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Broken Box Mime Theater Presents DESTINATION EVERYWHERE

By: Mar. 14, 2018
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Broken Box Mime Theater Presents DESTINATION EVERYWHERE  ImageThe Cultural Services of the French Embassy and the French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF) are pleased to announce programming for the third annual Tilt Kids Festival, featuring six premieres of whimsical, thoughtful, and rigorously made works for children across six venues throughout New York City, March 3-18. Described by The New York Times as "French in origin, fantastical in concept, and freewheeling in execution," the festival will engage kids of all ages with the work of renowned artists across multiple disciplines. Many events are free; for ticketed events, please visit www.tiltkidsfestival.org.

Each performance uniquely speaks to how children experience the world, and their need to have a space to enjoy art while simply being kids. By introducing young people to works that are fun and mind-expanding, Tilt Kids Festival helps enrich and build a new generation of cultural audiences.

Known for revolutionizing theater for kids in France and around the world, acclaimed French director Joël Pommerat opens Tilt 2018 with a rare US performance of his most celebrated work, Little Red Riding Hood, adapted from Charles Perrault's classic fairy tale and created for his eight-year-old daughter. Hailed for creating "spellbinding theater" (The Guardian), Pommerat imbues a sense of magic in his storytelling and proves that profound art does not need to be specific to any age.

The first weekend of Tilt also features the New York premieres of Gala, visionary French choreographer Jérôme Bel's newest work bringing together professionals and amateurs of all ages and from all backgrounds, at NYU Skirball Center for the Performing Arts; and Once upon a Forest, the Animal Spring, an interactive exhibition from French-Moroccan artist Yto Barrada and American designer Julie Klear that invites kids to use the power of words to change the world.

The festival's second weekend is devoted to reading, writing, and thinking-familiarizing children with the power of literature, philosophy, and design. It includes three new commissions: Pearls on a Branch, from a new book by Najla Khoury, features a captivating reading from acclaimed actress Yasmine Al Massri (Miral and ABC's hit TV show Quantico) that brings traditional Syrian and Lebanese folk tales to life. Lebanese-Canadian designer Diane Mikhael leads a special Lettering Lab workshop at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, inviting kids to create a visual dialogue between letters from the Arabic and Latin alphabets. And English philosopher Simon Critchley's lauded Philosophy for Kids returns to the Brooklyn Public Library this year with new, inspiring themes, engaging both children and adults in stimulating and approachable thinking and discussions.

For Tilt's last weekend, whose theme is music, New York's Broken Box Theater presents a special Tilt edition of their hit interactive performance Destination: Everywhere, using movement in the French tradition of mime, and a spoken emcee, to bring funny and fantastical tales to life. Amidst all the excitement, kids and grown-ups can also take a moment to relax with a Musical Journey, a Tilt first, led by world-renowned nay and oud virtuoso, Bassam Saba, along with co-founder of the New York Arabic Orchestra, April Centrone. They will transform the ballroom at the Cultural Services of the French Embassy into a hypnotic musical haven, for a unique, spellbinding journey through musical traditions of the Arab world.

Tilt Kids Festival 2018 closes with a bang with Billy Martin and TILT Brass's Stridulations for the Good Luck Feast, an afternoon of interactive musical performances that create a welcoming environment for loudness and play, at Brooklyn's ISSUE Project Room.

Tilt Kids Festival is co-curated by Rima Abdul-Malak, Cultural Attachée of the Cultural Services of the French Embassy; Lili Chopra, Executive Vice President and Artistic Director of the French Institute Alliance Française (FIAF); and Violaine Huisman, writer, translator, and curator.

From the Curators

"Tilt came from the desire to present works created from the relatively new phenomenon of cultural institutions taking work for young audiences seriously," says Lili Chopra, Executive Vice President and Artistic Director at FIAF, and co-curator of Tilt Kids Festival. "With Tilt, we are asking incredible minds and great artists to create an open context for children (and also their parents) in New York, to introduce them to new forms and possibly expand their tastes to different artistic experiences."

