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Under the radar

  20th February 2005  —  Issue 107 Free entry
Low frequency listings
  • Flame-haired Parisian acrobat Camille Boitel’s first solo show, L’Homme d’Hus, at the ICA from 21st January, could be a highlight of the London international mime festival.
  • Muscular yet silky, Russell Maliphant’s choreography is reliably surprising. He revives Two Times Three, trapping dancers in squares of light, at the Traverse, Edinburgh, on 29th January.
  • Royal Court regular Roy Williams premieres his explosive new play Little Sweet Thing at the Wolsey Theatre, Ipswich, from 4th February, then touring.
  • Filling London’s cavernous new gallery, Albion, is quite a challenge. Andy Goldsworthy, the man who once melted 13 one-ton snowballs in central London, has helicoptered in enough Scottish granite to build an 18-foot-high tower in the space, for his exhibition, Passage, on now.
  • Before Grayson Perry there were Lucie Rie and Hans Coper. Modern Pots, at the Dulwich Picture Gallery, London, from 2nd February, showcases their iconoclastic, influential ceramics.
  • Kay Adshead’s plays manage to be otherworldly while tackling contemporary politics head-on. Her latest, Bites, at the Bush Theatre, London, now, frames the war in Afghanistan in a typically quirky structure: a seven-course meal.

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