23 Oct Inside Deptford X festival 2019
Deptford X, London’s longest running contemporary visual arts festival, celebrates its twenty-first birthday this year with its largest programme to date.
New director Nathalie Boobis has curated twelve major projects, five of which have been specially commissioned. These will be bolstered by almost 100 fringe events drawn from the local community.
This year’s theme is Stop Making Sense, which is taken from the Talking Heads’ 1984 concert film of the same name, and was chosen by Boobis to reflect the ‘surreal, playful and unruly art as a disruption to our current political climate of hostility and division’.
Says Boobis: ‘This year’s festival builds on the success of all the earlier incarnations with an ambitious core programme, a vast Fringe showcasing the density of artistic activity happening in the area, and a community procession to close the festival.’
The festival, which will take place over ten days between 25 October and 3 November 2019, can be experienced in a range of spaces across Deptford, South East London. Last year 120,000 people saw its various exhibitions, public artworks, interventions, talks and performances connected with its core programme and since its inception in 1998 it has attracted over 1 million visitors.
This year, Deptford X is made up of the ‘Curated’ and ‘Fringe’ strands but amongst other innovations, which include a festival procession invoking worldwide carnival traditions on the final day, Boobis has added a third: ‘Supported’ which, alongside Curated, form the core festival programme. Five projects were selected by an open call aimed at BAME applicants, with the winners, who are supported financially and curatorially by Deptford X, selected by a jury consisting of artists and art professionals Hew Locke, Natasha Hoare, Teresa Cisneros, Christopher Kirubi and Imran Perretta.
The seven works in the curated programme include a film by Sarah Browne, who co-represented Ireland at the 53rd Venice Biennial, and a new sculptural installation by Kobby Adi, whose work explores, amongst other things, cultural objects associated with Blackness. American artist Gray Wielebinski has created a major immersive work which uses sports as an entry point for exploring themes of national identity, desire, myth making, surveillance, hierarchies, race and gender. This work will be shown in Deptford’s Wavelengths Leisure Centre.
Meanwhile, the Fringe, which unlike the other two strands is un-juried, is made up of 94 projects by local artists, curators, galleries and arts organisations. Locations range from a painting installation in a hairdressers, a sound installation in the toilet of a bar, and the napkins of a Vietnamese restaurant, to Deptford Community Cinema, local galleries and studios, and Goldsmiths Centre for Contemporary Art.
Boobis adds: ‘I’m really excited about this year’s festival; the artists I have chosen to work with for the Curated programme are all producing fantastic and timely work that’s very much responding to the context of Deptford. The ideas and concerns running through their work all address the notion ‘stop making sense’ in different and nuanced ways – from the need to engage more with play in order to break social boundaries in Tiz Creel’s interactive work, to the limits and complexities of language in Jin Han Lee’s paintings. Selecting the Supported projects was tough. We had 53 incredibly strong applications but the panel decided to privilege projects they felt would benefit most from Deptford X support. I think we have chosen a great selection of artists and I’m looking forward to working with them in the run up to the festival. Last year the Fringe was the biggest yet at 94 projects and we have the same number this year. It’s amazing the amount and quality of artistic production in the area and the generosity of support offered by local businesses to host art projects for the festival.’