"Accessible to children but not designed only for children, the festival has also a natural power to revive child-like curiosity in parents and bring them closer to the wonder of childhood" stated Rima Abdul-Malak, Cultural Attaché at the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, and co-curator of Tilt. "Instilling a deeper awareness of other cultures is at the heart of our mission at the Cultural Services, where we strive to share the wonders of French and Francophone creativity with new U.S. audiences."


Tilt is a New Yorker's festival: multicultural, sophisticated, impertinent! Every project we present this year examines our historical moment through playful and accessible art forms. We hope to expose children to new paradigms through adventurous creations and radical inclusion," adds Violaine Huisman, co-curator of Tilt Kids Festival.

Merci!

Tilt 2018 is made possible by: Air France and Delta, Florence Gould Foundation, FACE Foundation, the French Ministry of Culture, Howard Gilman Foundation, Institut français, Jacadi, La Roche-Posay, Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie, and SACD (Société des Auteurs et Compositeurs Dramatiques).

The festival is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Special thanks to FIAF's 2018 Producer's Circle: Sarah Arison, Michel G. Bernard, L'Arsenal Contemporary New York, Didier Lestienne & Pierre Rouy-Cartier, Marie Nugent-Head, and Elisabeth Wilmers.

Tilt Kids Festival Commission

Yto Barrada & Julie Klear: Once Upon a Forest, the Animal Spring

Saturday, March 3, through Friday, April 6

FIAF Gallery, 22 East 60th Street (between Park and Madison Avenue)

Monday through Friday, 11am-6pm; Saturday, 11am-5pm

Opening Reception Saturday, March 3 from 11am-12pm
Free & open to the public

All ages

In an imaginative new visual art exhibition, French-Moroccan multimedia artist Yto Barrada and American designer and art educator Julie Klear invite kids to create new worlds using colorful art pieces to transform the FIAF Gallery into a moveable visual feast.

Turning buildings into forests, or cities into flowers, kids are encouraged to play, hide, and interact with the animals and landscapes, while changing things up through words, languages, and sounds. By moving pieces around and creating original artwork, the kids will have a unique opportunity to work together and use the power of art and words to change the world!

Animal Spring was originally created as an artful card game in four languages-English, French, Arabic, and Dutch, by the Wiels Museum in Brussels.

Workshops

Protest Animals with Julie Klear

Saturday, March 3 from 2-3pm

FIAF, Tinker Auditorium, 55 East 59th Street (between Park and Madison Avenue)

Kids are invited to create their own animal with the objective to choose an emotion, a protest, and to voice an opinion. Workshop will be led by artist Julie Klear.

Poetry as Protest with Amélie Gaulier

Saturday, March 17 from 1-2pm

FIAF, Tinker Auditorium, 55 East 59th Street (between Park and Madison Avenue)

Kids are encouraged to create their own slogan, protest poster, catchphrase, or mantra. Workshop will be led by teaching artist Amélie Gaulier.

Workshops are free. RSVP at www.tiltkidsfestival.org.

Co-presented with WIELS Contemporary Art Center in Brussels.

About Yto Barrada
Brooklyn-based artist Yto Barrada studied history and political science at the Sorbonne and photography in New York. Her work- including photography, film, sculpture, prints and installations-began by exploring the peculiar situation of her hometown Tangier. Barrada's work has been exhibited at Tate Modern, MoMA, The Met, Renaissance Society, Witte de With, the Walker Art Centre, Whitechapel Gallery (London), and the 2007 and 2011 Venice Biennales. She was the 2011 Deutsche Bank Artist of the Year, the 2013 Robert Gardner Fellow in Photography (Peabody Museum at Harvard University), the 2015 Abraaj Group Art Prize winner and shortlisted for the 2016 Marcel Duchamp Award. Barrada is also the founding director of the Cinémathèque de Tanger.

