Clod Ensemble is a multi-award winning [1] [2] performance company and registered charity [3] based in London, UK. Founded in 1995 by director Suzy Willson and composer Paul Clark, the company creates performances, workshops and other events in the UK and internationally.
Each production has a unique visual identity and distinctive musical score, ranging from acoustic work to multi-speaker installations. Performances take place in theatre spaces, festivals, galleries and public spaces [4] including Sadler's Wells, [5] Tate Modern's Turbine Hall, Serralves Museum Porto and Public Theatre New York. Their work explores the relationship of music and movement, bodies and spaces. Performances sometimes draw on medical themes and the complex relationship we have with our bodies and the medical profession.
Selected performances include Silver Swan, [6] featuring a choir of seven unaccompanied singers, Under Glass, where performers are contained within glass cases, from a jam jar to a test tube; An Anatomie in Four Quarters [7] in which the audience cut a path through the auditorium of a large theatre; MUST, a collaboration with New York performance artist Peggy Shaw; [8] and Red Ladies, [9] in which a chorus of identically dressed women transform, celebrate and interrupt the familiar streets of a city.
They run a programme of education and participation projects in schools, higher education institutions and NHS Trusts. Their award-winning [10] [11] Performing Medicine project delivers courses, workshops and events which draw on techniques and ideas in the arts to provide training to medical students and healthcare professionals. [12] Performing Medicine was cited an example of best practice in the 2017 report from the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Arts, Health and Wellbeing. [13]
They are recipient of a Sustaining Excellence Grant from Wellcome Trust [14] and are an Arts Council England National Portfolio Organisation. [15]
Direction and Choreography by Suzy Willson. Music by Paul Clark.
Title | First Performance | Revivals | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Feast During the Plague | 1995, Battersea Arts Centre, London | |||
Musical Scenes | 1995, Battersea Arts Centre, London | 1996, Battersea Arts Centre, London. HaDivadlo Theater, Brno-střed, Czech Republic. | ||
Metamorphoses | 1996, Battersea Arts Centre, London | UK Tour including Oxford Playhouse. | Text by Peter Oswald. | |
The Overcoat | 1998, Battersea Arts Centre, London | UK Tour | Referenced in: Drawing attention to the significant: exploring the functions of music in The Overcoat (1998) by Millie Taylor [16] | |
Silver Swan | 1999, Battersea Arts Centre, London | Victoria & Albert Museum, London (2002). McEwan Hall, Edinburgh (2005). The Linbury Studio, Royal Opera House. Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, London (2012). | Based on two 17th Century songs by William Lawes and John Smith. Referenced in: An Inventory of Falling by Suzy Willson [17] | |
Lady Grey | 1999, Purcell Room, Southbank Centre, London [18] | |||
It's a Small House and We Lived in it Always | 1999, Purcell Room, Southbank Centre, London | International Touring Double Bill Double Agency with Miss Risqué, including La Mama Experimental Theatre Club, [19] New York (2002). | A collaboration with Split Britches. | |
Miss Risqué | 2001, Nuffield Theatre, Lancaster University | International Touring (see above) | A collaboration with Split Britches. | |
For One Night Only | 2002, Battersea Arts Centre, London | A selection of short pieces including Wrestling, Trapeze and Egg&Spoon. | ||
Kiss My Echo | 2002, Battersea Arts Centre, London | |||
Greed | 2003, Battersea Arts Centre, London | UK and international tour including Bristol Old Vic | ||
Red Ladies | 2005, Trafalgar Square, London as part of British Architecture Week (outdoor interventions). 2006, Hackney Empire (Theatrical Demonstration). | UK and international revivals 2005 – 2015 including: Hastings in association with Coastal Currents Arts Festival (2015). Margate in association with Turner Contemporary and Margate Theatre Royal (2014). Porto and at the Serralves Museum, Portugal. (2008). Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2008). Warwick Arts Centre (2006). | Text by Peter Oswald. Referenced in: Red Ladies: Who are they and What do they Want? by Suzy Willson and Helen Eastman. [20] | |
