Thursday, January 23, 2014

Colomboscope 2014 - arts and history

The literature festivals taking place across various big cities of India make you think whether literature is becoming to art what cricket has become to sports in India where cricket occupies the center stage and other sports disciplines remain either off stage or occupy a quiet corner on it. I like the literature festivals, have visited the one that happens in Bangalore and track the ones in other cities in newspapers. 

However, I do wonder if this partisan approach prevents us from developing a holistic view of a subject – art in this case - keeping us confined to only one of its sections - literature – and not letting us appreciate the whole.

Colomboscope 2014, Colombo’s arts festival, to be held from 30th January to 2nd February 2014, is quite a departure from this selective approach. The festival will celebrate contemporary literature, music, film and dance, bringing together national and international academics, authors, musicians, dancers, filmmakers and actors to reflect upon history, which is the broad theme of the festival which thematically connects all its events and discussions with a setting to complement it – places like Whist Bungalow and its gardens in Modera; the Old Town Hall – Pettah; the Grand Oriental Hotel & St peters Church – Fort and so on.

However, what interests me intellectually is how the festival promises to explore its subject, history. When we talk about history, written and oral narratives spring to our mind. But those are just two ways of recording and narrating history – and there are many more mediums without whose contribution the essence of a period remains inadequately understood. At Colomboscope, art practitioners will discuss how histories are recorded and passed down through the ages, through the performance and visual arts, buildings and monuments, clothing, language and the written word, narratives and media.

But history is not just an impersonal account of others to be appreciated from a distance but also a local, personal and individual narrative. And Colomboscope will explore this aspect of history through citizens’ accounts in sessions such as Memory and Remembrance, History’s Lenses, Social History and the Rise of the Citizen Historian and Whose Narrative is it Anyway? Award winning local and international writers will debate and discuss how they have dealt with, and been witness to eventful periods in modern history, and read from their works.

Colomboscope 2014 is different from the other art festivals I hear and read about in many ways. Not just does it bring all the arts under one roof but also explores their roles within a context – history – discussing it through forms of discourse - events, conversations, screenings etc -  and rendering it palpable through its setting. Quite layered. I don’t know whether it’s the first one of its kind. I honestly don’t think it is, but surely it is a thoughtful way of putting together a festival.

2 comments:

@completelyjane said...

Hi Indra

We have many literary festivals in the UK but not so many arts festivals. I love the idea of Colomboscope - wish I could go!

Janie

indrablog said...

Hi Janie,
There are many lit fests here, too, but this one seems to be quite unique.

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