RISE LIKE A VIRUS
Austria
Directing & Text
Joachim Gottfried Goller
Language
German with English subtitles
Duration
65 min
more about the artist
“Sometimes he had the feeling, everyone had forgotten the 80s,” writes Joachim Gottfried Goller in his biography about himself. He doesn’t explain why the 80s are important for him – he was born in 1992. His production RISE LIKE A VIRUS was created during his third year at the Mozarteum in Salzburg during the lockdown winter of 20/21 and could be a hint. The second last decade of the 20th century brought the end of the conflict between the different systems in the East and the West and was defined by developments whose effect is still being felt today: digitalisation, environmental protection, war, famines, Chernobyl, the neoliberal turn, the immunodeficiency disease AIDS. AIDS is the subject of RISE LIKE A VIRUS. The production is confident enough to be like a party and is comwithted, smart and playful in capturing the atmosphere of a pandemic in the situations, scenes and soundtrack. The show deals with fates, explicit sex and the rebellion against boundaries of all kinds. In 1981, the consequences of being infected with HIV was declared a pandemic disease. For those infected, unlike today, they were a death sentence. Especially the sexual transmission of HIV led to the massive stigmatisation of certain social groups and lifestyles. The tolerance and equal rights that the civil rights movements had fought for in the 60s seemed to be destroyed overnight. A documental compilation.
RISE LIKE A VIRUS was created during social distancing, i.e. in two different apartments as a digital production for an audience on the video conferencing platform Zoom. Joachim Gottfried Goller completed his training in directing at the Mozarteum Salzburg in September.
Direction & Script Joachim Gottfried Goller
With Raban Bieling, Christine Grant, Maren Solty, Lukas Vogelsang
Technical Supplies & Decoration Michael Hofer-Lenz / Support Dramaturgy Elisabeth Kerschbaumer / Production Universität Mozarteum Salzburg / Production Photos T Helferzelle