Sunday, 19 December 2010
Saturday, 16 October 2010
Documentation from Emergency Festival
Thanks to Jordan Ahmadzadeh for this video of 'Twice Cooked'
and thanks to Margaret Sharrow for her comments
and thanks to Margaret Sharrow for her comments
Twice Cooked, Holly Bodmer performing at emergency 2010 from Jordan Ahmadzadeh on Vimeo
Friday, 24 September 2010
performing in manchester
If you are in Manchester or are Manchester bound on October 1st and 2nd then please come along to Emergency at the Greenroom!
There are over 40 performances happening over the weekend. I am performing Twice Cooked on Saturday 2nd at 15:30 in the IABF Cafe.
'Twice Cooked' is about the complex ways in which we give and receive nourishment. It explores the notions of hosting, forcing, surviving and the fine line between caring and over-sugaring. Expect a broad knowledge of biscuit brands, mouth to mouth resuscitation, the quintessentially english tradition of talking to a plant and the more unusual practice of digesting a shoe.
For further details check out the website www.emergencymcr.posterous.com
groovy!
There are over 40 performances happening over the weekend. I am performing Twice Cooked on Saturday 2nd at 15:30 in the IABF Cafe.
'Twice Cooked' is about the complex ways in which we give and receive nourishment. It explores the notions of hosting, forcing, surviving and the fine line between caring and over-sugaring. Expect a broad knowledge of biscuit brands, mouth to mouth resuscitation, the quintessentially english tradition of talking to a plant and the more unusual practice of digesting a shoe.
For further details check out the website www.emergencymcr.posterous.com
groovy!
Monday, 30 August 2010
now that's what we call live art

Would Be Nice Though
a new performance by Dot Howard and Holly Bodmer
at the Norwich Arts Centre on Saturday 4th September
repeated every hour between 1pm till 3.30pm
Would be nice though is about those 20 minutes before that interview. Two candidates undergo the physical effects of anxiety whilst providing an intensely self-deprecating commentary.
a new performance by Dot Howard and Holly Bodmer
at the Norwich Arts Centre on Saturday 4th September
repeated every hour between 1pm till 3.30pm
Would be nice though is about those 20 minutes before that interview. Two candidates undergo the physical effects of anxiety whilst providing an intensely self-deprecating commentary.
Part of Other/Other/Other's 'now that's what we call live art' contribution to the Norwich Arts Centre's AFTERLIVE event. See www.norwichartscentre.co.uk/afterlive-launch-event for more details
Wednesday, 28 July 2010
Eating my Shoe
An ode to Charlie Chaplin... a few weeks ago I ate my shoe at the Norwich Arts Centre Cafe. This was the public premiere of my new performance 'Twice Cooked'.
Twice Cooked is about the complex and ritualistic means in which we partake in eating, and how we give and receive nourishment. The piece was inspired by experiences working within care, and the kinds of food related conversations and procedures I observed. In Twice Cooked, I am exploring the notions of hosting, forcing, surviving, and a fine line between caring and over-sugaring.
Twice Cooked was part of a programme of site-specific works by other/other/other artists on Saturday 3rd July's Live Art Event. Locating our works in every nook and cranny of the Norwich Arts Centre, the audience found themselves making use of the building in alternative and unusual means. We had a good audience number and I have to say they ventured into every kind of participating activity with enthusiasm. The only drunk and disorderly came from a strange and shadowy figure in the corner of the bar...the elusive, unbilled and deceased 'Jimmy Stewart' who once lived in Norwich (aka performance artist extraudinaire Rebecca Wigmore)
As usual, for more information follow this link: http://www.otherotherother.wordpress.com/
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
My first Exhibit!


I have much blogging catching-up to do! Above is a picture of my first bit of 'something on a wall' without a live presence. The opportunity to make something to be left in the space came from Pea and Pea Collaborations who curated the Falling/ Fooling installation at the Fringe Arts Bath Festival (May 2010). This work was exhibited throughout the two weeks of the installation, alongside the other artists pieces and my performance of Private Joke.
Pictured is a cd player that plays genuine sound footage of a music exam recorded around 1998 at my secondary school in Cambridge. It plays a long, excruciating and shambolic music practice; on an instrument that is hard to define. There are two distinct voices, one of pupil and one of teacher and their exchange is at times more embarassing then the music itself. The tape came accidentally into my hands when I wanted to record something and asked my teacher for a blank tape. Years later I put the tape into a player and curiosity led me to fast forward. This piece takes up a good 14 minutes, which I have cut down to 12 by taking out the 'candidate name and number' in order to protect their anonymity. The tape was a big inspiration for my performance piece 'Private Joke' which features a lot of failing as well as the humble determination in such situations when 'the performance must go on'...
Above the pictured cd player is some hand-drawn notation to accompany the soundtrack. Drawn in black ink are various kinds of falling figures and downward scales as well as some jolly italic instructions. Viewers must follow the pattern of the notation as they listen to the music stumbling on.
Wednesday, 26 May 2010
Private Joke at 'Falling/ Fooling' an exhibition at FAB Festival

A performer alone in the performance space (with a microphone and a few minimal props) begins to expose an intimate and private joke. At the core of the joke is the recalling of an incident - an accidental and (un)fortunately public incident – when she fell over.
Private Joke is a solo performance that contemplates the notion of falling. It is a predominantly vocal piece that weaves itself around both physical and metaphorical appropriations of falling. These are presented in the manner of subtle slapstick, bringing attention to the similarity between the words fall, fail and fool; and pursued in a performance that presents its own flaws, jokes, stumbles, mispronunciations and digressions from the point.
Private Joke is a solo performance that contemplates the notion of falling. It is a predominantly vocal piece that weaves itself around both physical and metaphorical appropriations of falling. These are presented in the manner of subtle slapstick, bringing attention to the similarity between the words fall, fail and fool; and pursued in a performance that presents its own flaws, jokes, stumbles, mispronunciations and digressions from the point.
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