Must | 2007, Wellcome Collection, London | UK and international tour, including Public Theater, New York as part of Under the Radar Festival | Written by Peggy Shaw & Suzy Willson. Performed by Peggy Shaw. Referenced in: A Menopausal Gentleman: The Solo Performances of Peggy Shaw by Jill Dolan [21] and Queering the Temporality of Cancer Survivorship and Jackie Stacey & Mary Bryson. [22] | |
Under Glass | 2009, Sadler's Wells - off-site at Village Underground, London | UK and international tour 2009 – 2019 | Village Text by Alice Oswald. Winner of Total Theatre Award for Visual Theatre 2009. Referenced in: The Pain of Specimenhood by Gianna Bouchard. [23] | |
An Anatomie in Four Quarters | 2009, Sadler's Wells, London | Wales Millennium Centre, Cardiff (2013) | Referenced in: Clod Ensemble: Performing Medicine by Suzy Willson. [24] | |
Zero | 2013, Sadler's Wells, London | UK Tour (2013) | ||
The Red Chair | 2015, Live at LICA, Lancaster | England tour (2015) Scotland tour (2017) | Written and performed by Sarah Cameron. Published by Methuen Publishing. | |
Snow | 2018, Kings Place, London as part of Noh Reimagined Festival | Text by Suzy Willson & Peggy Shaw. | ||
Placebo | 2018, The Lowry, Salford [25] | UK Tour (2018) including The Place, London | Including My Lonely Lungs monologue written with Peggy Shaw. Design by Art School. | |
On The High Road | 2019, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank Centre, London | UK Tour (2019) | Including Madam Wu monologue written with Peggy Shaw. | |
This is My Room | 2021, The Rose Lipman Building, Hackney, London | Musical contributions by Manchester Collective and Damsel Elysium. | ||
The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady | 2023, Shoreditch Town Hall, London | Collaboration with Nu Civilisation Orchestra. Original music by Charles Mingus. |
Title | First Performance | Revivals | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Pierrot Lunaire | 1998, Battersea Arts Centre, London | 1999, Battersea Arts Centre, London | Music by Arnold Schoenberg. Translation by Alice Oswald. |
Songs for the Dead | 2000, Battersea Arts Centre, London | 2001, Battersea Arts Centre, London | Including music by Purcell, Schnittke, Paul Clark, Elliot Carter and Ligeti. |
Swing Night | 2006, Battersea Town Hall, London | 2012, Stoke Newington Town Hall as part of London Creativity and Wellbeing Week | With Gordon Campbell Big Band |
The Music Man is a musical with book, music, and lyrics by Meredith Willson, based on a story by Willson and Franklin Lacey. The plot concerns con man Harold Hill, who poses as a boys' band organizer and leader and sells band instruments and uniforms to naïve Midwestern townsfolk, promising to train the members of the new band. Harold is no musician, however, and plans to skip town without giving any music lessons. Prim librarian and piano teacher Marian sees through him, but when Harold helps her younger brother overcome his lisp and social awkwardness, Marian begins to fall in love with him. He risks being caught to win her heart.
The Juilliard School is a private performing arts conservatory in New York City. Founded by Frank Damrosch as the Institute of Musical Art in 1905, the school later added dance and drama programs and became the Juilliard School, named after its principal benefactor Augustus D. Juilliard.
Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, often referred to simply as LaGuardia or "LaG", is a public high school specializing in teaching visual arts and performing arts, located near Lincoln Center in the Lincoln Square neighborhood of the Upper West Side in Manhattan, New York City. Located at 100 Amsterdam Avenue between West 64th and 65th Streets, the school is operated by the New York City Department of Education, and resulted from the merger of the High School of Music & Art and the School of Performing Arts. The school has a dual mission of arts and academics, preparing students for a career in the arts or conservatory study as well as a pursuit of higher education.
The Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts (WAAPA) at Edith Cowan University (ECU) is a performing arts school in Perth, Western Australia. Established in 1980, it is notable for being the most comprehensive performing arts school in Australia by disciplines of study and has produced some of Australia's most prominent graduates in the field.
