Manchester International Festival programme to include inflatable sculptures, coin treasure hunt, and work from Juan Mata and Maxine Peake

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Manchester International Festival has revealed the programme for its 2023 event, which will take place in venues and spaces across the city.

For the first time, visitors will also be able to see an event taking place inside the ground-breaking new £210m Factory International theatre and arts venue, ahead of its official opening in October.

The warehouse-style space will be filled by psychedelic inflatable sculptures, designed by Yayoi Kusama, with her exhibition You, Me and the Balloons making a centrepiece for MIF23.

This year’s festival is set to run between 29 June and 16 July, showcasing original new work from artists across the globe.

Dance, music, theatre and art pieces will come from the likes of Maxine Peake, Janelle Monáe, and even footballer Juan Mata.

MIF’s much-loved Festival Square will be back in 2023 too, this time in a new riverside location outside Factory International, which will host free live sets from over 100 live bands and DJs plus a variety of food and drink.

Other venues used for MIF23 will include John Rylands Library, Mayfield Park, and the National Football Museum, plus cultural spaces like HOME, the Whitworth, and Contact theatre.

One of the headline events will be The Find, a city-wide treasure hunt for collective coin artworks by Ryan Gander, with hundreds of thousands of coins hidden on park benches, walls, steps, in food courts and libraries, tucked away in parking ticket machines or between tram seats.

MIF legend Maxine Peake will be back, working with Sarah Frankcom and Imogen Knight to adapt They, Kay Dick’s dystopian masterpiece, with a live, afterhours performance inside the iconic John Rylands Library.

The new Mayfield Park, and the banks of the River Medlock, will be used to host Each Tiny Drop on 29 June, where audiences will be invited to ‘collect water specially transported from the Soan River in Pakistan and steward it into the River Medlock in a celebration of the life source we so often take for granted’.

Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Janelle Monáe will take on a three-day residency, plus other musical additions to the MIF23 programme will be performances from Angélique Kidjo, Alison Goldfrapp, and revered Sufi singer Sanam Marvi; the premiere of a new show from John Grant and the Richard Hawley band celebrating pop and country legend Patsy Cline; a world premiere by John Luther Adams inspired by arctic landscapes performed by the BBC Philharmonic; and a night of dance and music from dance company L-E-V curated by record label Young.

Those who can’t attend MIF23 in person can take advantage of more livestreams and behind-the-scenes broadcasts, plus the world premiere of a new film by artist and director Jenn Nkiru, and a programme of talks from Guardian Live that will take place in person and online.

Factory International. Image by OMA 24

Greater Manchester residents have been getting stuck in to the festival again – you’ll find locals performing on Festival Square, and volunteering across the Festival, with locally-produced works including youth-led performances, exhibitions surrounding mental health as part of Balmy Army, to a futuristic and interactive journey through Manchester by Blast Theory and Manchester Street Poem led by those most marginalised in the city.

Alongside the artists presenting new work at MIF23, a group of international artists will take up residency in communities in Greater Manchester to soak up the Festival and plan projects for the future, including El Conde de Torrefiel, The Nest Collective, Shilpa Gupta and FAFSWAG.

Artistic Director and Chief Executive, Factory International & Manchester International Festival John McGrath says: “From the radical and agenda setting to the purest of celebrations, MIF23’s programme covers a huge range of art forms and styles – from a ritual on the banks of a newly uncovered river, to mixed reality from one of Japan’s greatest composers, from a hunt for artworks across the city to a residency from one of American music’s most vibrant superstars.

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“A genuine melting pot of creativity where artists share their ideas with each other and the public, the Festival will once again take the temperature of our times, and imagine possibilities for the future.

“As always MIF is rooted in its home – in the spaces and places of Greater Manchester. So at the same time as we take up residency in our flagship new venue with our centrepiece exhibition of Yayoi Kusama’s incredible inflatable sculptures, the Festival will extend its reach throughout the city: finding unexpected locations to show its work in, and working with local artists and residents to perform and take part. MIF23 will be a true celebration of the city and its cultural offerings.”

Tickets for MIF23 are on sale to Factory International members from 28 March and on general sale 30 March.

The full MIF23 programme:

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