10 Questions for Brighton Festival CEO Andrew Comben

10 QUESTIONS Brighton Festival CEO Andrew Comben talks art forgery, politics and the highlights of this year's programme

Helmsman talks art forgery, politics and the highlights of this year's programme

The Brighton Festival begins in May. Since 2014 theartsdesk has had a media partnership with this lively, multi-faceted event which takes place over three weeks. This year the Guest Director is the Malian musician Rokia Traoré, who inhabits a position previously filled by cultural figures such as Brian Eno, David Shrigley, Kate Tempest, Anish Kapoor and Vanessa Redgrave.

10 Questions for Candice Edmunds of Theatre Company Vox Motus

The Glasgow-based artistic director talks theatre with a difference

“When we graduated we were seeing lot of theatre as a literary form,” explains Candice Edmunds of the theatre company Vox Motus, “But we were really excited by it as a visual form and everything we make, from our earliest scratch pieces up to Flight, has really been an experimentation into how much we can substitute dialogue and the written word for theatrical visuals.”

Brighton Festival 2019 launches with Guest Director Rokia Traoré

BRIGHTON FESTIVAL LAUNCHES WITH GUEST DIRECTOR ROKIA TRAORÉ South-coast's arts extravaganza reveals its 2019 line-up

The south-coast's arts extravaganza reveals its 2019 line-up

The striking cover for the Brighton Festival 2019 programme shouts out loud who this year’s Guest Director is. Silhouetted in flowers, in stunning artwork by Simon Prades, is the unmistakeable profile of Malian musician Rokia Traoré.

Malcolm Middleton, Brighton Festival review - mordant brilliance

★★★★ MALCOLM MIDDLETON, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL Mordant brilliance

Rare gig from the Scottish singer-songwriter is stark but mesmeric

Before starting this review a decision was taken: that the over-used description of singer-songwriter Malcolm Middleton as a “Scottish miserablist” would not appear. However, this has proved impossible. Middleton is renowned, to the coterie who enjoy his music, for songs ripe with dejection but the first half of his set tonight is especially heavy with stark soul-searching.

The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety, Brighton Festival review - molto nervoso

Calixto Bieito's melange of text and music delivers a mesmerising riff on desolation

Calixto Bieito has a reputation as a radical theatre-maker, and by any standards The String Quartet’s Guide to Sex and Anxiety is an unusual, genre-breaking piece; Bieito has described it as “like a symphonic poem for a quartet of musicians, and a quartet of voices”.

David Shrigley talk, Brighton Festival review - comedic stroll through a career in art

★★★★ DAVID SHRIGLEY TALK, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL Comedic stroll through a career in art

High speed PowerPoint entertainment from the kingpin of oddball cartoons

As the Brighton Festival 2018 draws towards its closing weekend, its Guest Director, the artist David Shrigley, has committed to an illustrated talk about his work that “will contain numerous rambling anecdotes but not be in the slightest bit boring”. In the programme, he claims to have promised this signed in his own blood. Such drastic assurance proves unnecessary.

A Change is Gonna Come, Brighton Festival review - lively, winning jazz adventure

★★★★ A CHANGE IS GONNA COME, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL Lively, winning jazz adventure

Reimagined civil rights protest songs make for a musically rich evening

Watching this band in action is a treat. They gel absolutely and play off one another in a manner that’s easy and mellow, yet also sparks by occasionally teetering on the edge of their virtuosic abilities. The songs played throughout the evening at Brighton Festival are protest classics and other socially aware fare, but the group’s leader-arrangers, singer Carleen Anderson and keyboard player Nikki Yeoh, have turned them, via jazz, into almost completely new pieces of music.

Bridget Christie, Brighton Festival review - politics through a domestic lens

★★★★ BRIDGET CHRISTIE, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL Politics through a domestic lens

Brexit and its fallout still an obsession

Bridget Christie tells us at the top of the show that she is a heterosexual, able-bodied, privileged white female – so why is she feeling so discontented? As she explains with great verbal dexterity in What Now?, it is living in a post-EU referendum world that has made her feel so discombobulated; left and right have no meaning any more, and – like so many British voters – she doesn’t know where her political home is.

The World Of Moominvalley, Brighton Festival review - a fascinating insight into the world of Tove Jansson

Author Philip Ardagh shares his extensive knowledge in an engaging and charismatic talk

It was no matter that journalist Daniel Hahn dropped out ill at the 11th hour of this "audience with" event. Author Philip Ardagh's deep knowledge and unflappable demeanour comfortably carried the hour-long talk about the inhabitants of Moominvalley. We heard detail of characters, themes, metaphors, changes from books to the TV cartoons and detail of Tove Jansson and her family, who wrote the original books.

Robbie Thomson XFRMR, Brighton Festival review - lightning strikes out

Tesla electricty-based show doesn't engage as it might in other circumstances

The welcome to Glasgow audio-visual artist Robbie Thomson’s performance engenders a hefty sense of anticipation. It’s almost nervousness-inducing as we’re handed ear-plugs and warned about how very loud it’s going to be. Then, walking into the main hall from the bar, all is gloom. From 1849, for a century-and-a-half, this venue was a church and attached school, its claim to fame a dismissive mention in Jane Eyre. But this evening the stained glass windows are blacked out, blocking the evening sun.