Making DRACULA count

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Making-DRACULA-count-30279074.html

STAGE REVIEW

A new British-Thai production brings Bram Stoker’s bloodsucking prince to the Bangkok stage

“THE STORY IS deeply spiritual and famous the world over,” says Paul Ewing, the artistic director of Ewing Entertainment Worldwide of his production of “Dracula: Blood Is Life”, which begins its three-week Bangkok run tonight.

Ewing, a former cast member of the Royal Shakespeare Company and now a resident of Bangkok, is confident that what promises to be a largely Thai audience will understand and enjoy the show.

“What I like about living in Thailand is the deeply spiritual atmosphere, which is very different from that in the West, where Christianity is still part of who we are but not quite as it used to be. That openness to spirituality and the tradition of storytelling are major parts of Thai culture,” he tells XP.

” The story of ‘Dracula’ deals with the spiritual force and the personification of evil and how it interrupts individual lives and reverberates into their society. Wherever we are or whatever culture we come from, there are issues of evil, goodness, innocence, chastity, sex, lust, romance and desire.”

Instead of British playwright Liz Lochhead’s stage adaptation, Ewing has picked American playwright Steven Dietz’s version which, he says, “sticks more to the original text [novel] by Bram Stoker. Lochhead’s is a very difficult text” and wouldn’t communicate as well with audiences in Asia.”

British director Joe Harmston, highly renowned for his West End production of August Strindberg’s “The Father” adds, “[Dietz’s version] has sheer energy driving the story through a whole series of short scenes. I think that audience members whose first language isn’t English will enjoy a clear telling of the story and actually endlessly be moved on, irrespective of whether they understand it all or not,”

Comparing “Dracula” to “The Father”, Harmston says, “The stories that I’m always attracted to are the ones that focus on human relationships and characters wrestling with the clash between their hearts and strengths and particularly social conventions. My first response when I heard Paul was doing ‘Dracula’ was ‘Really?’ as I was recollecting all those 1970s Christopher Lee movies with buckets of blood but no human connection. Then I read the novel for the very first time as well as Dietz’s play and I was struck by what it’s actually all about. There’s so much to do with the world of desires and social conventions as well as the way evil spirits find their way into human behaviour through our desires.

“Evil, as it’s portrayed here as is often the case with drama, is like a virus that develops fast in the healthiest body. Great horror movies are ones where the person next to you – usually a wonderful friend – suddenly tries to kill or rape you. That’s far more disturbing and actually more real.”

Explaining why he cast musician Chulachak “Hugo” Chakrabongse in the title role, Harmston says, “I like his artistic credentials and he’s a natural performer. It’s been an interesting voyage for him in terms of honing his [music] talents to the particular needs of this stage production, but he got every element right. We don’t want Dracula to be a cartoon character and Hugo’s appeal and subtlety as well as his rock ‘n’ roll background which genuinely connect to the darker side of the world are a perfect fit.”

As for Myra Molloy who’s portraying Lucy, he says, “I met her in London and I think she has an interesting raw talent. She’s genuinely keen to learn more. It’s been a fascinating journey with hard work for her to develop confidence to be thinking constructively about what she’s doing [creating a storytelling performance as Lucy].”

Other members include, among others, rising RSC star William Belchambers who will perform the title role this weekend, Thai actor Vin Kridakorn as Jonathan Harker, Ewing himself as Renfield, and veteran British actor Joe Dixon, who starred in Harmston’s “The Father” and the hit movie “The Mommy Returns”, as Van Helsing.

A highly anticipated theatrical event in the region, many foreign producers are flying into Bangkok, including one from the Nederlander in New York, to see if they’d like to take it further.

Ewing explains, “Horror is a part of entertainment culture in Asia. Apart from the story, which is the spine of the work, we’ve also invested a lot of time, intellect, skills and gifts in this ‘made-in-Thailand’ production to the point where we can confidently call it world-class in terms of our cast and crew. We’ve done this on purpose so as to be able to take this commercially accessible production, which is also entertaining, to other countries where the audience will be fascinated by the aesthetics of the piece.”

The creative team includes set designer Sean Cavanagh, whose credits include more than 500 productions worldwide, Knight of Illumination Award-winning lighting designer Ben Cracknell, visionary costume designer Rachael Forbes, who recently worked with Sarah Brightman on her world tour, magic consultant John Bulleid, associate of the Inner Magic Circle with Silver Star, movement director Simeon John-Wake, Tony- and Drama Desk-nominated composer Kevan Frost in addition to Thai sound designer Tada Mitrevej.

In short, “Dracula” is a must-see play. Don’t miss it.

DRINK IT IN

”Dracula: Blood Is Life” runs until March 6 at the K-Bank Siam Pic-Ganesha Centre of Performing Arts in Siam Square One.

It’s in English with Thai surtitles. Due to the content, it is not recommended for children under the age of 12.

Shows are at 7.30pm on Thursdays and Fridays, 2pm and 7.30pm on Saturdays and Sundays. There are also school matinees at 2pm on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, followed by discussions with the cast and crew.

