fascist caped crusader. Vats of feminizing chemicals, sexy cartoon interludes, scarecrow psychiatrists, CGI Lorne Michaels, and psychedelic gender dysphoria all play supporting roles. Helmed by writer/director/editor/star Vera Drew and using her own life experiences as a basis for the film, THE PEOPLE’S JOKER is a deeply personal journey that’s as much documentary as it is parody.”

Head along and watch this highly anticipated title in the most perfect space: a grassroots DIY queer cinema with a bunch of weirdos!

All profits are going towards QUARRY’s next venture. General Admission and Low Income/Unwaged tickets available.

Raven

A moving new play from Abi McKenzie.

Eris is hosting a party that never ends. As the boundaries between reality and illusion blur, she begins to face the devastating consequences of her choices. A moving new play from Abi McKenzie with puppetry, movement and underscored with live cello.

Friday’s show will include a curtain raiser performance from Collective Encounters’ Women in Action group who have been taking part in workshops exploring the themes of Raven.

Event

Supported by Arts Council England.

Deaf led tour – transport

Join the team in this new opportunity for deaf and hard of hearing visitors to join a tour of their wonderful transport collections, led by a deaf guide.

For the tour on 19 April only the British Sign Language guide will be interpreted so that hearing visitors can accompany their deaf or hard of hearing friends and family on the tour.

The tour is free but places are limited so please book your ticket early.

DDFI40: Koishii by Chris Shapiro

This work began as part of the DaDa Fellows scheme in 2021 to allow disabled and neurodivergent artists time and space to try new artforms and develop their craft, co-commissioned by DaDa and New Earth Theatre.

Koishii is Japanese for “I miss” referring to a person/place/thing that it’s impossible (at least currently) to reunite with. The word itself has an almost dramatic and slightly older tone, but is also used with tongue in cheek self-awareness, an equivalent to the word “yearn”.

The experience allows you to move a character to get a key, which lets you unlock a portal to the next day in your life. In order to get the key you have to navigate pools of lava, poison gas that slows you down, and the fact that your controls will change at random to make movement more uncomfortable. All the while Chris’ narration about their experience of chronic illness play in the background.

About Koishii from Chris Shapiro

For this piece, Chris uses gamification within their art to explore their experiences of disability and neurodivergence.

There’s a sense of masking and chronic illness/neurodiversity and how it’s kind of detrimental to us, in the sense of covering how bad we’re actually doing and then depleting a lot of energy to do so, especially in relation to things like benefits and PIP interviews and with doctors who might disbelieve how bad we’re doing because we mask as a reflex,

The game includes elements of the unpredictability and intensity of a random flare up, what brain fog is like, the exhaustion and overwhelming nature. You’re not sure if these are connected or unrelated, and having no way of finding out other than waiting to see if a link arises.

Chris used the design of the sea because it’s an environment that makes you feel small and aware that you’re at its mercy. This is to recreate that sense of how with both chronic illness and neurodiversity you’re really aware of how things you have no control over can change everything in a moment, and you sort of dread that or have it in the back of your mind constantly, because you have to adapt if something happens.

Chris thought it would be fun if sometimes you don’t get to choose where you go, and with the sea that’s a possibility to play with in a vague way that doesn’t have to be location specific and can be slightly randomised, echoing chronic illness/neurodiversity where there isn’t necessarily a manual, just a warning that sometimes there will be consequences, figure out what they’re from.

About DDFI40:

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.

DDFI40: Eat Me

DaDa is excited to collaborate with Liverpool’s original Drag Dinner Cabaret and Club Night Collective ‘Eat Me and Preach’, who will be inviting disabled, Deaf and Neurodivergent artists to be part of a raucous evening of ‘Not Safe For Work’ performance and protest that gives ‘more than a nod’ to the long-standing intersections of queer and crip identities, offers a safe space for shared grief, rage and healing and offers joy and community in dark times.

Access: there will be BSL interpretation and Audio Description.

Age Guidance: 18+ Adult themes, strong language throughout and nudity highly likely

About DDFI40:

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.

DDFI40: Would You Like A Seat?

Want to Join the Elite? The National Bureau For Sitting is Assessing You!

Head to the Bluecoat and be assessed by Sitting Experts the National Bureau For Sitting (NBFS)

Have you ever wondered if you have what it takes to join the NBFS? Now’s your chance to find out!

The National Bureau For Sitting (NBFS) is coming to the Bluecoat to assess your sitting prowess. Join the ranks of esteemed members like Prince Andrew, Jacob Rees Mogg, and Maggie Thatcher.

Experience:

Expert Assessment: Be evaluated by professional seat-sitting assessors.

Luxurious Comfort: Indulge in the unparalleled comfort of a Chesterfield chair.

Exclusive Club: Potentially gain entry into the elite club of exceptional sitters.

Let’s Regulate Sitting, One Cheek at a Time!

About DDFI40:

DaDaFest International returns 8th-31st March 2025 to celebrate DaDa’s 40th Anniversary and this time they are coming with ‘RAGE: A Quiet Riot’.

Event

DDFI40 will showcase work by disabled artists that captures all shapes and sides of rage. From the internal quiet frustrations and righteous rage, to overt injustice and activism, DDFI40 will explore disability rights, disability arts, access, ableism and ‘Rage’ in an explosion of creativity.