Why we love Korean weepies

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Why-we-love-Korean-weepies-30282322.html

ENTERTAINMENT

The melodrama in soaps from Seoul is a magnet for women with repressed melancholy, says a professor

YU YIJIE, a 25-year-old Chinese graduate student at Kookmin University in Seoul, has been a fan of Korean TV drama series even since she first watched “Full House”, starring Rain and Song Hye-kyo, in 2004.

She’s been a devoted fan of all the big Korean series ever since – to the extent that she delved into television production as part of her studies.

“I decided to come to Korea to study after seeing ‘My Girl’ in 2005, which was a huge hit in China, starring Lee Jun-ki and Lee Da-hae,” says Yu. She arrived in 2012 with public administration as her major and in the off-season worked as an intern at broadcasting companies in China.

Her graduate degree, she decided, would be in film and television, thus turning her love of the screen into a professional pursuit.

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Yu’s case illustrates the positive influence Korean entertainment is having after more than a decade of popularity overseas. Since the early 2000s Korean TV dramas have been enormously popular, spearheading the Korean culture wave known as hallyu.

The first drama to really get the Korean Wave going was “Winter Sonata” in 2002, which was particularly popular among middle-aged women in Japan. The drama created an enormous fan base there and catapulted stars Bae Yong-joon and Choi Ji-woo to global fame. They even earned the honorific nicknames Yon-sama (Emperor Yon) and Jiwo Hime (Princess Jiwoo).

A year later the period drama “Jewel in the Palace”, became the first to attract widespread attention beyond East Asia. It was sold to more than 90 countries, as far away as Hungary. Seventy per cent of TV viewers in Tajikistan tuned in when it first aired in 2007 and five reruns followed.

In Kazakhstan its success guaranteed the popularity of the period dramas that followed – “Jumong” in 2006, “Queen Seodeok” in 2009 and “Dong Yi” in 2010, according to the report “Global Hallyu 2015”.

South Korean period dramas have had people of diverse nationalities take an interest in Korean traditional culture, costume, food and landscape, eventually attracting a growing number of tourists.

They’re especially popular in East Asia and Southeast Asia, where viewers easily relate to the traditional values and the hierarchical society depicted.

“Myanmar’s culture shares a great similarity with Korean culture,” the report says, “since it values family, respect for elders and hospitality toward guests. The similar culture and customs, thoughts and languages between two countries let Burmese people embrace Korean dramas readily.”

Oh In-gyu, a professor at Korea University who is director general of the World Association for Hallyu Studies, says there’s another factor that enables Korean dramas to transcend borders and ethnicity. “They present a feeling that women of all nationalities can share, the feeling of melancholia. The state of melancholia can translate into ‘han’, the distinct state of the Korean mind.” Han is a complicated psychological concept, but it refers to accumulated depression with no outlet. It’s been used to describe the psychological state of older Korean women raised in a patriarchal, hierarchical society.

Oh says female viewers around the world who share this mindset are the ones driving Korean-drama “fever”. “Whether it’s historical dramas, romantic melodramas or dramas with violence, the primary viewers of Korean dramas are women,” he notes.

The female protagonists in the TV series and movies tend to overcome a series of obstacles before finding their true love or achieving career success. In “Jewel in the Palace”, Jang-geum, who comes from a disgraced family, becomes an assistant to royalty, working her way up from assistant cook to court doctor.

“Women feel a sense of catharsis watching the female character grow,” says Oh, who between 2010 and 2013 tested his theory in Israel, France and Britain. He examined the differing reactions of male and female viewers watching five different Korean dramas.

“Men showed little interest in the stories, while women quickly became attached to the characters.”

Also attracting women around the globe are the “ideal” male figures portrayed, Oh says. “The Korean men in these shows are sensitive, kind and fashionable, the ideal type for most women.”

“Stairway to Heaven” has been a tremendous hit in Argentina, where an article published earlier this month in the newspaper Clarin called it one of the country’s most-watched television programmes. Kwon Sang-woo plays the male lead, devoted to his ailing childhood sweetheart. He protects her until her death with the promise of everlasting love.

 

Self-destruction and harsh realities at Art Basel Hong Kong

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HONG KONG ART BASEL 2016

Tintin Wulia's 'Five Tonnes of Homes and other Understories' piece is seen during the press preview for Art Basel in Hong Kong on March 22, 2016, before it opens to the public from March 24-26. Photo/AFP

Tintin Wulia’s ‘Five Tonnes of Homes and other Understories’ piece is seen during the press preview for Art Basel in Hong Kong on March 22, 2016, before it opens to the public from March 24-26. Photo/AFP

South Korean artist Kyungah Ham’s ‘Chandeliers for Five Cities’ shows at Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/AFP

South Korean artist Kyungah Ham’s ‘Chandeliers for Five Cities’ shows at Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/AFP

Chinese artist Zhang Xiaogang’s painting ‘Flashlight’ is on display Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/EPA

Chinese artist Zhang Xiaogang’s painting ‘Flashlight’ is on display Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/EPA

Philippine artist Roberto Chabet’s installation ‘Cargo and Decoy’ is on display at Art Basel in Hong Kong, Kong. Photo/EPA

