Bella Artois
Bella Artois is s a London based queer musician, whose influences, spanning from punk to pop to jazz, blend to create a unique combination of chaos and tranquility in their music and live shows.
Honey Birch
Honey Birch is a queer singer songwriter and poet from London. Adopted from China but brought up amongst audacious caucasity, they explore the themes of loss, love and belonging, blurring the borders between imagined lives and reality.
Stephanie Burrell
Stephanie is an artist who works within dance and performance. Originally from Manchester, she trained at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance. Stephanie's performance credits span between London, Berlin and Mexico City. Her performance work explores sensuality, gender, relationships, economies and the digital world. This practice-based and academic research has brought #housewifegoingdigital to fruition. Stephanie also makes her own physical theatre work with collaborator Erin Hughes under Birthday Fish Theatre. 2024 will see their Edinburgh Fringe debut.
Holly Blair
Holly Blair (she/they) LA-based multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and filmmaker Holly Blair Holly’s music and art traverse the spaces in-between in an effort to mirror the natural spectrum of human emotion. As a queer, gender-fluid artist, she is interested in exploring environments that challenge fixed definitions. She creates cinematic, sonic, and lyrical worlds that breach the gap between genres in order to resonate with the inherent messiness of being human. Holly's new EP 'Then Comes The Lightning' is out this summer.
Grace Quigley (she/her)
Grace Quigley is a queer poet, and co-parent of queer noise. Grace’s work explores dyke culture, queerness, community, London living, mental health, love, heartbreak and laughter. Her recent Offie nominated show ‘BLUEWATER’ received 5 stars in both Edinburgh and London. She is currently a member of the Roundhouse Poetry Collective.
Kia Matanky-Becker (she/they)
Kia Matanky-Becker is a Queer Poet, Performance artist, sculptor and co-parent of Queer Noise. Kia's Lyrical poetry is an unapologetic exploration of queer relationships, friendship and community. They are particularly interested in queer coming of age narratives and their beautifully messy complexities. An over-sharer and attention seeker, get ready for tales of lesbian drama, late nights and the people they fell in love with on the bus this morning.
Kia has performed at poetry nights across the country, their performance films are archived internationally, and they were awarded the Poetry Society collaboration prize 2021.