Christchurch Press 4 January 2012: World Buskers Festival Programme, Page …
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
Page 34 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 34 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 38 of a World Buskers Festival supplement in the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 January 2011.
Page 44 of a World Buskers Festival supplement in the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 January 2011.
Page 50 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 14 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 17 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 6 of a World Buskers Festival supplement in the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 January 2011.
Page 32 of a World Buskers Festival supplement in the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 January 2011.
Page 27 of a World Buskers Festival supplement in the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 January 2011.
Page 6 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 5 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 20 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 24 of a World Buskers Festival programme in the Christchurch Press, published on Wednesday 4 January 2012.
Page 2 of a World Buskers Festival supplement in the Christchurch Press, published on Tuesday 4 January 2011.
A buskers village was set up in Hagley Park for the first time in 2012 for the World Buskers Festival.
A buskers village was set up in Hagley Park for the first time in 2012 for the World Buskers Festival.
A video of journalist Charlie Gates introducing the 2014 World Buskers Festival. Gates revisits the performance venues for former festivals to show how the central city has changed since the 2010 and 2011 earthquakes.
Tonight Christchurch's Bread & Circus Buskers festival is swinging into action, and its promising to lure the biggest crowds to the central city since pre-earthquake times. But organisers admit the festival hasn't escaped its dire financial past, despite new management and a rebrand as the Bread and Circus Festival last year. And it it will still be running at a loss until about 2022. Katie Todd reports.
An entry from Ruth Gardner's Blog for 21 January 2014 entitled, "Silly Sign".
A map showing the location of temporary Buskers Festival venues in Hagley Park.
Aspects of Christchurch life after the earthquakes of 2010 and 2011, modelled on acts performed at the Buskers' Festival being held in Christchurch. Include `Silt walking'through liquefaction; 'Orange zone', representing the paralysis of homeowners whose properties were classified as 'orange', or of undecided status; 'Jugglers "Marryatt" and "Red Zone"': the Christchurch CEO, Tony Marryatt, juggles with money, his large pay rise, while the red-zoned householder juggles with unattractive options; 'The boy [CBD] with red tape all over him', referring to the cordon which was strangling the Central Business District; the columnist Joe Bennett with his dog, refusing to move from his house in Lyttelton, a cause celebre of resistance to the earthquake authorities in those days. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).