Mixtape of the Dead & Gone #1’- Egwu Onwu Ahamefula
by Nkeiruka Oruche + Gbedu Town Radio
Every track must come to an end, but you don’t have to...
If your final journey is to the land of ancestors, what would you leave behind? What would you take with you?
When Ahamefula is faced with these questions, posed by #7, a Messenger on ‘Onye Ozi’ Ancestor app, sent to collect them, their first instinct is to run, until #7 offers Ahamefula a chance not to be forgotten. Afro Urban Society & CounterPulse present ‘Mixtape of the Dead & Gone #1’, a shit-just-got-real Afro-Urban dance-theater performance exploring the limits of stunting and reality, vibes and inshallah, legacy, heartbreak, and acceptance.
Thursday – Saturday June 2-4 & 9-11, 2022
8PM
CounterPulse: 80 Turk St, San Francisco
Get tickets now at CounterPulse.org/edge2022
Tickets: $20-35 Sliding Scale
Thursdays are pay-what-you-can at the door days. Feel free to reserve a $0 ticket online and pay any amount with cash or card at the door.
This performance will have Audio Description on one evening and and ASL Interpretation on one evening, dates coming soon!
‘Mixtape of the Dead & Gone #1’, is presented by Afro Urban Society and Counterpulse as part of @Counterpulse's ARC Edge, an incubation residency and commissioning program for contemporary choreographers whose work is deeply curious about the intersection of art practice and social change. By eliminating boundaries between disciplines, between artists and audience, and between communities, Edge produces innovative performance works with transformational potential.
egwu ọnwụ Ahamefula is the first stage in the ‘Egwu Onwu: Mixtape for the Dead’ (MDG) series as part of the ‘Obi gbawara’m//My Heart Shattered or What happens after I die?’ (OGB) project. Created and facilitated by multimedium cultural artist and producer Nkeiruka Oruche, OGB is a multimedia performance, & cultural reclamation project reactivating the practice of death and grief performance from the Igbo Ọdịnanị & Ọmenala tradition. Drawing from pre-colonial Igbo traditional forms, as a point of departure, MDG will recreate & reimagine grief songs, dances, and poems remixed with Pan Afro-urban forms to explore the questions How do we hold pain, grief & joy for ourselves & as a community? How do we define & self-determine our liberatory practices? And how do we remember who we are in societies designed to make us forget?
MDG/OGB is created through the methodologies of first-hand living, reading, oral narrative, immersive travel, interviews, apprenticeship, and community gatherings. The project involves bringing together Indigenous Igbo and other Diaspora Black folks: everyday people, artists, cultural practitioners, community organizers, and scholars based in the Bay Area as well as back in Ala Igbo (Igbo land), and other parts of the diaspora.
The full project will materialize as a multi-faceted series of ceremonies, visual installations, multimedia performances, workshops & interactive sessions, and an experimental docu-dance film.
OGB is made possible by the City of Oakland; Alliance for California Traditional Arts through the Sankofa Initiative of the San Francisco Arts Commission; the New England Foundation for the Arts' National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; The East Bay Community Foundation East Bay Fund for Artists; California Arts Council, CA$H | Theatre, a grants program of Theatre Bay Area
To learn more about the project visit nkeirukaoruche.com/ogb