Philippine artist Roberto Chabet’s installation ‘Cargo and Decoy’ is on display at Art Basel in Hong Kong, Kong. Photo/EPA

Indonesian artist Eko Nugroho’s installation ‘Hiercharchy of Prosperity #1’ is on display at Art Basel in Hong Kong, Kong. Photo/EPA

Indonesian artist Eko Nugroho’s installation ‘Hiercharchy of Prosperity #1’ is on display at Art Basel in Hong Kong, Kong. Photo/EPA

‘Private Riots’ by Tromarama is seen during the press preview for Art Basel in Hong Kong on March 22, 2016, before it opens to the public from March 24-26. Photo/AFP

‘Private Riots’ by Tromarama is seen during the press preview for Art Basel in Hong Kong on March 22, 2016, before it opens to the public from March 24-26. Photo/AFP

Visitor views Anish Kapoor's work ‘Random Triangle Mirror’ at Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/AFP

Visitor views Anish Kapoor’s work ‘Random Triangle Mirror’ at Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/AFP

Gabriel Barredo installation ‘Asphalt’ is on display at Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/EPA

Gabriel Barredo installation ‘Asphalt’ is on display at Art Basel in Hong Kong. Photo/EPA

Giant gold cubes designed to be defaced and a large-scale tribute to Hong Kong’s lowly cardboard sellers took centre stage as Art Basel opened its doors in the city on March 22.

VIP guests flooded into the sprawling two-floor exhibition at the harbourfront convention centre, with more than 200 galleries from around the world hoping collectors will bite, despite China’s economic downturn.

Tuesday’s opening kicks off two days of private views before the public are given access Thursday, in a week when Hong Kong becomes a frenzy of art events.

British artist Tracey Emin launched her first ever solo show in greater China in Hong Kong Monday, and Japanese artist Tatsuo Miyajima has his latest light creation beaming out of the city’s highest tower each night.

But in a refreshing antidote to the champagne and glitterati, one of the most prominent exhibits at this year’s edition is Tintin Wulia’s grand-scale “Five tonnes of Homes and other Understories”.

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Huge compacted bales of cardboard decorated with murals hang from chains forming a spiral – a reminder of the city’s ubiquitous elderly cardboard collectors who hunch over trolleys and deliver to recycling depots in exchange for a few dollars.

Wulia spent two years on the project tracing the cardboard’s route through Hong Kong, including collaborating with Filipina domestic workers who use cardboard to create windbreaks for themselves when they gather in the city’s public spaces to socialise on Sundays.

Both groups are an integral part of Hong Kong’s landscape – both belong to an underclass a world away from art’s big spenders.

“I feel sometimes the art fair is quite detached – people fly in and fly out,” says Wulia, born in Indonesia and based in Australia.

“For me it’s connecting the art fair to the rest of the world and the real Hong Kong.”

In a more extravagant installation, Chinese Zhang Ding’s “18 Cubes” shines brilliant gold – with visitors encouraged to leave their mark by scratching and defacing the glinting surfaces.

South Korean Kyungah Ham’s embroidery gold chandeliers also glitter, but make a political point – they use textiles made in North Korea to highlight the contrast between the two nations, and the gulf between the impoverished and political class.

The Hong Kong edition of the show, which also takes place in Basel and Miami, is now in its fourth year and has helped feed the city’s reputation as an art hub for Asia.

A host of new galleries have opened in recent years and major arts complex M+ is under construction.

“We never thought we’d establish ourselves so quickly,” says Art Basel director Marc Spiegler.

This week has expanded and expanded – it’s been amazing to see.”

But critics say Hong Kong’s art scene is still too commercially focused.

“We are an art hub in the sense of (being) a market where people buy and sell because of the low tax,” says art critic John Batten.

Better museums and an education system that emphasises the arts from primary school age were key to building up cultural capital, he said.

“Once we do that, maybe in five years, it will be good,” he said.

 

A life in theatre

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Daraka Wongsiri/Photo Courtesy of Dreambox

Daraka Wongsiri/Photo Courtesy of Dreambox

Daraka Wongsiri, Thailand’s most prolific playwright, receives the IATC Thailand’s lifetime achievement award tonight

In a career that spans almost four decades, Daraka Wongsiri, 62, has penned more than 30 plays and musical books with well-rounded characters, on up-to-date situations, and with an underlying social commentary. Many of these works are now being studied in drama classes nationwide.

Thai theatregoers my age and older grew up watching such representative dramas as “Kulab si lueat” (“The Crimson Rose”, 1988), “Sut sai plai rung” (“Where the Rainbow Ends”, 1991), and “Phinaikam khong ying wikoncharit” (“A Madwoman’s Will”, 1994). Audiences who prefer satirical comedies will recall how hard we laughed at her “Thuenthuek” (“Old Maids”, 1992), “Khunmo kha taewa man maichai” (“Doc! But That’s Not…”, 1995), and “Sam sao sam sam” (“Three Misbehaving Women”, 1996).

Daraka has also written stage adaptations of Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tale “The Snow Queen” (“Nangphaya Hima”, (1991) and the Chinese folk tale “The White Snake” (“Nang phaya ngoo khao”, 1999).

