Symposium stages a family of four bizarre characters; an eccentric aunt, her two washed-up show-girls and their father, Kurt Cobain. As they journey on a boat surrounded by an abyss, scrambling to make sense of what is left after the rhapsodic information rapture. They play with chance, to find new meaning in popular culture references. Symposium is a theatrical experiment applying William Burrows Cut-Up Technique forming an absurd chance-based narrative, using Pop-Art kitschy style to present the intersections of the free-floating contemporary cultural landscape. Symposium speaks to Frederic Jameson's notion of postmodernist nostalgia, [...] the longing to return to a world of darkness that our modern age has lost, where the gap between worlds and things disappears and existence unfolds before us. Symposium absurds society's glossy preoccupation with the past, and its fear of looking forward. When the future screams horror, we must dissect the question of the past for the present & how to make new art for the hypercrowd.
