The planets will align this spring for Fusebox Festival’s 20th anniversary. Yes, technically, our moon will align to block the sun over Austin on April 8 for a total eclipse. Still, Texas’s preeminent multidisciplinary performing arts festival couldn’t have asked for a more wondrous cosmic performance as opening act for a 20 year celebration.
In fact, the last time Austin lay in the path of totality was in 1397, before there was an Austin or a Texas, so Berry says they knew they wanted to add eclipse programming to this special Fusebox anniversary. They decided to open the Festival a few days early and partner with several local organizations to help produce two outdoor events.
The festival opens Sunday, April 7, at Waterloo Park with The Universe in Verse, created and hosted by Maria Popova. Billed as a celebration of science and wonder of reality, the event will feature stories of science and poetry readings from poets, cosmologists and musicians such as Joan as Police Woman and David Byrne. The next day, the Long Center will host an eclipse viewing party. NPR’s Radiolab will record a special episode of their show. The party will include music by Austin composer Graham Reynolds, who will also debut his new album later in the festival, and visual storytelling from writers Roxane Gay and Debbie Millman.
The Festival will take a break on Tuesday before presenting five more days of programming featuring local, national and international alumni artists of past festivals, as well as new faces.
“We definitely liked the idea of featuring some artists from our 20 year history and bringing them back with new projects. We also wanted to make sure there were new artists that folks in Austin had not gotten to experience.”
Several of the artists in this year’s festival are also part of Fusebox Presents, Fusebox’s new year-round performance series produced in partnership with Texas Performing Arts. Fusebox announced the series last year, while giving notice that the festival would move to a biennial schedule after 2024.
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Tania El Khoury, Cultural Exchange Rate; Photo by Judith Buss.
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Abby Z and the New Utility in Radioactive Practice. Photo by Ben McKeow.
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Sam Green in 32 Sounds. Photo by Catalina Kulzar.
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The Illustrious Blacks at Fusebox Hub. Photo by Ismael Quintanilla.
This scheduling means that Fusebox Presents and the Fusebox Festival will overlap for four distinct projects including an interactive immersive art installation by Tania El Khoury about family, borders and crossings; a genre-bending dance performance from Abby Z and the New Utility (choreographer Abby Zbikowski with dancers Fiona Lundie and Jennifer Meckley); and Sam Green’s 32 Sounds, an immersive documentary that will include live narration and music. The fourth Presents/Festival project will be playwright and UT professor Lisa B. Thompson’s The Black Feminist Guide to the Human Body, a performance piece that explores her research into Black women’s health disparities.
Another past partner, the Contemporary Austin will host a special exhibition surveying 20 years of Fusebox Festivals. While looking back through their festival archives for the project, Berry says they’ve noticed four “key pillars” or thematic threads that many of the performance art and projects seem to explore: hybridity, ritual, the human body and site, as in art created for a specific space inside or outside.
Berry says many of the works this year also connect to those concepts with an added theme of nature.
Australian Justin Shoulder’s Anito performance will likely be one of the big projects that merges hybridity and the body in the festival. Berry is particularly excited about the piece as it was supposed to make its U.S debut in 2020 when COVID forced them to pivot to a digital festival with only a few weeks’ notice.
“[Shoulder] draws on different queer mythologies to create these otherworldly creatures, using prosthetics and costumes so you don’t even know what you’re looking at,” describes Berry on the need to see the performance live.
Several of the Fusebox Presents series projects also focus on the body and use hybrid mediums.
Singer and composer Dorian Wood’s 12 hour long Canto de Todes will likely touch upon many of those Fusebox core themes. Part pre-recorded immersive installation, part live concert of chamber pieces influenced by folk, popular and experimental music, Berry says this will only be the third time the complete work has been produced live.
As we ended our talk, I asked Berry if he could go back in time and tell his 20 years younger self all about Fusebox 2024, what would most surprise him.
“I’m just surprised that we’re still doing this,” he laughs. “We didn’t know we were going to do this twice, much less 20 times.”
But getting a bit more contemplative, he says the fact that Fusebox could be his job and where that job would take him is a surprise.
“The global network that we have built and connected with over the past 20 years is in some ways one of the most special things to me. And that we’ve built relationships with and learned from and partnered with festivals, artists, art centers and cultural ministries all over the world, that part has been particularly exciting and rewarding.”
“There’s this strange, wonderful, interesting community of people that are making strange, wonderful, interesting live performances, that I didn’t know about, all over the world. It’s hard to hear about them unless you’re traveling around the world because so much of this work is live and designed to be experienced in the room. This work is pretty intimate, and I love that about it.”
—TARRA GAINES