Musical lovers have been delighted too by her book and lyrics for such works as “Rai saen suk” (“The Happy Farm”, 1986), “Khu Kam” (“The Doomed Duo”, 2003), “Mae Nak” (2009), and “Pritsana” (2012) which was honoured with the first IATC Thailand award for best book of a musical. Her most recent work, staged two months ago, was “Mom”, which she adapted from MR Kukrit Pramoj’s short story and which met with success and critical acclaim.

Daraka also translated “Dreamgirls: The Musical” in 2012 and Agatha Christie’s “Go Back for Murder” into “Roi Rak Roi Khattakam” (2013). And as an example of how Thai people love adapting, not adopting, her most popular work is “Onlaman lang ‘Ban Sai Thong'” (“Mayhem behind ‘The Golden Sand Mansion'”, 1999). A hybridisation of British playwright Michael Frayn’s “Noises Off” and Ko Surangkhanang’s best-selling novel “Ban Sai Thong”, this international behind-the-scenes farce was restaged in 2000, 2003, and 2005, and toured to Chiang Mai (1999) and Khon Kaen (2000) for a nationwide total of more than 100 performances, a record for a Thai play.

In short, I don’t think any professor would want to put the question “Who is contemporary Thai theatre’s most prolific playwright?” in an exam. Likewise, when any foreign critic or producer colleague asks me about contemporary theatre, Daraka’s works are always part of our conversation.

A graduate of Chulalongkorn University’s Department of Dramatic Arts, Daraka says her decision to work professionally as a playwright in the 1980s, which was as unique back then as it is now, was due to her professor, National Artist Sodsai “Khru Yai” Pantoomkomol.

“At the Faculty of Arts, I wasn’t really an academic type of student. I preferred practical work and that’s why I chose to major in dramatic arts. I also studied fundamental classes in acting, directing and design but I found my true passion in playwriting. I was an introvert: I still am. The best way to express myself is through the written word. The criticism Khru Yai gives to my works has always been constructive. She often says, ‘This is what I think and you may agree or disagree.’ She did this in my college years and still does it now. I always send her my scripts and she writes her notes on them. When she was healthy she would come to watch my plays and musicals,” Daraka says.

“I learned from her that we should have a firm grasp on the basics and only then can we be more experimental. She taught me and continues to remind me not to completely believe in what she says and she gives me enough freedom to develop my own work. She’s always encouraging and open-minded; I think that’s a rare kind of teacher.”

After graduation, Daraka wrote scripts for the Ministry of Education’s radio dramas. “I performed in them as well but that’s okay – nobody saw me,” she laughs.

The success of the charity musical plays “Rai saen suk” and “Aphinihan Maemot Faet” (“The Miraculous Twin Witches”) led her to another “crazy” idea of starting a theatre company. DASS Entertainment was formed in 1990 and takes the first two letters of her first name. Daraka explains, “I quit my civil servant job because I didn’t want to get into the whole system of bureaucracy. After working as an assistant magazine editor for a year, I decided that in my early 30s I should start doing only what I want to do. And with many like-minded friends and supporters, we thought we could pull this off.”

With a few productions a year at the AUA Auditorium, MBK Hall, and later their own Bangkok Playhouse as well as Chalermkrung Royal Theatre and upcountry venues, DASS Entertainment, with Daraka as resident playwright, has certainly succeeded in pulling it off.

Working in Theatre 28’s Thai production of Bertolt Brecht’s “Galileo” in 1985, Daraka met a new friend who would became a lifelong collaborator, namely the director of all her plays and musicals, Suwandee Jakravoravudh, a drama graduate from Thammasat University.

“We’ve been working together this long because of our sheer respect for each other’s role in every production. In interpreting my plays, she’s always careful, and when the director is careful, so are her cast members. In this healthy collaboration, we have discussion as well as arguments.

Daraka puts part her playwriting skills down to her love of reading.

“I’ve been an avid reader all my life,” she says. “This may sound like an overstatement but it’s a fact: I even read what’s on ‘thung kluai khaek’ (fried banana recycled paper bags) and merchandise catalogues. I observe everything around me and like listening to people from all walks of life. When I see, for example, a sad-looking cleaning lady, I talk to her and our conversation, mostly about her life, later inspires my writing.”

And now in the age of social media, she says, “I read everyone’s Facebook posts. I also write long posts, many of which are as long as short stories; Twitter is not for me! When I’m interested in something, I’m really curious about it. I’m now interested in Donald Trump and Syria – I even read from Syrian websites and then use the translation function to access primary sources of news.”

When DASS became Dreambox in 2001, Daraka added the role of producer to her work, saying, “I have to learn how to keep the company’s accounts book too.”

And that, along with the company’s additional work in television and special events, explains why she’s not as prolific now as she was in the 1990s and early 2000s.

“The theatre-going public here is limited and the run of each production, unlike that in other countries, is not very long. Sometimes we’re drained after working on a few productions every year so we decided that we needed to slow down,” she says,

In honour of Khru Yai and to support the career of aspiring playwrights, she also initiated the Sodsai Awards, Thailand’s only playwriting contest for university students.

