Category: news

  • Margate tour tickets on sale

    E. coli’s Margate Promenade Performance tickets are here!

    E. coli has been spending a lot of time in Margate recently and local residents are getting sick of her. She has a reputation for being toxic. But is she misunderstood? Join us for an unforgettable walking tour and performance along Margate’s coast as we hear E. coli’s side of the story. 

    Photos by James McCauley, photographer for the Royal College of Art

    Thursday 21 & Friday 22 August E.coli is brought to slimy life by multi-award nominated writer and performer Laura Wyatt O’Keeffe (soho theatre, round house, latitude festival) in microbial drag. The tour is a queer, joyful exploration of Margate’s relationship with microorganisms, provoking new perspectives on the sewage crisis and our relationship with non-human life.

    (more…)
  • ECO-DRAG: a Flow.Walk.Drag. x @shellygrotto takeover

    To celebrate Margate Pride, Flow.Walk.Drag has co-curated a pop-up exhibition at Margate’s Crab Museum – ECO-DRAG.

    Come learn about local drag performances that take on environmental issues, namely Southern Water’s persistent sewage spills. Learn about the impact on public health and the characteristics of one notorious bacteria that comes to town with heavy rain and sewage overflows: E. coli.

    Margate’s ornate, subterranean queen Shelly Grotto has previously embodied Southern Water and the Ocean to raise awareness of corporate sewage pollution. Shelly explores why drag eco-activism is so powerful and offers her top-tips for drag eco-activism.

    The exhibition is open 11-5 until Sunday 10th August.

    And at 4pm on the final day, come and join a speed-dating event with E. coli. You can win a spot to go on a date with this notorious, mysterious, misunderstood bacteria. Sign up to win a slot here!

  • Cholera Walking Tour skinny

    What Happens When a Deadly Disease Gets a Drag Makeover and Takes Over the Streets of Liverpool?

    Cholera Walking Tour is an Infectious Blend of Drag, Science and Environmental Justice. Prepare for an outbreak of a different kind, as Liverpool’s streets will be contaminated with creativity as drag artist Auntie Climax embodies Cholera herself, leading audiences through the city’s hidden waterways and forgotten histories in the most provocative walking tour that will ever take over your body and imagination.

    “We’re not just performing history,” explains Liverpool Hope University Senior Lecturer Annalaura Alifuoco. “We’re diagnosing present-day symptoms of environmental injustice and offering a different kind of treatment – one that centres collective wellbeing, communal knowledge and joyful resistance.”

    (more…)
  • Liverpool Tour Tickets On Sale

    We’re super excited to release the first tickets for our Liverpool cholera walking tour! Led by drag artist Auntie Climax as Cholera, join us to explore a microbial perspective of the city.

    July Friday 25/ Saturday 26/ Sunday 27

    Evening Tours : 6pm – 7:30pm. Get your tickets here!

    Saturday Morning Tour : 10am – 11:30. Get your ticket here!

    An interactive, playful and informative tour using ritual, storytelling and scientific research, the tour will last approximately 1.5hours, travelling between Liverpool Cathedral and Granby Four Streets, with regular stops at points of intrigue between.
    Co-created in collaboration with Toxteth L8 residents, members of Liverpool’s queer community, local historians, microbiologists and Granby Winter Garden.

    (more…)
  • Celebrating Science and Self-Expression: The fourth LGBTQ+ networking event at the Microbiology Society’s Annual Conference

    Guest post by our microbiologist collaborator Rebee Penrice-Randal

    June is Pride Month; a month that celebrates and honours those within the LGBTQIA+ community and recognises their ongoing fight for equal rights and acceptance. During this year’s Annual Conference, held in Liverpool, UK, the Microbiology Society’s member-led group, Queer in Microbiology, hosted their fourth LGBTQ+ Networking Event, in collaboration with the collective artists group, Flow.Walk.Drag. Champion, Rebee Penrice-Randal, reflects on their experience at the event and the importance of such events in ensuring microbiology is inclusive and accessible to all.

    As Pride Month arrives, we reflect on our fourth LGBTQ+ Networking Event at this year’s Annual Conference in Liverpool; a space where identity, inclusion and scientific curiosity intersect. Over the years, this event has grown into a vital part of Conference; providing a welcoming environment for LGBTQIA+ scientists and allies to connect, share experiences, and explore the ways diversity enriches our field. The group have previously published their experiences of running an inclusive event at conferences.

    Event organisers

    Organisers of the LGBTQ+ Networking Event

    (more…)