Arcadia Spectacular
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Arcadia Spectacular, known colloquially as "Arcadia", are a performance art collective that combine elements of sculpture, architecture, recycling, pyrotechnics, lighting, circus and music into large scale performance and dance spaces. Best known for their 50-tonne "Spider", they rework ex military machinery and industrial components into installations and 360 degree arenas, following a transformational and environmental ethos.


History

Arcadia was founded by Pip Rush (who previously worked alongside his brother, artist Joe Rush, at the
Mutoid Waste Company The Mutoid Waste Company are a performance arts group founded in London, England by Joe Rush and Robin Cooke in collaboration with Alan P Scott and Joshua Bowler. It started in the early 1980s, emerging from Frestonia's 'Car Breaker Gallery'. The ...
) and Bert Cole, formerly master of the world's largest tent, the Valhalla. Their first collaboration, the Afterburner, debuted at the Glastonbury Festival in 2007 after being built in a cowshed. Subsequent years saw the Afterburner's refinement until 2010 when three Customs and Excise scanning units were attached as "legs". This first incarnation of the "Spider" led to two more years of adjustments until they became separate installations in permanent form. Arcadia's installations are built from recycled materials and military equipment. Arcadia have developed a series of mechanical landscapes and performance-based shows between 2007 and the present, collaborated with New Zealander Carlos van Camp to form the Lords of Lightning and built the mobile Bug Stage which appeared at the closing ceremony of the 2012 Paralympics. In 2014, Arcadia were given a permanent area at the Glastonbury Festival and Arcadia perform with the Spider in Bangkok, Thailand. The Afterburner traveled to New Zealand for New Year's Eve at the
Rhythm & Vines Rhythm and Vines (commonly known as R&V, RnV or Rhythm) is an annual music festival held at Waiohika Estate vineyard, northwest of Gisborne, New Zealand. The festival began in 2003 and was held for the one day of New Year's Eve until 2008 wh ...
festival before travelling to
Miami Miami ( ), officially the City of Miami, known as "the 305", "The Magic City", and "Gateway to the Americas", is a coastal metropolis and the county seat of Miami-Dade County in South Florida, United States. With a population of 442,241 at ...
's
Ultra Music Festival Ultra Music Festival (UMF) is an annual outdoor electronic music festival that takes place during March in Miami, Florida, United States. The festival was founded in 1999 by Russell Faibisch and Alex Omes. It was first held on Miami Beach, ...
in March 2015 as part of its new "Resistance" area. In September 2015, Arcadia performed to 24,000 people over two nights in Bristol's Queen Square. This event that also celebrated Bristol's year as European Green Capital featured the world's first pyrotechnic flame system run entirely on recycled biofuel. In March 2016, Arcadia returned to Ultra's Resistance area with the Spider, and autumn 2016 saw city shows in Seoul, Taipei and Perth where they collaborated with the
Noongar The Noongar (, also spelt Noongah, Nyungar , Nyoongar, Nyoongah, Nyungah, Nyugah, and Yunga ) are Aboriginal Australian peoples who live in the south-west corner of Western Australia, from Geraldton on the west coast to Esperance on the so ...
people of Western Australia. In 2018, they registered an Instagram account, and successfully obtained the deletion of another user account of the same name which had been registered since 2010. In 2019, Arcadia launched Pangea at the Glastonbury Festival, a new area centered around a re-purposed 140 ton dock crane previously installed at Avonmouth port in Bristol. The crane's ultimate purpose is the development of a new hemispherical stage concept to 'take over the sky' above audiences.


Areas and performances

Pangea Pangea is a 360 degree hemispherical stage that will evolve over five years at the Glastonbury Festival with a re-purposed 140 tonne dock crane at its heart The Spider The Spider is a 360 degree structure built from recycled materials. Its 'legs' are Customs and Excise scanning units, its 'eyes' are spy plane engines, its 'claws' are log grabbers, its 'body' is built from helicopter tails and its DJ booth from jet engine blades. The DJ booth is suspended above the dancefloor. The Spider has several built in flame cannons, able to shoot 50 foot flames and is rigged across its 'body' with lights and lasers. Its 'arms' fire jets of CO2, it is often given a 'skin' by video mapping and it is surrounded by a 360 degree 'soundfield' of PA speakers, often in a circle designated by flaming Victorian lampposts. Metamorphosis Show The Metamorphosis Show is anchored in themes of transformation and incorporated both into the architecture of the Spider and across the arena with podiums in the midst of the crowd and a ring of external towers. The show features aerial performances, 7 meter mini spiders on zip wires above the crowd, lighting played as a musical instrument, new LED mapping technology, pyrotechnics, hydraulics, robotics, engineering and video mapping to tell a story of metamorphosis. The Afterburner The Afterburner is a 360 degree structure built from recycled materials. Its central focus is a flaming spire with multi level, radial platforms extending to a 360 degree inward facing sound system. The Bug The Bug is a 6 wheeled, amphibious stage built from submarine moulds and an Alvis Stalwart. Lords of Lightning A collaboration with New Zealander Carlos van Camp, a specialist in Tesla electricity. The Lords of Lightning features two performance artists atop podiums containing Tesla coils that generate 4 million volts of electricity. The new Metamorphosis show has seen an evolution of the technology synchronise lightning bolts to musical notes. Flaming Lampposts A series of Victorian style lampposts entwined with recycled vehicle exhausts that give a treelike appearance. The lampposts are rigged with flame canons that emit jets of fire which are often synchronized with musical beats.


References

{{reflist, 3


External links


Arcadia Spectacular website
Performance artist collectives