“Of course we need to take into consideration their young age and the fact that their interests are quite common. Many of them are writing about teen romance and are not deeply delving into issues,” she says of her young colleagues’ works.

“And so it depends on each writer’s keen eye for the details. Many of them are afraid of making mistakes or going further than what they’ve been taught in classes. Some works are quite outstanding, though, like last year’s winner ‘Thritsadi maiyamok’ [later staged at “Take Off Festival” at Thong Lor Art Space] which was written by a first-year student in Communication Arts.

NO STAGE FRIGHT

  • The IATC Thailand Dance and Theatre Review 2015 starts at 6 tonight at the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre.
  • All dance and theatre artists and members of the public are welcome.
  • For more details and the list of nominees, check http://www.Facebook.com/IATC.Thailand.

World given three great reasons to watch Thai movies

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SOOPSIP

Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit/NATION PHOTO

Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit/NATION PHOTO

After collecting eight Subhanahongsa awards -the Thai version of the Oscar

He and fellow Thai directors Anucha Boonyawatana and Rutaiwan Wongsirasawasdi will be attending the 69th Cannes Film Festival from May 11 to 22 in the hope of securing financing to make more movies.

The Culture Ministry’s Thai Film Pitch rummaged through 21 prospective projects before deciding last week that Nawapol’s “Die Tomorrow”, Anucha’s “Malila” and Rutaiwan’s “To Become a Butterfly” were best-suited to promote the local film industry and Thai culture, not to mention Buddhism and the diversity of Thai society.

Nawapol’s “Die Tomorrow” entails six short segments all inspired by deaths reported in the Thai daily newspapers (not this one and, no, not that other one either). People die in accidents, from sickness, are murdered or just get too old. In each case they’re seen just before their death and immediately after. It’s all about the impermanence of life, you see – this appalling cycle of suffering and loss we’re apparently stuck with.

Nawapol’s concept poster for “Die Tomorrow” resembles a newspaper, bearing a black-and-white picture of three young ladies glued to their mobile phones, but beneath that the grim revelation of their demise: “Overloaded boat causes death of three schoolgirls”.

In “Malila”, Anucha explores the meaning of life and death by following a young monk on a journey. It’s full of charming traditional religious ceremonies and engaging philosophy. Anucha made waves last year with his psychosexual gay thriller “The Blue Hour”, which premiered to much acclaim at the Berlin film fest. It won special mentions at the New Flesh Awards at the Fantasia film fest in Montreal. It was also nominated for many Subhanahongsa Awards, but “Freelance” captured the bulk of those prizes. Now set for release in the US, “The Blue Hour” comes to the Museum of Modern Art in New York next month.

Finally, there’s “To Become a Butterfly”, Rutaiwan’s chance to return to the director’s chair after more than 10 years. It’s a drama about a mother devotedly raising an autistic child, teaching him to fit into society. A veteran film industry hand, Rutaiwan directed 2005’s “Wai Onlawon 4” and has long been a behind-the-scenes driving force at Hub Ho Hin and other film-production companies.

She was producer and screenwriter on “The Life of Gravity”, an indie low-budget drama that Pen-ek Ratanaruang shot with just his two actors, Cris Horwang and Peter Nopachai Jayanama, on a Sattahip beach. It was a made-for-TV effort, being broadcast on TrueVisions. More recently, she is working with Pen-ek again as a producer, this time on his latest effort, “Samui Song”, which we may be hearing more about soon.

High hopes for happy learning

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EDUCATION IN ASIA-PACIFIC

Paper aeroplanes take flight in 'I Have a Big Dream', which earned young photographer Estiawati Subair of Indonesia second place. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

Paper aeroplanes take flight in ‘I Have a Big Dream’, which earned young photographer Estiawati Subair of Indonesia second place. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

The grand prize winner, 'In the Mood for School' by South Korea's Yejoon 'Jennifer' Yoo. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

The grand prize winner, ‘In the Mood for School’ by South Korea’s Yejoon ‘Jennifer’ Yoo. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

Debdatta Chakraborty of India won third prize with the photo 'Education for Street Children'. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

Debdatta Chakraborty of India won third prize with the photo ‘Education for Street Children’. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

Thailand's Napasorn Saesin's earned a place among the finalists with 'Going Together towards Success with Happiness'. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

Thailand’s Napasorn Saesin’s earned a place among the finalists with ‘Going Together towards Success with Happiness’. Photo courtesy of Unesco Bangkok

Smiles all around as Unesco Bangkok issues new education
guidelines and organises a rousing art contest

With its recent adoption of a “study less, play more” policy for schools, Thailand seems right in tune with a regional trend. “Happy School” is the theme of a just-concluded art contest hosted by the United Nations, Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco), and the winning entries are full of glee.

“In the Mood for School” by South Korean teenager Yejoon “Jennifer” Yoo – who’s living in Bangkok while attending an international school – claimed top prize among the 160 entries from 17 Asia-Pacific countries.

It shows the feet of a student who’s sitting on the ground surrounded by the utensils of learning, from a textbook, pens and schoolbag to a coffee cup, rugby ball and iPhone.

