MàD¹
Caroline Lamarche
Suddenly you want to wander around in stations, singing at the top of your lungs and dancing on the tips of your toes to the instrumental and electroacoustic music.
Suddenly you want to wander around in stations, singing at the top of your lungs and dancing on the tips of your toes to the instrumental and electroacoustic music.
An overture in the form of a manifesto that rearticulates the chilling assessment of the mounting perils and the volcanic force of a collective response.
Here, it is no longer actors giving substance to the disappeared voices, but the individuals themselves who return from the past to speak to us with their voices, their melody, their timbre and their breath.
A delightful tour in the form of an address to Vié Didier, a big brother as a writer and a lifelong friend.
Here, you’ll find no Tarot de Marseille or premonitions. It's all about collective empathy and a sensitive, philosophical and performative meeting place!
With audio and visual material taken on the spot and up close and personal with their subjects, it renders visible in the form of a slide show with voice narration, the daily life of the survivors of the floods of July 2021 in Belgium.
Reflecting the delicate alliances between wildlife and the human world, this parable of joint emancipation astonishes, disconcerts and touches.
In Patua Nou, Dominique Roodthooft adopts the pictorial narrative in the form of a meander through several stations to draw new stories related to exile.
A live radio performance of the podcast De pierres en étoiles, between observation of the stars and poetry, adapted from the collection Devant l'immense* by Rebecca Elson and translated by Sika Fakambi.
To remember the terrible floods of July 2021 in the Liège region, a reading with two voices: those of David Van Reybrouck and Caroline Lamarche.
With her legendary finesse, her trucker's voice and her 10cm heels, Peggy Lee Cooper is going to attempt a perilous exercise: bringing together in a recital authors that couldn’t be more disparate.
Between lucidity and fantasy, radicalism and compassion, the self-portrait as a mental patient of visual artist and poet Unica Zürn.
In the course of three investigations, three writings and three eras, the sisterhood is overwhelming and enlightening, as it provides weapons to fight against inequalities today.
With their film Why We Fight? Alain Platel and Mirjam Devriendt pay tribute to the arts, but also to humanity, that always seems to balance between creating something spectacularly beautiful or horribly cruel.
Suddenly we want to wrestle, to get a massage, to probe other ways of giving voice to words and bodies.
Corners full of surprises for all tastes and ages.
A slam by two figures of the Congolese scene on issues of social justice and equality.
Belgium, the Congo, their little stories and History, it’s the Koko Slam Gang who present them as a popular festival with humor and audacity.
Inspired by the Peruvian Lucha Libro, the literary wrestling match offers struggling poets the opportunity to compete, face to face, in the ring.
A mix of music & stories to make you dance about what it’s like to be a black, racialized woman. Like a vast dance floor, rhythmic and engaged.
An exhibition space that questions transnational adoption, the uprooting of identity and the collective history.
Theatrical and hybrid performances around texts written by exiled researchers and journalists.
Author Claire Olirencia Deville invites children from 8 to 12 years old to write their own personal fairy tale.
Between sharing, deconstruction and creation, Badi will propose a journey through time and space to meet the other.
The writters reveal to us some of their secrets, between melancholy, combat, tortured language and poetic politics.
Catholicism, gender and the sexualization of bodies, consumption, Aurélie Olivier dissects her rural childhood in a language specific to her environment of origin.
For his first solo performance, Hashem Hashem tells us a double story, that of the body in gender transition and that of the city, Beirut, in the midst of radical transformation.
Avoiding clichés, Liquides Lyriques is the beat of eroticism that revives desire, questioning normative representations and celebrating the diversity of bodies.
A trip, without any boundaries of genre, to the MENA regions where you’ll meet some amazing artists.
Four tales who spring from the colorful imagination of Claire Olirencia Deville.
Pour un temps sois peu is a story of a trans woman through the details, the dangerous, the cruel, but the real details.
Six queer feminist authors write the unpresentable, the explicit, the tender, the raw and the erotic.