Silo Theatre today made the unprecedented move to announce that it would be spending most of 2023 developing three new works, rather than focussing on presenting live, in-person, performances.
The theatre company cited the need to survive in a post-pandemic world with smaller audience numbers, rising prices, diminishing government support and loss of key industry talent – all of which means creating new local work is a priority. Over nine months Silo will develop these works, all “wildly different in their ideology, scale and approaches to storytelling”.
The artists leading these developments include Anapela Polatai’ivao, Stacey Leilua, Leon Radojkovic, and Freya Finch. “This climate has demanded that we look closely at the impact we want to make in the future,” said Silo artistic director Sophie Roberts. “Returning to business as usual feels not only boring in this context but also dangerous. Risk and experimentation excite us, and this might be our riskiest move to date – we need to make time and space for new ways of thinking, leading and art making.”
She also noted that this will be the most significant investment in artistic development in the company’s history and that this will futureproof its artistic success and financial security over the medium term.
After this reset, Silo aims to have these works in the repertoire, ready to present multiple seasons both nationally and internationally, from Spring 2023.