Collective Altar is a week-long activation of live art and ritual at Quench Gallery in Margate, as part of People Dem Collective and Diasporas Now’s nomadic programme Movements from the Margins
CODA
Friday 9 January, 19:00-21:30
Closing performances of live art and music by RIEKO, SERAFINE1369, Haroon Mirza, and Flora Yin Wong, hosted by Diasporas Now
Ritual protocol: CODA is a free and unticketed offering, but recommended to be experienced for the whole duration of the evening out of respect for the performers. Lineup schedule to be announced soon.
CODA is the closing performance programme of People Dem Collective and Diasporas Now’s week-long residency at Quench Gallery, Collective Altar. The line-up features a live music set by Diasporas Now director RIEKO, an experimental DJ set by multi award-winning artist Haroon Mirza, an instrumental set by multidisciplinary artist Flora Yin Wong, and an embodied ritual by dancer and five elements healer SERAFINE1369.
Bringing together artists working across Margate, Ramsgate, Folkestone, and London, the evening is a celebration of music, movement, and intention – drawing on ancient healing and divinatory lineages, toward a convergence of international artists to the threshold of Margate, to the shedding of skins, to fire and momentum of 2026.
ALTAR
Friday, 2 January - Friday, 9 January
A participatory installation of intentional objects and channeled chalk writing
CEREMONY
Saturday, 3 January (invitation only)
An intimate gathering of artists and healers for the opening for Collective Altar, hosted by Eat Ethio
Invitation only
SCRYING
Sunday, 4 January (offsite)
Beachside fire scrying with Hubert Green and sound bath by Cherelle Sappleton
Ritual protocol: SCRYING is a closed circle for Black and Brown diaspora only.
15:30 meeting point at People Dem Collective (8-12 Harold Rd, Cliftonville, Margate CT9 2HT)
Sold out
SUBTEXT
Tuesday, 6 January,19:30-21:00
A sonic conversation between Paul Camo and James Jordan Johnson
Sold out
RESONANCE
Thursday, 8 January, 19:30-21:00
Deep listening for grounding and attunement with Ruby Savage
Sold out
What moves artists and healers to Margate, at the marginal shores of the district of Thanet? The name itself holds possible etymological origins to Thanatos, translating to “the isle of death.” In the depths of coastal winter, perhaps the light of rebirth is most palpable – as a retreat, a lighthouse, and a homing beacon.
This week-long residency at Quench Gallery, titled Collective Altar, is inspired by the elements of the Kent Coast: a speculative alchemy in chalk, salt, water, and fire – from the prehistoric sentience of fossilised cliffs, to deep-time diasporic lineages encoded in our DNA. The entire offering centres transformative shared experience over tangible artistic output, inviting Global Majority artists and healers with practices connected to the district of Thanet, and the region of Kent, to contribute to the mythos of Margate’s becoming.
Collective Altar guides participants through multiple activations at the precipice of 2026 – from shared meals at an artist salon in the gallery, to seaside scrying and incantations around open fire, to channelled writing, energetic realignment, electronic frequencies, and live art, music, and movement.
We gather at the threshold of the ocean, in liminal new-year rituals preceding cyclical renewal. Collective Altar is ever-changing – an ode to ephemerality and synchronicity, and the legacy of art to heal communities through past, present, and future.
Together we celebrate the magic that exists within our own bodies and our (extra)sensory perceptions: an invitation to speak, to feel, to sing, to dance, to heal.
Collective Altar is curated by Black-led community organisation People Dem Collective and live art platform Diasporas Now, as part of the collaborative programming series Movements from the Margins – piloted at Turner Contemporary in 2024, with a recent festival debut at We Out Here in 2025.
Collective Altar is supported by People Dem Collective, Quench Gallery, and PRS Foundation.
Location: Quench Gallery (Cliftonville Avenue, Margate, CT9 2AH)