Content Warnings
A Relaxed Screening of this programme will take place simultaneously at Berwick Town Hall Council Chamber.
Queer Care Caravan residents Conal McStravick, Cannach MacBride and Mikiki will be staging interventions and engaging in discussion as part of this event.
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The Queer Care programme is curated and facilitated by LGBTQIA+ artists Cannach MacBride, Conal McStravck, and Mikki who have worked with queer and trans media and community care resources with cooperation from from Lothian Health Services Archive, Edinburgh, Tyne and Wear Archives and UK trans mutual aid groups and transnational LGBTQIA support groups, past and present.
Cannach MacBride (they/them s an artist working with performance, installation, writing, video, and event making – with and without institutions. Their practice focuses on relational entanglements, listening across—and being attentive to—difference, and working creatively towards an ethics of inseparability and interdependency. They are currently doing PhD research into listening as pluralistic creative practice, and they have also worked in the care industry.
Conal McStravick (they/them) is a queer, non-binary artist, writer, curator and educator born in Ireland and based in Glasgow, Scotland. This project at BFMAF continues McStravick’s doctoral research project “Learning in a fantastically public medium”: Stuart Marshall and Sound, Video and Television as Art and Activist media, 1968-1993, with events, exhibitions and publishing on Marshall and his context, between 2022-2026.
Mikiki (they/them) is a queer video and performance artist from Newfoundland whose work has been presented across Canada through self-produced interventions, artist-run centres, and public galleries. Alongside their artistic practice, they have worked in sexual health education since the early 2000s. Their varied roles—including sexuality educator in Calgary public schools, bathhouse attendant in Saskatoon, and drag queen karaoke host in St. John’s—inform their work in gay men’s health. Mikiki has also worked as a sexual health outreach worker in Ottawa, HIV educator in Montreal, and Poz Prevention Coordinator at the Toronto People With AIDS Foundation, and now leads a harm reduction outreach and HIV testing programme at a community health centre.
Q-LoXXX
Developed through collaboration with queer Latinx asylum seekers and migrants connected to Papaya Kuir, this project blends Latin American decolonial and cannibalistic discourses with aspects of queer resistance practice and theory. Through role play, fabulation, writing and collage, participants collectively imagined Q-LoXXX—a speculative utopia shaped by queer ghosts—whilst handmade scenography and props gave form to a transformative space for world-making and documentation.
All Good Medicine
Two West Coast Women, Cease Nahanee Wyss and Jo Spaxman, discuss a range of North American herbs, and their uses in treating common ailments. Interwoven into this self-help style video is a legend about the creation sacred healing herbs.