During the 28th October to 1 November 2024, an immersive week of creativity and inquiry into Roger Casement in the Amazon, artist Mark Maughan opened his door to his latest performance piece, collaborating with thought leaders, innovators, and activists from across the Atlantic. This was a chance to dive into the making process, to dissect a series of questions, and to envision how these ideas might shape a powerful future performance.
About the Project:
The project peels back the layers of a dark chapter in history, focusing on the UK-funded Peruvian Amazon Company that thrived during the rubber boom between 1907 and 1913, on lands now recognized as part of Colombia. In 1911, Roger Casement, a British diplomat born in Ireland, penned a scathing report that revealed the horrific genocide of an estimated 60,000 Indigenous Peoples, drawing parliamentary scrutiny and ultimately leading to the company’s dissolution.

Portrait of Roger Casement, Artist: Sarah Henrietta Purser, 1848-1943, Oil on canvas.
Casement’s name became synonymous with human rights yet fell prey to scandal and personal turmoil, culminating in his execution at Pentonville Prison. The echoes of the UK rubber trade’s brutality still resonate today, leaving the trauma experienced by the Indigenous communities of the Colombian Amazon unresolved.
With a rich background as a translator for NGOs in Colombia, Mark Maughan has spent the past two years engaging with the four nations of La Chorrera—the Uitoto, Okaina, Muinane, and Bora. His theatre project seeks to amplify the unheard narratives of this troubled history, grappling with the tightrope walk between the pursuit of objective truth and the subjective nature of storytelling in theatre.
Check out the ‘Schedule for the Week’ below for details about the sessions and how people participated:

Open Research represents a fresh avenue for artists to collaboratively explore creative projects alongside public audiences as part of their making process. It draws inspiration from Reena Kalsi’s Process programme at Roundhouse London in 2022.
On the first day, Mon 28 Oct 24, Jeffrey Dudgeon MBE, Northern Irish politician, historian and gay political activist, author of the ‘Roger Casement: The Black Diaries – with a study of his background, sexuality, and Irish political life’ with Kinti Oreliana, Erna Von-Wall and Almiro Andrade provided content and perspectives to the start of the research.
The three-day event provided many answers and also left a lot to be explored after the event.
Why not start your research by contacting your local library and exploring Roger Casement, or contact NIGRA (Northern Ireland Gay Rights Association) the organisation which helped Jeff Dudgeon in the case Dudgeon v United Kingdom to the European Court of Human Rights; this successfully challenged Northern Ireland’s laws criminalising consensual sexual acts between men in private.
Links:

transgender people under Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich. It resembles the pink triangles Nazis forced gays to wear in concentration camps during World War II and states in English, Hebrew and German: “In memory of those persecuted by the Nazi regime for their sexual orientation and gender identity.”