Jennifer’s picture and the other nine finalists in the contest – which was open to all, not just students – will go on display this Friday at new Bangkok community mall the Commons. The question that each of them answers is “What does a happy school look like to you?”

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Yesterday was the International Day of Happiness, and to mark the event, Unesco Bangkok will also on Friday release its first report on “happy schools” around the Pacific Rim.

“A Framework for Learner Well-being in the Asia-Pacific” examines innovative approaches taken by schools to ensure their students’ “holistic development”, as opposed to just testing and rote learning. It offers criteria for schools to improve, timely advice for Thailand, which is grappling with shortcomings in its education system.

For her part, Jennifer says in her artwork’s caption that she “wanted to encourage both schools and students to acknowledge the value of useful learning content and lessons that are applicable in human life”.

“Students nowadays are suffering from both mental and physical problems due to huge pressure and competition in schools,” says the 18-year-old. “As greater academic achievements are required in society, students concentrate on getting higher grades rather than learning important lessons for daily life.”

As a result, she says, relationships suffer, stress builds and serious problems go unattended. “Students are our future, so helping them learn useful life wisdom and increasing their happiness is very important in promoting a healthy society.”

There’s also a rose in her painting, representing youthful love and relationships. The books symbolise knowledge, the phone the importance of communication, the cup of coffee leisure and relaxation, and the football physical activities and entertainment.

And the feet themselves, she says, symbolise “students who are in the mood for learning”.

“I intentionally painted them black and white to suggest that students are ready to be ‘coloured’ with wisdom.”

Indonesian Estiawati Subair, 33, won second prize with a cheerful photograph titled “I Have a Big Dream”. It shows junior students in Makassar flying paper aeroplanes – the result of fun lessons taught by not just designers and pilots but also accountants, doctors and journalists.

Indian Debdatta Chakraborty, 40, won third prize with a lovely bird’s-eye view photo titled “Education for Street Children”. She has four smiling Bangladeshi schoolgirls sitting on the ground writing on small slates. Their remote school has no modern amenities but, as the first from their families to receive any kind of education, they’re delighted to be there. “Their happiness to learn surprised everyone,” says Chakraborty.

Napasorn Saesin, Thailand’s only finalist, won the judges’ hearts with an engaging watercolour she called “Going Together towards Success with Happiness”. The 14-year-old Chulalongkorn Demonstration School student depicted a school bus, driven by big smiling balloons, leaping out of an old book, its destination in the sky marked as “Success”.

“We need to step out of schools that teach the same old things from old textbooks and instead make a journey to a new world to find success,” Napasorn says.

The other finalists were Indians Kuntal Kumar Roy, Prasanta Biswas and Abhijeeta Sarkar, Indonesian Alland Dharmawan and Australian Elodie Khan – the youngest entrant at age 10.

Unesco’s Alienor Salmon, who was in charge of the art contest, says the entries reflect the research findings and key messages of the agency’s report.

“School is a place where there’s friendship, laughter, playing and opportunities to learn through creative and practical activities, and where learners can stay connected with nature and their local communities,” she says.

“School is also about learners discovering their aspirations and dreams, with all of these factors not only enhancing learner happiness and well-being, but also making a crucial contribution to their future success in life and work.”

Unesco Bangkok’s report began with a study on the Happy School Projects launched two years ago. The aim was to determine what makes a school “happy”, based on the views of students, teachers, parents and others.

“In view of the challenges students face in today’s competitive, stress-fuelled, test-focused world, the theme of happiness has come to the forefront of the global policy agenda,” the report notes. Happiness was recognised in a United Nations General Assembly resolution in 2011 as “a fundamental human goal” and counted among the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

“The importance of happiness in schools has also attracted global attention, with global indices such as the Better Life Index and international assessments including PISA aiming to measure the linkages between learner happiness and the quality of education.”

The report concludes with the Happy Schools Framework – 22 criteria for building a happy school, grouped into the categories people, process and place, along with strategies for achieving them.

“The framework calls for education systems to shift away from traditional measures and to instead embrace diversity of talents and intelligence by recognising values, strengths and competencies that contribute to enhancing happiness,” the agency says.

“Suggested criteria for achieving these goals include supporting positive teacher attitudes and attributes, encouraging learner freedom, creativity and engagement, and creating a warm and friendly learning environment.”

The Happy Schools Project emerged from Unesco Bangkok’s “Learning to Live Together” report on ways in which educators can promote peace.

LOOK AND LAUGH

– Entries in the art contest will be on display from Friday until April 3 at the Commons on Soi Thong Lor. Winners will receive their awards there at 1pm on Friday. Find out more at www.unescobkk.org/education/quality-of-education/happyschools

 

Life lessons in an artist’s haunting “3D” mosquito nets

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SOOPSIP

Uttaporn Nimmalaikaew is using mosquito nets as canvases for his haunting portraits.

Uttaporn Nimmalaikaew is using mosquito nets as canvases for his haunting portraits.

Uttaporn Nimmalaikaew is using mosquito nets as canvases for his haunting portraits.

Uttaporn Nimmalaikaew is using mosquito nets as canvases for his haunting portraits.

Consider the humble mosquito net. They had them in ancient Egypt, apparently, protecting the pharaohs while they slept. It’s the cheapest and the most effective way to fend off malaria, after all. But what about mosquito netting as high art?

