Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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As bright white features fell from the sky during Womadelaide 2018, few could have predicted they would continue to turn up in cars, houses, gardens, backpacks and laundry baskets for months to come.

The duck feathers had been dropped nightly from 60 metres above Adelaide’s Botanic Park during Gratte Ceil’s Place des Angels aerial ballet, creating a veritable snowdome effect for tens of thousands of revellers.

In five days’ time, those feathers will be finding their way into nooks and crannies across the city once again as the act returns for the world music, art and dance festival from Friday.

Gratte Ciel director Stéphane Girard said the production involved 32 artists and technicians, including outdoor sports artists, climbers, speleologists, paragliders, dancers, circus artists, and “acrobats in love with height and the great outdoors”.

“They appear in the sky at 60 metres high, between the trees and the stars,” Girard said.

“They seem far away, expressing themselves in another dimension, but over the course of the show, they will come and breathe the sweetness of this special night into the hollow of your shoulders.

“Maybe you will end up dancing with an angel under a famous feather storm.”

Company used to headlines

Some would consider the feathers infamous with many revellers in 2018 complaining they had an allergic or asthmatic response to the feathers, and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) condemning the acrobatic spectacular for using animal products.

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Pre-empting another onslaught of media questions and headlines, the festival’s organisers have included an online fact sheet about the feathers, most of which reiterated responses given by director Ian Scobie in 2018.

It pointed out that 2018 had been an “extraordinarily dry and particularly hot and dusty year in Botanic Park, made worse by the failure of the park irrigation system some weeks out from the event”.

A pall of dust could be readily seen hanging in the air, with much of the grass in high-traffic areas already browned off by the first full day.

Festival organisers said it made for “challenging conditions particularly for those with respiratory concerns”.

It added that the irrigation system had been upgraded this year and watering systems were in place “to manage dust issues at the event as far as possible”, although it warned the park could become dusty regardless as the four-day event progressed, depending on weather conditions.

Any concerns this year had not been reflected in ticket sales, with Saturday — headlined by Florence + the Machine — having sold out some time ago, along with all four-day and three-day passes.

People mill about at a festival with dust hanging in the air.
2018 was a particularly dusty year at Womadelaide.(Supplied)

Girard said the company was accustomed to “headlining the news” worldwide with its “monumental zipline” act.

“It touches a mass of spectators and does not leave them indifferent,” he said.

“When creating such positive emotions we sometimes disturb a small number of people.

“This is OK by us and each one is entitled to their own views.”

PETA questions feather supply

Last last year, PETA urged the company to modify this year’s act so it did not use animal products and said Womadelaide’s claim that the feathers were sourced “ethically” and in line with animal welfare regulations from sites that “humanely farm the birds for the production of meat” could not be guaranteed.



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