About Julie Klear
With children as a central theme in her work, Julie Klear is an international art director, product designer, art educator, and children's book illustrator. She was co-founder and creative director of Zid Zid Kids (2003-2016), an award-winning children's brand of handmade toys and accessories distributed in 20+ countries. As an artist-art educator, she has created play spaces and workshops for children in galleries, museums and schools in the US, the Middle East, Europe and in Morocco. Collaborators include The US Embassy, The British Council, Bahrain Ministry for Families, Wiels Museum Belgium, Marrakech Biennale, Cinémathèque du Tangier, Four Seasons Hotel, Royal Mansour Hotel, Selman Hotel, Louis Vuitton, Art Dubai, among others. In 2016, she launched Zid Zid, a new digital venture focused on the first play-based language learning platform for preschoolers.

Joël Pommerat: Little Red Riding Hood

Saturday, March 3 at 12 & 7pm

Festival opening brunch Saturday, March 3 from 11am-12pm

Sunday, March 4 at 12pm

FIAF, Florence Gould Hall, 55 East 59th Street (between Madison & Park)

Tickets: $25 Kids ages 7-10 & Students with ID; $40 FIAF Members; $60 Non-Members

Ages 7 & up

45 minutes

"[Pommerat] is one of the most outstanding and creative directors working today."-The Guardian

Once upon a time, there was a fearless little girl. A workaholic single mother. A homemade flan. And a crafty wolf. With projections, imagination, and a velvety voice, a stoic narrator guides audiences across a dark stage for an unforgettable adventure and a powerful rite of passage.

Visionary French director Joël Pommerat makes Little Red Riding Hood startlingly new in this contemporary staging of the oft-told fairytale. Created by Pommerat to introduce his young daughter to the magic of theater, this production of Little Red Riding Hood revolutionized the way theater is made for kids, in France and around the world. With the aim of speaking truth, he creates wholly original theater that radiates warmth, empathy, and curiosity for audiences of all ages.

Don't miss a rare stateside performance of this landmark production, in French with easy-to-read English subtitles.

The performances at FIAF are part of Joël Pommerat's first U.S. tour, including performances in Los Angeles and New York, and masterclasses taught by the company at Princeton University.

Co-presented with Princeton University. Supported by FACE Contemporary Theater, a program developed by FACE Foundation and the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States with lead funding from the Florence Gould Foundation, Institut français, and the French Ministry of Culture and Communication.

About Joël Pommerat

Joël Pommerat, a self-taught artist and one of the most prominent playwrights and directors in France, is known for developing a new approach to theater by constructing works that are familiar, magical and unforgettable at the same time. He founded the Compagnie Louis Brouillard in 1990 to create theater that combines his two passions - writing and acting.

He has worked extensively at the Théâtre de la Main d'Or in Paris (Le Chemin de Dakar, Le Théâtre, Vingt cinq années, Des suées, Les Evénements) and was able to develop several of his best known pieces and workshops after receiving a grant from CIC bank and the support of the Théâtre de Brétigny and the Théâtre Paris-Villette. In 2007 he was invited by Peter Brook to become artist-in-residence at the Bouffes du Nord Theatre until 2010. He has been associate artist at the National Theatre of Brussels and the Paris Odeon Theatre of Europe. In 2007, Joël Pommerat received the third Grand Prix de Littérature Dramatique for his last play Les Marchands.


Jérôme Bel: Gala (New York Premiere)

Saturday, March 3 at 3pm

NYU Skirball, 566 LaGuardia Place (between Thompson Street and LaGuardia Place)

Tickets: $40

Ages 7 & up

90 minutes

For Gala, a cast of twenty New Yorkers get dressed up in their sequined best to pull together their most enthusiastic moves. In true Jérôme Bel style, ranging from 8 to 80 years old, some performers are professional dancers, while others are dancing on stage for the first time. Through their movement, the gentle humanity of each performer lights up this inspired production.

Jérôme Bel, the "mischievously entertaining" (The Guardian) French choreographer, explores the relationship between choreography and popular culture, dancer and audience, often using humor to break the formality of a theatrical performance. His approachable, playful work asks questions that may also be on kids' minds-what is dance? Who gets to be a dancer?

Co-presented with NYU Skirball Center for the Performing Arts.

