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Another participant and I were selected to perform a boy/girl traditional Sundanese duet pop song in a breaking of the fast event one Friday evening. It was a truly surreal experience...the crowd whistled and cheered to see us dressed up in costume, singing in local dialect a song we had 4 days to learn!! Since the event we decided to make a pop music video, with the hope of becoming the next viral phenomenon in Bandung !!!
Blue Sunda at Motekar art centre
A nine year old boy sings a Sundanese song to his lost father and mother in pentatonic tone scale accompanied by kechapi at a full moon performance in Bandung.
Jan Švankmajer is a czech surrealist artist and filmmaker. His work spans several media. Švankmajer has gained a reputation over several decades for his distinctive use of stop-motion technique, and his ability to make surreal, nightmarish and yet somehow funny pictures. Švankmajer's trademarks include very exaggerated sounds, often creating a very strange effect in all eating scenes. He often uses fast-motion sequences when people walk or interact. His movies often involve inanimate objects being brought to life through stop-motion in a dark and disturbing nature.
“For me the most interesting thing about wayang is that it really gives you the whole picture. There may be some other art form that is more comprehensive, but I don’t think so. I feel that in other performing arts people touch only on the trunk or the tail of the elephant, but when I am doing wayang I am pushed into dealing with the whole animal.”
Rama & Rahwana fight from faith brandon on Vimeo.
Rahwana dance from faith brandon on Vimeo.
Learning Cepot the clowns' laugh from faith brandon on Vimeo.
Cepot walk and dance from faith brandon on Vimeo.
The Indonesian Arts and Culture Scholarship has been conducted since 2003 and was initially offered to and participated by member countries of the South West Pacific Dialogue (SwPD); Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Timor-Leste, and the host Indonesia.
Bearing in mind the significance and advantages obtained from the program, the offer was expanded over the years to include member countries of ASEAN, ASEAN+3, and PIF, as well as India and South Africa. In 2008, Indonesia welcomed the participation of Azerbaijan, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, the United States and Austria. This year, the Government of Indonesia will give the opportunity for participants from Germany, France (New Caledonia), Norway, Russia and Suriname.
In order to deepen the participants’ understanding of Indonesian arts and culture, and to enhance their skills for the final performance, participants will be divided and assigned by the organising committee to different arts centers for the duration of approximately two and a half month. The arts centers are located in Bandung, West Java; Denpasar, Bali; Solo, Central Java; and Surabaya, East Java.
Participants will live within or around the arts centers, allowing for the chance to experience the local heritage and interact with the local community. Synergy between theory and practices shared inside and outside the art centers would undoubtedly become the driving force for shaping international cultures and norms, and will eventually strengthen regional as well as global understanding and cooperation at a people-to-people level.Saung Angklung Udjo (SAU) is in the east of Bandung, a tropical paradise away from the busy city. Performances take place every day promoting traditional Indonesian dance, music, theatre, puppetry and martial arts. The angklung instrument is also made and sold on site in small bamboo shacks scattered across the art centre. Saung Angklung Udjo not only operates as a performance space and workshop, but is an educational centre for young people with the aim of preserving Sundanese culture through teaching. Udjo Ngalagena established the centre in the 1960s with this strong purpose to preserve Sudanese traditional art and culture. The centre has bamboo theme, so, the chairs, the musical instruments and even the stage, all are made of bamboo.
Participants at Saung Angklung Udjo
Moon Play (Mondspiel) by Lothar Schreyer is a German Expressionist puppet play first performed in 1923. Actors work with two hand-made life-size contemporary Bunraku styled puppets as an extension of their bodies, performing a magical ritual to the moon. As the puppets come to life so does the mystical world around them, through the use of OHP puppetry, digital recordings, visual art and live music this Bauhaus inspired play explores a mesmerizing transcendental form of puppet and object theatre. The abstract script experiments radically with language and deliberately avoids the use of conventional characterization and narrative plot structure to create a phantasmagorical bubble of eternity and escapism for its audience.
Like Schreyer's performances during the Expressionist movement our version of Moon Play emulates not the power of individual feeling but the purity of communal spirituality. Here the impetus to theatrical performance is not explosive expansion of individual personality - but in dissolution and subsumption into collective. In our show we attempt to fully realise this and work as an ensemble with the puppets and objects and have strived to develop and deliver an extremely close relationship between live and animated bodies.
Password: Moon
Moon Play from Fay Buzzard on Vimeo.