Experimental performance art is taking over Carriageworks this month

While Sydney Contemporary has come and gone for another year, Carriageworks isn’t yet done regarding large-scale art events in Sydney. Liveworks Festival, set for October 23 to 27, will again fill the unique space with a collection of performance art pieces and experimental works from artists across Australia and the Asia Pacific.

Curated by Performance Space, the Liveworks Festival this year anchors itself on themes of care and intimacy, asking questions on how we hold each other in collapse, and how we find release and joy in the unexpected.

Marcus Whale will perform a visceral solo show called Ecstasy, dissecting the uncommon relationship between rave culture and Christian Liturgy. Daley Rangi and Luke George will each present intimate performance pieces designed to encourage viewers to rethink their relationship with the environment.
Emily Parsons-Lord and Shan Turner-Carroll work together on a piece called It’s Already Happened, Hossesi will wrangle a full ensemble for a “vibrant theatrical experience.” And Oli Mathiesen has an endurance-based dance work called The Butterly Who Flew Into The Rave.

And that’s just some of the stacked program, which will stretch across five days with engaging performances for all ages.

A heavier focus on wider representation, queer identity, and a few explorations of social norms will be led by The Bloom’s Jessie McCall, while other local artists turn in what seems to be some of their most meaningful work to date. In a changing world, sitting at the forefront of technology, something like this is not only remarkably unique, it’s essential.

Even if you’re only going for the inspiration.


Liveworks Festival

Where: Carriageworks; 245 Wilson St, Eveleigh NSW 2015
When: October 23-27


Read More

Related
The Sydney Opera House is planning two big performances for New Year's Eve.

Sydney Opera House reveals big New Year’s Eve plans

Opera Australia and Sydney Opera House will be going all out to celebrate New Year’s Eve as 2024 switches into 2025. Sydney already puts on one of the world’s most famous New Year’s Eve fireworks displays each year, but now ... Read more
Wine Island makes a big move to Watsons Bay for 2024

Sydney’s epic Wine Island is moving to Watsons Bay

Sydney’s tropical wine festival returns for three days of sun-sipping and cheese-biting, with Wine Island taking over Gap Bluff in NSW National Park. Kicking off on Friday, November 29 and running through Sunday, December 1, Wine Island ’24 moves from ... Read more
Thursday dating app and events. Couple cheersing

7 best off-app ways to meet other Sydney singles

Most unattached people in 2024 agree that the a carousel of loneliness that are romance based dating games (apps like Hinge, Bumble and Tinder) are no longer working for us. Here are 6 off-app ways to meet other single people in Sydney.
Ibrahim Kassif and owner Ibby posing in front of Surry Hills restaurant Nour

Surry Hills favourite Nour enters a new era

It’s been 8 years since Ibby Moubadder made Middle Eastern food cool again with his ferociously popular Surry Hills restaurant, Nour. Now, the restaurateur hopes to take his modern Lebanese diner into a new era with ex-Stanbuli chef Ibrahim Kasif. ... Read more