About Jérôme Bel

Je?ro?me Bel, the "mischievously entertaining" (The Guardian) Paris-based choreographer, explores the relationship between choreography and popular culture, dancer and audience, often using humor to break the formality of a theater apparatus. Bel's work has often been referred to as conceptual. He questions both art and contemporary dance by deconstructing modes of presentation and the notion of authorship while problematizing the historical prominence of technical virtuosity in dance. Disabled Theater, featuring non-traditional performers (amateurs, people with physical and mental handicaps, children...), was presented in NYC as part of the 2013 Performa Festival. His works have been seen at international contemporary art biennials and museums, including the Tate Modern, MoMA and the Louvre. Bel received a Bessie Award his 2005 work, The Show Must Go On. www.jeromebel.fr

Tilt Kids Festival Commission

Yasmine Al Massri: Pearls on a Branch by Najla Khoury

Saturday, March 10 at 11am

Albertine Bookstore, Cultural Services of the French Embassy, 972 Fifth Avenue (at 79th Street)

Free & open to the public

Ages 5 & up
60 minutes

Award-winning actress Yasmine Al Massri (Miral and ABC's hit TV show Quantico) brings to life traditional Syrian and Lebanese folktales, passed down through generations of women, and collected by Najla Khoury in Pearls on a Branch: Oral Tales.

Khoury originally published these tales in Arabic in 2014, having collected them as she traveled through Lebanon with a theater troupe during the country's civil war from 1975 to 1990.

This special performance celebrates the launch of the book's English edition, which will be published in March 2018 by Archipelago Books, featuring a selection of the most popular tales, translated from Arabic by Inea Bushnaq.

"[T]hese tales are radiant with sunlight and flowers, jinns and spirits, palaces and sultans... the themes will resonate with anyone who loves fairy tales and folklore... An absolute delight for readers young and old."

-Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

Presented in partnership with the Consulate General of Lebanon in New York.

About Najla Khoury

Najla Jraissaty Khoury was born in Beirut. In the 1970s, she taught adult literacy programs and trained pre-school teachers. Her work has been influenced by her experience in education and her interest in folk tales and children's literature. Najla Khoury founded and directed a puppet troupe and has developed several educational toys. In 1997, she helped found the NGO Assabil Libraries, which focuses on establishing public libraries throughout Lebanon.

About Yasmine Al Massri

Yasmine Al Massri is a French-Lebanese actress, contemporary artist, and dancer based in L.A. She studied in Paris at L'École des Beaux Arts. Al Massri's first big break as an actress was in the award-winning Lebanese film Caramel, written and directed by Nadine Labaki. At the 2007 Cannes Film Festival it generated tremendous critical acclaim and went on to be the most successful Arab film to date. Yasmine is a multi-talented artist, with a gift for learning languages - besides speaking perfect English, French, Arabic, and Spanish, she learned an entirely new language for her role in Ayrouwen. Touareg is a language spoken only by the indigenous people of the Sub-Saharan Africa.

Tilt Kids Festival Commission

Diane Mikhael: Lettering Lab: Exploring with Arabic and Latin Letterforms

Saturday, March 10, at 11am & 1:30pm
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, 2 East 91st Street (between Fifth & Madison Avenue)

Free & open to the public

Ages 5-12
90-minute sessions

As part of the Cooper Hewitt series Design Kids, Lebanese-Canadian designer and professor Diane Mikhael will lead a special workshop commissioned by the festival.

Kids will explore and compare the visual forms and dimensions of Arabic and Latin letters. Creating a visual dialogue between letters from the two different alphabets, they can uncover the relationships between different shapes.

Co-presented with Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum as part of their series Design Kids. Design Kids is made possible by the generous support of Target, Siegel Family Endowment, and Great Circle Foundation.