Artist Uttaporn Nimmalaikaew had a mosquito net in his studio while he was chasing his master’s degree at Silpakorn University. One day a few drops of paint landed on it and he was immediately struck by the effect that resulted. The net surface gave the paint a deep dimension.

What Uttaporn has done with this revelation is startling. He creates mosquito nets that still function as intended (frustrating mosquitoes, that is) – but they bear portraits of people that appear holographic. His images have turned heads around the planet. He’s earned a Sovereign Asian Art Prize, been named an Artist of Distinction at the National Exhibition of Art in Bangkok and won various medals.

An instructor at King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Lat Krabang, Uttaporn prints life-size or oversize drawings on the carefully draped netting to form the base. Then oil paint is applied to layers of netting in the same way tulle fabric is painted, which involves a different way of recreating light and shadows realistically.

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A top layer adds the details that make the optical illusion complete. Finally all the layers are connected with a line of transparent copolymer. The paintings appear to shift slightly depending on the distance and location from which they’re viewed.

Uttaporn regards his work as “an exploration into the essence of impermanence and the cycles of life”. There’s certainly a haunting nature to the finished pieces. “People have to see my work and experience it, not just see it in photographs,” he advises.

“I intentionally let the threads droop to suggest the flow of life, of ageing and physical degeneration. Everything is in a constant state of decay and fragility, but with death comes rebirth, and that’s a beautiful thing.

Family members are often the subjects of these portraits on net. “Seeing my loved ones gradually deteriorate, I become frightened by the bond of love I feel. I fear losing them, but the fact is that everyone has to be born and die.”

Uttaporn first felt this fear of loss in seeing his mother, to whom he’s particularly close, “growing older, getting weaker”. “I knew she’d eventually be gone.” Ultimately all we can do, he says, is take good care of the those we love while they’re still here, guarding them in their unavoidable fragility, protecting them like a mosquito net shields the dreamer.

 

A feel behind the wheel

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/A-feel-behind-the-wheel-30281962.html

STAGE REVIEW

Director Peter O'Neill's production stayed true to the original spirit of the play. Photo courtesy of Peel the Lime Light

Director Peter O’Neill’s production stayed true to the original spirit of the play. Photo courtesy of Peel the Lime Light

Peel the Limelight gets into gear with “How I learned to drive”

Paula Vogel’s Pulitzer Prize winning drama “How I Learned to Drive”, Peel the Limelight’s fourth work in less than two years, met with such an enthusiastic response that the two-weekend run at the intimate Spark Drama’s studio sold out completely and an additional performance had to be added to cope with the waiting list.

The company continues to fly high after the highly acclaimed “The True History of the Tragic Life and Triumphant Death of Julia Pastrana, the Ugliest Woman in the World” staged last year as part of Bangkok Theatre Festival 2015.

Director Peter O’Neill’s arresting production stayed true to the original spirit of the play. And even though the story was set in the 1960s-1970s, way before sexual harassment and child abuse became hot issues, and in rural Maryland, far away from our tropical paradise, the pivotal messages travelled well across time and socio-cultural differences. While the audience was mainly made up of expatriates, the well-translated surtitles meant that Thais understood and enjoyed the play too.

The story was a reminder, as powerful as it was heartfelt, that in such a case the physically weaker and younger need not always be the victim.

The two main cast members, Thai actress Siree Riewpaiboon as Li’l Bit and British actor James Laver as Uncle Peck, and the three members of the chorus, American actor and musician Nick Gallagher, South African actress Mandi Manson and British singer and musician Claire Stanley, formed a strong ensemble. However, sitting on a side section, it seemed that some of them forgot about the 10 audience members on the two side sections, thus forcing us to peek round at their actions. Their speaking and singing voices, though, filled the small space and occasionally I wondered if the pace of the play would be quicker and the performance more realistic if they lowered the volume.

Thanks to her good command of English, Siree blended in with the native speakers although her characterisation of Li’l Bit in her early to mid-teens was questionable. And while Laver’s work on his accent and physicality as a married middle-aged man was praiseworthy, his sexual desire was so subtle that, despite being the initiator, he was clearly the victim from the beginning.

Working with the limited space and probably a limited budget, production designer Kochawan Chayawan efficiently selected the necessary set props. These included the car seats, which were significant to the telling of the story and also served as dining chairs and a bed. I do wish though that she had made use of the traffic light pole – the only set prop not to be pressed into service.

The audience could see how Li’l Bit matured over the course of the play thanks to Kochawan’s choices of costume, although those frequent onstage costume changes looked clumsy and delayed the pace.

All Peel the Limelight performances are followed by discussion between cast and crew and the audience, which confirms the company’s aim to provide theatrical food for thought in this culinary heaven.

GO ASK AGNES

– Peel the Limelight is planning to put John Pielmeier’s controversial drama “Agnes of God”. For details, check http://www.PeeltheLimelight.com or Facebook.com/PeeltheLimelight.

