New Yorker Robin Frohard was so shocked to find a mummy in his shopping plastic, so he was forced to act.
Key points:
- The Adelaide Festival takes place early next year
- This includes the “shop” with products made from plastic bags
- Its premiere in New York was delayed by a corona virus infection
She found a shop assistant bag and double bag of groceries in a town in her hometown.
“It felt so ridiculous to me,” he recalled.
This is the look of The Plastic Pack Store, one of the highlights of the 2021 Adelaide Festival program.
In the “Shop” will be set Former Harris Scarf Department Store at Randall Mall during the festival, Which runs from February 26 to March 14.
Its products are similar to everyday products – Pots of ice cream, mixed salads and fruit and vegetables – Except they are all made of plastic bags.
There are cardboard boxes like pizzas and orange plastic bag juice that offer “hot melti bags in your mouth in minutes” and they “lovingly offer you only the finest orange plastic bags from Florida”.
Play that connects together
Creating the show, which included a film and store guided tour, came with its own plays.
It is set to open in Manhattan’s Times Square earlier this year, before the COVID-19 crisis hits big time and privately affects the Brooklyn-based artist.
“My boyfriend owned it, and two of my collaborators owned it,” Frohard said.
“Our show was supposed to open in March and of course we closed three days ago,” he admitted.
It eventually reopened, playing to a strictly restricted audience.
Now she and five others are preparing to fly to Adelaide in February, where they will undergo mandatory two-week isolation before setting up a plastic bag store.
The United States is ahead of Australia in terms of plastics
Frohard was impressed by the gains Australia has made in reducing the use of plastic bags.
“I think you were able to pass Additional law relating to single-use plastics.
“I think we can better understand the issues with single-use packaging; I think it will take some time. [in America]. ”
Coming from a background in theater and puppetry, Frohard has in recent years focused only on garbage and waste.
She worries about where the world is going.
“I get frustrated, I do, maybe this is my coping mechanism, try to tell an interesting story and make people laugh in a new way to think about things – to think about these things that can sometimes feel too much, you think it’s kind of blocking them out and confronting them , “He said.
As American corona virus cases continue to rise Back in the bunker in New York, Frohard is looking forward to blocking his career and coming to Australia.
“There is no theater, no show, no crowd, no events,” he explained.
“It’s definitely a challenge for artists now.”
Not all of the trash used in The Plastic Pack Store is locally sourced – it was found on the streets and in bins in New York.
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