About Diane Mikhael

Diane Mikhael is an associate professor, designer, curator and co-founder of the Middle East Design Educators Association (MEDEA). She holds a certificate from the International Society of Typographic Designers (ISTD) and has served as an assessor in London and the Middle East. Diane has been a design educator for more than 22 years, teaching as a full-time faculty in the Graphic Design department at Virginia Commonwealth University Qatar (2008-2015) and at Notre Dame University in Lebanon (1996-2008). She is currently lives in Toronto and is teaching at the design department of various universities. Focused on cross-cultural engagements, her research is an amalgam of theoretical and pragmatic examinations around the thematic path of Design and Culture, and design for social change. She is the author of the book Bilingualism in Visual Communication: The Visible Forms and Meaning in Arabic and Latin Typography.

Tilt Kids Festival Commission

Simon Critchley & Guests: Philosophy for Kids

Sunday, March 11, 2-4pm
Brooklyn Public Library, Central Branch, 10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn

Free & open to the public

Ages 6-12
30-minute sessions

For the third consecutive edition of Tilt Kids Festival, philosopher Simon Critchley, moderator of The New York Times philosophy column "The Stone" and celebrated author of The Book of Dead Philosophers, will lead Philosophy for Kids workshops at the Brooklyn Public Library.

Critchley and his guests will engage the youngest of intellectuals in an exploration of some of the philosophical themes that impact their lives in interactive discussion groups. This year, parents can also participate. In a concurrent seminar, they will be invited to discuss issues at the intersection of philosophy and parenting.

Simon Critchley is a Hans Jonas Professor at the New School for Social Research. His books include Very Little...Almost Nothing, Infinitely Demanding, The Book of Dead Philosophers, The Faith of the Faithless, The Mattering of Matter, Bowie, Memory Theatre, and Notes on Suicide.

Co-presented with the Brooklyn Public Library.

About Simon Critchley

Simon Critchley is a Hans Jonas Professor at the New School for Social Research. His books include Very Little... Almost Nothing, Infinitely Demanding, The Book of Dead Philosophers, The Faith of the Faithless, The Mattering of Matter, Bowie, Memory Theatre, and Notes on Suicide. Simon is moderator of "The Stone," a philosophy column in The New York Times, to which he is a frequent contributor.

Tilt Kids Festival Commission

Bassam Saba & Guests from the NY Arabic Orchestra: Musical Journey (World Premiere)

Friday, March 16 at 5:30pm

Cultural Services of the French Embassy, 972 Fifth Avenue (at 79th Street)

Free & open to the public

Ages 4 & up
60 minutes

World-renowned educator, composer, and virtuoso oud and nay player Bassam Saba teams up with April Centrone and members of the New York Arabic Orchestra to transform the Cultural Services of the French Embassy's ballroom into a musical haven.

Reclining in a cozy nest of cushions, pillows, and twinkling lights, kids and grown-ups are invited to breathe deep, sit back, and embark on a meditative journey through the musical traditions of the Arab world.

Founded in 2007 by Bassam Saba, the New York Arabic Orchestra is a professional music ensemble and year-round training program in Arabic music. Its mission is the preservation and promotion of classical Arabic music through concerts, new compositions, and education. In the workshops, children are introduced to Arabic instruments such as the nay, oud, qanun, and Arabic percussion through engaging, interactive sessions inspiring curiosity, creativity, meditation, and expression.

Presented in partnership with the Consulate General of Lebanon in New York.

About Bassam Saba

Bassam Saba of Lebanon is a world-renowned virtuoso, multi-instrumentalist, and leading figure of Arabic music. Saba studied nay, oud and violin at the Lebanon National Conservatory and Western Classical Music and Flute Performance in Paris and Moscow. He has toured extensively with Fairouz, as well as Marcel Khalife, Simon Shaheen and Ziad Rahbani. He has collaborated with classical and pop stars such as Yo-Yo Ma, Sting, Alicia Keys and Santana, and jazz icons such as Herbie Hancock and Quincy Jones. Saba, a highly sought-after teacher of Arabic music, co-founded and directs the New York Arabic Orchestra.

About April Centrone

April Centrone is the co-founder and lead percussionist of the New York Arabic Orchestra (2007), an organization specializing in the performance, education, and preservation of Arabic music. Centrone has t




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