Volxfest (Folk Fest)

The Art & Power of Celebration

Volxfest to join in, dance along, play along, sing along, listen, parades, musical tram rides, performances, dance performances, open dancing and singing… in addition, workshops and regulars’ tables take place in the run-up to the festival.

Subject to change
Volkxfest
© Franzi Kreis
Contributors

Simon Mayer, art in motion (Artistic Director)
Irene Egger, Österreichisches Volksliedwerk (Head of Production and Artistic Research)
Farah Deen, Simon Mayer, Markus Prieth, Patric Redl, Hannah Shakti-Bühler, Mario* Sinnhofer, Irma-Maria Troy, Hannah Wimmer (artistic team)
in co-operation with: AltBadSeer Musi, Banda Adriatica, D’Attergauer Volkstanzgruppe und Lederhosengirls, D’Vöcklataler, Heimat- und Trachtenverein Alt-Gmunden, Grundlseer Geigenmusi, Viechtauermusikanten, Heimatverein Viechtau, Hip Hop Community Skgt, Oberösterreichisches und Steirisches Volksliedwerk, Salzkammerqueer, Volkstanzgruppe Altaussee, Volxfestler*innen, Volxfestorchester
Johannes Starmühler, Lisa Anetsmann, Ilona Eggl, Felix Gfällner (production)
Jeroen Smith and Lukas Froschauer (technology and sound)
Karoline Wibmer (project support)
Johannes Klocker, Teresa Distelberger (documentation)
Institute for European Ethnology at the University of Vienna (ethnographic support)

Lisa Neuhuber (programme management, culture of remembrance)

When
from Mai 2024

About the project

VOLXFEST invites its guests to experience their own relationship to local, national and global roots. As a project that celebrates the coexistence and interplay between contemporary experimental art (contemporary dance, performance, new music) and traditional forms of expression, Volxfest would like to make the idea of homeland tangible and able to be experienced from different perspectives. It is a three-part festival that creates a mosaic of multiple belongings using music, dance, traditional costumes and customs. Through the art and craft of “celebrating”, Volxfest opens up a new culture of togetherness.

The projects sees itself as a multilayered participatory project consisting of multiple modules (research, pre-events, Volxfest, post-events) and components of the Volxfest (pop ups, exhibitions, dialogues, regulars’ tables, parties, performances, workshops). A team of 8-10 artists will create a three-party celebration (Volxfest) together with people in the communities of the European Capital of Culture region (cultural and traditional associations, informal initiatives, music and dance groups, schools) under the titles EindidrahnAufdrahnand Außidrahn.

Themes:

  • Celebrating, dance, music and customs in an annual cycle
  • Traditional costumes, dialekts, oral tradition
  • Generations
  • Diversity (beliefs, displacement, disappropriation)
  • Equality between the genders
  • Folk art, comfort and spirituality