The Push & the Pull

2022. Participatory durational event

The Push & the Pull was a new site-specific work by Ben Judd, for Whitstable Biennale 2022. Created in partnership with local community groups the new work developed themes of belonging and not belonging, engagement and estrangement. Over five days an historic Thames sailing barge travelled between Whitstable and the Isle of Sheppey in Kent, acting as a creative space and site for experimentation and in the process exploring ideas around community and islands, both real and imaginary.

This new work considered the river as a channel of communication that connects communities; within this context the boat embodied conflicting ideas of separateness and togetherness. The boat-as-island suggested an isolated utopian project where narratives can be invented, reused and recycled within a relatively closed society.

Judd’s performance took place on the boat as it travelled between Whitstable and Sheppey, embodying a fictional lost community of the island. He also worked with several local community groups to develop responses to Sheppey and the locality, including: songs by Oast House Community Choir; prose and poems by a group of local writers; a dramatic performance by Big Fish Arts; and an instrumental composition with local musicians.

There were daily performances of Judd’s The Push and the Pull on the boat; six passengers could join its journey. These were bookended by further performances on the boat by the community groups both before departure and after it arrived at its destination.

Judd worked with 121 Collective to co-design and build a structure that was attached to the deck of the boat and also extended below deck. The design was based on local research on the Isle of Sheppey including the historic use of boats to house people and the subsequent use of boat materials to build housing on land.

The Push & the Pull

2022. Participatory durational event

Co-commissioned by Ideas Test and Whitstable Biennale
Supported by Ideas Test, Arts Council England and Nottingham Trent University
Composer: Apostolis Psihramis
Choreographer: Dionysios Tsaftaridis
Costume design
Jo Cope
Costume design: BA
Design for Theatre and Screen, University of the Creative Arts: Ruth Paton, Anna Davies, Katie Bishop, Emily Buchan, Katie Vann, Isobel Shuttleworth
Exhibition design: 121 Collective
Magic lantern:
Jeremy Brooker
Writers: Sarah Tait, Clair Meyrick
Performers: Lauren Case, Ioanna Georgopoulou, Dionysios Tsaftaridis, Dominic Simpson, Angeliki Potamianou
121 Collective: Salah Krichen, Madoka Ellis, Francesca Merton, Yasir Ibrahim
Photography:
Sofia Nasif, Shannon Cole and Ben Judd
Video:
Tom Line
Project management
MSc Project Management for Creative Practitioners, Kingston University, London: Lande Pratt, Vicky McGookin, Priyal Mittal, Tanya Swanepoel, Charlotte Elcock, Yuen Zhou, Feiyun Peng, Maria Avramidou
Big Fish Arts: Chris Reed, Jo Eden
Fiato Ensemble: Helen and Shannon Bridger-Smart, Oscar Cole, Charlotte Friday, Thomas Friday, Andy Friday 
Rumour Writers: Jo Eden, Clair Meyrick. Sarah Tait, Linda Brinklow
Oast House Community Choir: Bob Carling and choir
Thames Sailing Barge:
Tiller & Wheel