
The Blue Description Project
John Hansard Gallery
Age suitable for:
- 16+ only
Accessibility alert:
- Enclosed spaces
- Darkened spaces
- Hearing loop available
- BSL Interpreter
- Live captioning on screen
Free
In 1993, Derek Jarman released Blue, an epoch-defining account of AIDS, illness, and the experience of disability in a culture of repressive heteronormativity and compulsory able-bodiedness.
Though often referred to as a feature film, Blue never existed exclusively in one medium. It was screened in theatres, simulcast on television and radio, released as a CD, and published as a book, creating opportunities for many different kinds of sensory abilities-visual, aural, and textual-to experience the work.
Conceived by artists and writers Christopher Robert Jones, Liza Sylvestre, and Sarah Hayden, The Blue Description Project (2024) creates a new, elastic and experimental iteration of Blue on the 30th anniversary of its release and Jarman's death. Reflecting Blue's standing as a foundational work of Crip* art, the project challenges ableist hierarchies in art while focusing on the generative possibilities of difference and interdependence.
The Blue Description Project builds on the multifaceted nature of Jarman's work through newly commissioned and expansive accessibility.
Access
The film screening will have creative captions and audio description that is edited into the main soundtrack of the film, and also captioned. It will also be British Sign Language (BSL) interpreted. The discussion afterwards will be live-captioned and BSL-interpreted.
Though often referred to as a feature film, Blue never existed exclusively in one medium. It was screened in theatres, simulcast on television and radio, released as a CD, and published as a book, creating opportunities for many different kinds of sensory abilities-visual, aural, and textual-to experience the work.
Conceived by artists and writers Christopher Robert Jones, Liza Sylvestre, and Sarah Hayden, The Blue Description Project (2024) creates a new, elastic and experimental iteration of Blue on the 30th anniversary of its release and Jarman's death. Reflecting Blue's standing as a foundational work of Crip* art, the project challenges ableist hierarchies in art while focusing on the generative possibilities of difference and interdependence.
The Blue Description Project builds on the multifaceted nature of Jarman's work through newly commissioned and expansive accessibility.
Access
The film screening will have creative captions and audio description that is edited into the main soundtrack of the film, and also captioned. It will also be British Sign Language (BSL) interpreted. The discussion afterwards will be live-captioned and BSL-interpreted.
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