MORNINGTON Peninsula Shire’s inaugural 11-day arts festival Drift started on Thursday 21 April, with performances continuing until 1 May.

CAROLE Pattulo, one of the artists whose work is included in the Drift festival.

For 11 days Drift is bringing the peninsula’s venues, places and spaces to life with more than 80 works from all disciplines including performance, music, visual arts, public art installations, film and projections, writing, culture and heritage.

With a focus on immersion, participation, creativity and fun, Drift honours the local creative community across the peninsula, while also bringing new talent to the region.

There is even the opportunity to choose a personalised experience by using the Your Drift festival planner: driftartsfestival.com.au/your-drift-a personal festival curation tool to help select and plan exploration of the Drift experience.

The festival is anchored by several curated projects, presented alongside community-led creative activations and events in venues and public spaces across the peninsula.

The festival is part of a performing arts fund, and the mayor Cr Anthony Marsh said the industry had been hit hard by lockdowns and COVID-19 restrictions, with loss of employment and income.

To choose an individual adventure go to: driftartsfestival.com.au/your-drift

SPARK Productions is holding Playground as part of the Drift festival. The “youth arts event” will give 12-28 year olds the chance to work alongside other artists and perform their own works in dance, music and theatre. An improv jam will be open to young musicians and dancers 7-9pm Friday 29 April at Fred Smith Reserve, Hastings. The main Playground event is on Saturday, with works from the “brilliant minds of the next generation”. Gates at the reserve open 6.30pm Saturday 30 April with performances running 7pm-10pm. The event “picnic-style” with food trucks present. Tickets (adults $30, 28 years and under $23 and children under four free, concession $20) at sparkproductions.org.au Picture: Yanni

First published in the Southern Peninsula News – 26 April 2022

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