Idyllwild Arts Foundation encompasses two institutions in Idyllwild, California for training in the arts: Idyllwild Arts Academy (IAA) and the Idyllwild Arts Summer Program. The institution was formerly known as Idyllwild School of Music and the Arts (ISOMATA).
Gecko is a British based international touring physical theatre company, founded in 2001, led by Artistic Director Amit Lahav.
The School of Music, Theatre, and Dance is the undergraduate and graduate school for the performing arts of the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States.
There has been a folk festival in the coastal town of Sidmouth in South West England in the first week of August every year since 1955, attracting tens of thousands of visitors to over 700 diverse events.
The BRIT School is a British performing and creative arts school located in Selhurst, Croydon, England, with a mandate to provide education and vocational training for the performing arts, music, music technology, theatre, musical theatre, dance, applied theatre, production arts and the creative arts film and media production, interactive digital design, visual arts and design. Selective in its intake but free to attend, the school is notable for its celebrity alumni.
The Presbyterian Ladies' College, is an independent, day and boarding school predominantly for girls, situated in Peppermint Grove, a western suburb of Perth, Western Australia.
Dance in Singapore has been an integral part of its culture despite having a relatively short history of creative, artistic and professional dance. The range of dance reflects the cultural diversity of Singapore, from traditional dance forms to contemporary genres.
Scottish Ensemble is a professional string orchestra based in Glasgow, Scotland and led by Artistic Director and violinist Jonathan Morton.
Hong Kong Arts Centre is a non-profit arts institution and art museum established in 1977. It promotes contemporary performing arts, visual arts, film and video arts. It also provides arts education. Its rival is the government-managed Hong Kong Museum of Art. These two museums are considered to be the top two art museums in Hong Kong that dictate the discourse of art in Hong Kong.
Ashley Glazebrook and Glen Murphy, better known by their stage name Twist and Pulse, are an English street dance duo based in London. They were the runners-up of the fourth series of Britain's Got Talent in 2010, coming second to Spelbound in the live final, but later won the spinoff show Britain's Got Talent: The Champions in 2019, becoming the Champion of Champions.
The National Youth Music Theatre (NYMT) is an arts organisation in the United Kingdom providing pre-professional education and musical theatre stage experience for young people. Based in London, it is constituted as a private limited company and as a registered charity. NYMT was founded in 1976 by director and playwright Jeremy James Taylor. Since its inception, it has produced over fifty productions at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, premièred thirty new musical theatre works, toured several times outside the United Kingdom, and had runs in the West End and on Broadway. Amongst the many alumni of the National Youth Music Theatre who have gone on to careers in the performing arts are actors Idris Elba and Jude Law, both of whom are also patrons of the organisation, along with Jonny Lee Miller, Dylan Strazar, Sheridan Smith, Connie Fisher, and Matt Lucas. Alumni have also included directors such as Jo Davies, and songwriters such as Tara Mcdonald.
Nighat Chaudhry is a Kathak classical dancer who was born on 24 February 1959, in Lahore, Pakistan. She moved to London with her parents when she was one year old. She studied ballet and contemporary dance; but when she was 14, she met Nahid Siddiqui, one of the greatest Kathak dancers, and began training with her. Inspired to learn the classical forms of her own culture, she abandoned ballet. In order to understand and absorb the nuances of the Indian style, she wished to be closer to its origins; and she moved back to Pakistan. She eventually became a trained Sufi & Mystique Kathak classical dancer and has been active as a professional Kathak dancer for over three decades.
Suzy Willson is a British director and choreographer. Willson is co-artistic director of London-based performance company Clod Ensemble.
Ensemble Español Spanish Dance Theater is an American Spanish-dance company in residence at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago. The Ensemble Español consists of the professional dance company, touring nationally and internationally throughout the year, as well as the youth company. The Ensemble Español provides arts education programming to students across Chicago, runs community outreach programs/workshops, offers college level dance courses at Northeastern Illinois University, and produces the annual American Spanish Dance and Music Festival.
Paul Clark is a composer based in London.