French honour for a Japanese designer

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/French-honour-for-a-Japanese-designer-30281959.html

FASHION AS ART

The retrospective includes archival pieces from past collections. Photo/AFP

The retrospective includes archival pieces from past collections. Photo/AFP

An array of international colours are displayed in the Issey Miyake Retrospective. Photo/AFP

An array of international colours are displayed in the Issey Miyake Retrospective. Photo/AFP

Issay Miyake Retrospect is at the National Art Centre in Tokyo until June 13. Photo/AFP

Issay Miyake Retrospect is at the National Art Centre in Tokyo until June 13. Photo/AFP

Issey Miyake was elevated to the rank of Commander of the Legion of Honour last Tuesday at the National Art Centre in Tokyo. Photo/AFP

Issey Miyake was elevated to the rank of Commander of the Legion of Honour last Tuesday at the National Art Centre in Tokyo. Photo/AFP

Issey Miyake is made a Commander of the Legion of Honour at the opening of his retrospective in Tokyo

Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake was elevated to the rank of Commander of the Legion of Honour last Tuesday at the National Art Centre in Tokyo, home to a retrospective that traces the 45-year career of this “architect of purity”, as former French culture minister Jack Lang described him during the presentation.

The elegant stylist of 77 years welcomed the honour with emotion. “I am surprised and confused, I wonder if I deserve this award,” Miyake responded, after a few words of thanks in French.

Lang first met Miyake when he was the Minister of Culture under Francois Mitterrand in the 1980s.

“His great work is his image, which is sensuous and virtuosic. Issey’s work surprises, astonishes and moves. It is both sculpture and movement,” he said.

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Lang also paid tribute to Miyake’s openness to the world and referred to a trip he made with him in Hiroshima, where Miyake was born in 1938. He survived the atomic bombing of the city in August 1945 but lost his mother three years later as a result of radiation,

‘The irreducible light of his work draws its wellspring in the pain of unspeakable tragedy,” Lang said.

Japanese architect Tadao Ando, a long-time friend of the designer, described Miyake as an artist who constantly reinvents “starting afresh each time from scratch.”

The exhibition dedicated opened to the public last Wednesday and examines more than four decades of the designer’s inspiration and innovations. Divided into three sections, it includes both archival pieces from past collections and interactive and moving displays demonstrating how some of the clothes are made.

At a press conference for the exhibit, Miyake was asked what challenges he thinks designers will have to face throughout the next 40 years.

“I don’t think I’ll still be around in 40 years, so it’s a bit of a difficult question. But given the problems facing humanity, such as aid issues, the shortage of natural resources and the growing population, then surely we need to think like our ancestors and consider making things that take a bit more time or that can be used by both men and women or even by the whole family.

The exhibition features some of Miyake’s most famous early pieces, including a romper with a tattoo print of Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix from the designer’s first collection in 1970 and a 1977 cocoon coat that was created using one continuous piece of cloth.

Miyake, who was trained in Parisian tailoring workshops, founded his studio in 1970 and presented his first show in Paris in 1973.

The Japanese designer retired in the late 1990s to devote himself to researching materials and construction techniques.

DRIVEN BY TECHNOLOGY

– The Issey Miyake Retrospective runs through June 13 at the Tokyo National Art Centre. For more details, check http://www.NACT.jp

 

PICTURE houses

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/PICTURE-houses-30281840.html

ART EXHIBITION

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“Future’s Ruins” looks at the decay of cinema palaces of the past amid hopes for the future

THE REGION’S cinematic past, present and possible futures unfold in a Bangkok photographic exhibition, “Future’s Ruins”, which looks at the moribund former standalone cinemas that used to be common in Bangkok neighbourhoods and in cities across the Kingdom.

The couple dozen or so photos are the work of Philip Jablon, an American who is an affiliate researcher at Chiang Mai University. Since 2009, he’s been working in Thailand and Southeast Asia to raise awareness about the importance of old cinemas and how keeping them open helps communities.

Running through May at the H Project Space in Bangkok’s Sathorn neighbourhood, his “Future’s Ruins” exhibition comes amid much concern for the future of Bangkok’s only active standalone cinema, the Scala in Siam Square.

On Facebook recently, Jablon posted a video he made in his hometown of Philadelphia, while standing in front of what was left of the Boyd, a historic movie palace that was the last of its kind in the City of Brotherly Love’s downtown.

In fluent Thai, Jablon says he hopes the Scala doesn’t meet a similar fate as the Boyd.

“Certain people want to destroy it,” Jablon says. “That would be a mistake.”

Run by the Apex group, which also operates the neighbouring Lido multiplex, the Scala is surrounded by uncertainty as Siam Square owner Chulalongkorn University is keen on tearing down the theatres in order to build more shopping malls.

But those plans appear to be on hold, at least temporarily, with leases on the Scala and Lido reportedly extended until at least 2018. And, in another recent Facebook post, Jablon shares news that Apex will invest in a new screen for the Scala, raising more hopes that the Art Deco theatre, its neon marquee, grand lobby and sparkling five-tier chandelier might still have few good years left.

Phuangthong Siriwan, general manager of Apex, remains hopeful. “We’ve kept the Scala going for so long out of passion,” she says. “We went to the Department of Fine Arts to have the building registered as architecturally significant.

