Difference between revisions of "Infecting the City"

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Described as a "provocative, site-specific, public art intervention that resonates with and challenges people to connect with each other and the City, through art", it is planned and executed with the specific intention of being sited and staged in the public domain, and is free and accessible to the public. It provides an opportunity to bring high quality, thought-provoking art, music, dance and performance out of theatres and galleries and into the streets and public areas of Cape Town’s Central Business District (CBD).
 
Described as a "provocative, site-specific, public art intervention that resonates with and challenges people to connect with each other and the City, through art", it is planned and executed with the specific intention of being sited and staged in the public domain, and is free and accessible to the public. It provides an opportunity to bring high quality, thought-provoking art, music, dance and performance out of theatres and galleries and into the streets and public areas of Cape Town’s Central Business District (CBD).
  
It can also display elements of [[Guerilla Theatre]].  
+
It can also display elements of '''[[Guerilla Theatre]]'''.  
  
 
This is undertaken in partnership by the [[Africa Centre]] and the [[Institute for Creative Arts]]
 
This is undertaken in partnership by the [[Africa Centre]] and the [[Institute for Creative Arts]]

Latest revision as of 11:46, 10 June 2024

Infecting the City (ITC) is an annual avant-garde public art festival in Cape Town.

The festival

Described as a "provocative, site-specific, public art intervention that resonates with and challenges people to connect with each other and the City, through art", it is planned and executed with the specific intention of being sited and staged in the public domain, and is free and accessible to the public. It provides an opportunity to bring high quality, thought-provoking art, music, dance and performance out of theatres and galleries and into the streets and public areas of Cape Town’s Central Business District (CBD).

It can also display elements of Guerilla Theatre.

This is undertaken in partnership by the Africa Centre and the Institute for Creative Arts

Sources

www@infectingthecity.com