Catch it while you can! Resistance nears the end of its tour.
The award-winning international touring exhibition by artist-activist Liz Crow, 'Resistance: which way the future?' takes as its starting point the Nazi programme of mass-murder which targeted disabled people and became the blueprint for the larger holocaust. What turned doctors and nurses into killers? What stopped ordinary people from speaking out? And what does this history mean for all of us today?
Over ten years in the making, the exhibition recently returned from its run at Washington DCʼs Kennedy Center, where a visitor wrote “One of the most powerful things I have ever experienced. I was so amazed by it, I went back to see it twice more.”
The opening drama follows the story of Elise, a patient who sweeps the institution in which she lives. She watches buses full of patients leave and return empty. When her turn comes, she knows what’s in store. Based on real events, this is the story of one woman’s resistance in the only way she could.
Director Liz Crow says “This is an episode of history that is virtually hidden, yet the values that underpinned it still echo through disabled people’s lives today. We can’t change history, but we can learn how to influence the future. The events of the holocaust came to an end because ordinary people resisted. I want audiences to feel inspired to get involved, be effective and find the courage to be a part of change. Resistance deals in a difficult subject but is infused with a sense of possibility.”
Resistance at Bristol’s M Shed: 5 January to 5 February
Open Tuesdays to Friday 10.00am to 5.00pm (closed Mondays).
Saturdays and Sundays 10.00am to 6.00pm.
Run time 30 minutes.
With BSL interpretation, captions, and audio description
Suitable for individuals and groups aged 11+ to adult, and particularly relevant to schools and colleges. To book a group visit, please contact [log in to unmask]
More information at www.roaring-girl.com/productions/resistance-on-tour/.
Next venue – and the last venue of this tour: Manchester’s Zion Arts Centre 10 February to 3 March.
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