Bryony Kimmings

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Bryony Kimmings
Born (1981-03-30) 30 March 1981 (age 41)
NationalityBritish
Alma materBrunel University
Known forPerformance art

Bryony Kimmings (born 30 March 1981) is a British live artist based in London and Cambridgeshire. She is an associate artist of the Soho Theatre, [1] and, in 2016, was commissioned to write The Pacifist's Guide to the War on Cancer for Complicite Associates. [2]

Contents

She creates multi-platform art works to provoke change. [3] Her work centres mostly around "social experiments", [4] which in the past have included the artist retracing an STI to its source, [5] spending seven days in a controlled environment in a constant state of intoxication [6] and becoming a pop star invented by a nine-year-old. [7]

She has performed at the Soho Theatre, London, [8] Kimmings' work has toured across the world including: The Southbank Centre, London, [9] BAC Grandhall, [10] Antifest (Finland), [11] Culturgest (Portugal), [12] Fusebox Festival (Texas), [13] Melbourne International Comedy Festival (Australia), [14] and Lisinski Operahouse (Croatia). [15]

Early career

Kimmings graduated with a degree in Modern Drama from Brunel University in 2003. [16] In a 2011 interview she said of her time at Brunel: "It was Live Art and the history of performance artists that excited me the most", and so immediately afterwards she established the company 'Glass Eyed' with friends. 'Glass Eyed' created work for two years before being dissolved. [17]

In 2006 she began Celebrityville a soap cabaret following the lives of forgotten celebrities living in a fictional town. A new episode was created every month between 2006 and 2008. Describing working on Celebrityville Kimmings said "this gave me a baptism of fire really, making such a large volume of work, learning about how to run a night, what to do if things broke half way through, making costumes, doing marketing - everything." [17] When Celebrityville ended, Kimmings began to explore a solo live art career with autobiographical themes. [17]

Shows

Performance work

As playwright

As screenwriter

Approach

Known primarily for creating autobiographical work, Kimmings achieved notoriety with her 2010 piece Sex Idiot. [99] In it, she revealed her sexual and her romantic history after discovering she had contracted an STI and told of the quest to find out which of her former partners had given it on to her. [5] [100] She toured this show until 2015. In her 2011 piece 7 Day Drunk Kimmings collaborated with a team of scientists to analyse the impact of alcohol on her creativity. [6] [101]

In an interview in March 2011, speaking of the drivers behind her work Kimmings said: "I guess in a way it is an artist's duty to say and explore the things that are untouchable, or hard to talk about." [17]

In a 2012 interview for Pulse Fringe Festival, Kimmings introduces herself as "an artist who makes autobiographical work" she continues to say her work "always follows a kind of autobiographical experiment that I go on." [102] Her profile on the British Council of Drama and Dance website says: "Bryony works autobiographically and begins the development of her work with a social experiment. She is inspired by the taboos and anomalies of British culture and her work promotes the airing of her own dirty laundry to oil conversations on seemingly difficult subjects." [103]

Personal life

Kimmings was born in Huntingdon [104] and grew up in St Ives, Cambridgeshire, attending St Ivo School. [105] She has an older sister, whose then 9-year-old daughter inspired her to develop her 2013 show Credible Likeable Superstar Role Model. [105]

In November 2015, Kimmings gave birth to her son Frank. The boy's father was her fiancé at the time, Tim Grayburn. Frank was diagnosed with West Syndrome, a form of epilepsy, soon after he was born. [106] In her 2018 show I'm a Phoenix, Bitch, Kimmings processed how she experienced post-natal depression, had a severely ill infant and went through a break-up all in one year. [106] [107]

Awards

Sex Idiot

Fake it ‘til you Make it

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