Talk to me and I slap you (Sun Feb 25, 3pm) | Peatix tag:peatix.com,2011:1 2019-11-01T16:43:41+08:00 Peatix ttmaisy Talk to me and I slap you (Sun Feb 25, 3pm) tag:peatix.com,2018:event-338873 2018-02-25T15:00:00SGT 2018-02-25T15:00:00SGT An interactive performanceCreated by Chan Sze-Wei (SG) and Gabriela Serani (CL)Performed by Gabriela SeraniThe Substation GallerySat 24 February 2018 3pm, 8pmSun 25 February 2018 3pm60 minutes, no intermissionThe one who loves you hits you. The one who hits you loves you. The one who loves you hurts you.This is a piece about relationships, unfortunately.(We can’t get away from them.)One woman, one chair, one microphone. And a chair opposite her, for you.In an intimate conversation, she lays her cards on the table: talk to her, and she might (really) slap you.Playing on the anticipation of what happens when a theatre audience talks back, this piece threads together live audience encounters with funny and frightening stories of loneliness, domestic violence, authority, gender, and sensuality."a perfect mirror to the hopeless shortcomings of our present social condition." - Theatrestück, on the Zagreb 2016 premiere of Talk to me and I slap you “[Gabriela] has a unique and individual performance quality with a sense of intrigue, mystery and wonder.”Debbi Purtill, UK choreographer “Sze-Wei demonstrated herself as an artist with strong and brave visions.” – Noor Effendy Ibrahim, Artistic Director of the Substation 2010-2015 on Do Gorillas Peel Bananas? by Chan Sze-Wei, 2013 This is an encounter rather than a spectacle. Seated in the round, the audience is a group witness. The performer waits, for you. You are invited to a series of intimate one-to-one conversations in playfulness, dancing, sadness, silence… and a collective journey to confront fear, violence, love and a moment of real human connection.Donation tickets available at https://igg.me/at/t7h4Xtk5Lxc/x/3046203With the support of: National Arts CouncilThe SubstationCreated and premiered in residency at the FAKI Alternative Theatre Festival, Zagreb 2016 Gabriela SeraniGabriela is a dance artist originally from Chile. Her powerfully fluid physicality and charismatic presence have featured in tours with UK companies BalletLORENT, Experiential Dance Company, and Lizzie Klotz Company, as well as the creation of performances with Paolo Mangiola (Italy) and Joanna Kalm (Estonia). Her choreographic collaborations have been presented at the International Festival of Glasgow (with Nerea Gurrutxaga), and at the FAKI festival of alternative theatre in Zagreb (with Chan Sze-Wei). She holds a BA in Contemporary Dance from Trinity Laban Conservatoire (UK), a postgraduate diploma from London Contemporary Dance School, is a graduate of ‘The Dancers’ Course’ by BalletBoyz UK, and will be commencing a Master in Cultural Studies and Arts Management in 2018. A longtime practitioner and teacher of Flying Low/Passing Through dance technique, she is among a select group of artists worldwide directly certified to teach by founder David Zambrano. In 2017 she was the Artistic director of Estudio De Danza Francisca Garcia in Santiago. Chan Sze-WeiSze stepped into a dance class for a university P.E. requirement, and hasn’t stopped dancing since. Since training at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (Best graduate, Diploma in Dance) and the London Contemporary Dance School (MA with Distinction) she has created and performed as an independent artist. Her unique interdisciplinary vision emphasises the intimate and sensorial, connecting the threads of the body with social issues, identity and gender. She blends conceptual, interactive, improvisatory and cross-cultural approaches for theatres, public spaces, video installation and film. Her choreographic work has been shown in Singapore, the UK, Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan, Croatia and Laos, as well as dance film festivals in the USA and Brazil. She has been selected for support by the Substation (Open Call 2013), Dance Nucleus (ELEMENT artist 2017), and FAKI Festival of Alternative Theatre (residency in Zagreb, 2016). She lectures on a part time basis at the LaSalle College of the Arts, and is a passionate advocate for the rights and sustainable careers of dancers in Singapore, and the development of artistic networks and exchange in Southeast Asia.