“Things have changed, though. We are at the centre of Bangkok. It’s up to the university. They have to do what works.”

Aside from the Scala, there are moves afoot to preserve and restore other Bangkok cinemas, among them the Nang Loeng, a barn-like teakwood edifice in the historic Rattanakosin enclave. Officials at the Thai Film Archive have been keeping close eyes on the theatre, which is formally known as the Sala Chaloem Thani and is owned by the Crown Property Bureau. Hopes are to reopen the Nang Loeng in time for its 100th birthday, sometime around 2018.

Sompong Chotivan, former manager of the Nang Loeng, is anxious for the reopening.

“When the Sala Chalerm Thani is done this will be a very strong community,” he said. “It will benefit the community and everybody who comes to the Nang Loeng neighbourhood”

And yet another faded old theatre, the Prince, in Bangkok’s newly burgeoning riverside Creative District, is due for some much-needed sprucing.

Art curator Atty Tanitivit, director of the Atty Gallery and a member of the Creative District, says the Prince is worth saving.

“Bang Rak Market has been known for its charm due to its diversified food options and juxtaposition of the old and the new,” Atty continues. “The revival of the Prince Theatre would add yet another layer to the area. If used as a creative space, be it a theatre or a public space, it would become another ‘must visit’ spot in Bang Rak. With its centralised location, it could also act as an attraction for creative businesses, especially food-related, in the area.

“If Bangkok wants to compete with other cities in the region, we have to be able to somehow utilise old buildings while preserving their legacy. If we let these buildings crumble or tear them down for new developments, Bangkok will soon lose its charms, as well as its livelihood.”

Moves to revitalise old cinemas in Bangkok come amid action elsewhere in the region, such as Singapore, which has dusted off its long-moribund crown jewel Capitol Theatre as a palace for performing arts and first-run movies. And in Malaysia, community activists in George Town, Penang, are working to reopen the Majestic, a moviehouse that dates back to 1919.

Meanwhile, Jablon is on the hunt for more cinemas to preserve in photos. He’s been in Myanmar for the past couple of weeks, revisiting places he first saw around six years ago and travelling to new locations. His work has been hampered by a wounded ankle, burned as the result of an unfortunate meeting with a motorcycle’s tailpipe.

While some of the old Burmese cinemas he photographed six years ago have been swept by the wave of redevelopment in the rapidly modernising country, other places are looking better, among them a chain of old stand-alones being revitalised by the Mingala Cinemas group, which is installing state-of-the-art systems and showing current hit Hollywood films.

“Their strategy is to acquire and upgrade old stand-alones without compromising the original architecture,” Jablon notes. “It’s proof that a major cinema operator can also take part in preservation of cultural and architectural heritage.”

MOVING PICTURES

“Future’s Ruins” runs until May 29 at the H Project Gallery, 201 Sathorn Soi 12. Sales of photos from the show will benefit further research and documentation of cinemas in Southeast Asia. For details, check HgalleryBKK.com.

Jablon also has “The Movie Theatres of Thailand”, a portfolio of 20 photos printed on A4-size Mulberry paper, handmade in Chiang Mai. There are nine sets left from a limited run of 35. The cost is US$300. For further details, check SeaTheater.blogspot.com.

Club Scene

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Club-Scene-30281826.html

AFTER DARK

Erik Lorincz

Erik Lorincz

Find good parties in Bangkok

Have a laugh

Tonight and tomorrow are |your last chances to catch some seriously funny acts at the Magners International Comedy Festival. The Comedy Club Bangkok on Sukhumvit Soi 33/1 and Tenderloins Bar and Steak House on Soi 33 have simultaneous hilarity happening courtesy of |Luke Ashlocke, Wes Zaharuk and Martin Mor, among others. See the line-up at http://www.ComedyClubBangkok.com.

Partying with Pangina

The G-Spot Night Party tomorrow night at Mango Tree on the River on the Yodpiman River Walk has Pangina Heals and crew, fun games and Bt100 drinks from 6 till late. RSVP to the Facebook event page for two hours of free-flowing Stoli vodka and Somersby cider. Find out more at (087) 015 6600.

Fair warning

The latest Kontraband bash tomorrow at the Dark Bar on Ekkamai Soi 10 might destroy your ears – pleasantly – with deep, dark music from alternative hip-hop, dubstep, dub techno, UK garage and jungle to drum-and-bass courtesy of DJs DeLorean, Azek and Will. Admission is Bt200 with a shot of Absolut vodka.

King of the cocktails

Erik Lorincz, winner of the 2010 Diageo World Class Global cocktail-mixing competition, will be at the bar at Vesper on Convent Road on Tuesday and at Il Fumo on Rama IV Road on Wednesday. The head bartender at London’s famed American Bar in the Savoy promises exquisite tipples and a jolly good time. Get the details at (081) 620 8879.

Couple of northern lads

British duo Bondax – Adam Kaye and George Townsend – will be performing at Live RCA on Thursday. Raised to prominence on the “BBC Introducing Lancashire” show, they produce genre-transcending sounds that have been a hit at festivals across Europe, including Bestival, Creamfields and Beacons. Get a pass for Bt450 from http://www.TicketMelon.com/Event/Bondax.