Tickets cost Bt1,200 to Bt3,800. School matinee seats are Bt1,000 (first circle) and Bt1,850 (stall). For details, check http://www.ThaiTicketMajor.com.

Special this weekend only – tickets for tonight can be purchased for 50-per-cent off and 20-per-cent of for tomorrow’s and Sunday’s shows.

Find out more at http://www.TheDraculaShow.com.

Club Scene

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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AFTER DARK

Giant Mojito

Giant Mojito

Find good parties in Bangkok

Mardi Gras in Bangkok

Ku De Ta Bangkok near the Chong Nonsi Skytrain station is hosting a Mardi Gras party tonight with lots of feather, beads and masquerade extravagance. Bring your bling, and those with the most jaw-dropping outfits get bottles on the house. |The dress code is purple, green |and gold. Call (02) 108 2000.

Singles into the pool

Le Meridien Bangkok on Surawong Road is luring single gals and guys to its “Single? Mingle” pool party tomorrow from 1 to 9pm. There’s be drinks, a delicious barbecue, friendly vibes and music by DJs Fred Jungo, Tommy Nori and KC. The Bt100 |entry free buys you the first drink. Call (087) 826 6642.

Loose people

Unattached folks can also head to Playground, Bubbles and Mixology at the Pullman Bangkok Hotel G on Silom Road tomorrow for the “Single & Proud Party Night”. The fun starts at 7 – free-flowing wine, cocktails and spirits, finger-licking canapes and a DJ on deck until late. Admission is Bt888. Call (02) 238 1991.

Monita for mojitos

Because sharing is caring, take your loved ones to La Monita Taqueria near the Ploenchit BTS station on Sunday and for Giant Mojitos created specially for the day. Call (02) 650 9581.

Kisses for a good cause

“Bad Romance” this weekend, the latest Sunday Gay Night at Maggie Choo’s, starts with free-flowing drinks from 8 to 10pm. The money you save can be spent smooching with one of the hot male models in the kissing booth, a charity fund-raiser. The cover charge is Bt500. Call (091) 772 2144.

You’re never bored with Bordeaux

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

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AFTER DARK

Head Chef Kevin Kristensen

Head Chef Kevin Kristensen

Tables at the Grand Hyatt Erawan tickles taste buds with a wine-paring banquet

Five exceptional Bordeaux Grand Cru wines found ideal dining mates at Tables Grill at the Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok Hotel last week.

France’s Bordeaux region has been producing remarkable wines since the Middle Ages, but it has an incontestable rating system denoting the “best” of all – the Bordeaux Wine Official Classification – instituted at the behest of the French emperor himself.

Attending the 1855 Exposition Universelle de Paris, Napoleon III called for a means of classifying the best Bordeaux wines that were being offered to visitors from around the world. Industry brokers ranked the wines according to each chateau’s reputation and to the wine’s trading price, which at the time was directly related to quality.

The rankings ranged from first to fifth growths, known as crus. All of the reds listed came from the Medoc region, except for Chateau Haut-Brion from Graves. The whites (then considered much less important than reds) were limited to the sweet varieties of Sauternes and Barsac and were ranked simply superior first growth or second growth.

Many of the leading estates from the Medoc appellation not included are listed as Cru Bourgeois, a classification system that’s been updated on a regular basis since 1932.

Some of this must have been in the back of Kevin Kristensen’s mind when he prepared the menu for the banquet at Tables Grill. The head chef has since last year being pursuing “sustainable cuisine”, but despite the ecological constraints he can still create dazzling “modern French” fare.

The opening salvo was a platter of US bay scallop cooked sous-vide, Dutch razor clams and flat oysters, paired with Francois Paquet Les Armanys Chablis 2013.

Light, appetising and not at all pungent, the perfectly cooked seafood went well with the delectable fruity and mineral white, whose oak-ish aroma somehow rendered the shellfish “less meaty”. And the citrus notes cleansed the palate ahead of the next course.

This was UK beef tartar served with Chateau Lynch Moussas Grand Cru Classe Pauillac 2005 – a Bordeaux red blend of predominantly Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot ranked in the fifth growth in the prestigious classification.

The light and minimally seasoned tartar needed a wine that was strong enough for the beef and light enough to complement rather than overwhelm the food. The Pauillac succeeded. Though produced in 2005, the wine tasted young and fresh, with faint cassis and red berries on the palate lending weight to the light dish and opening up a more herbaceous tone in the seasoning.

Another Bordeaux red blend, Chateau Batailley Grand Cru Classe Pauillac 2006, was poured next to be enjoyed with savoury Antarctic tooth fish with rich brandade.

A real sleeper of the vintage, the sensational red was a full-bodied, classic Pauillac with hints of blackcurrant, chocolate, plum and cinnamon that intensified the sauce and created a pleasing contrast with the slightly sweet and creamy fish.

French quail and Jerusalem artichoke were paired with Chateau Trotevieille Premiere Grand Cru Classe Saint-Emilion 2006 – a Bordeaux blend red ranked in the first growth.

The wine opened with earthiness, red berry and complex perfume, making it an excellent choice to accompany the earthy artichoke and seared game bird with savoury-sour sauce.

The feast ended with the simple sweetness of dark chocolate with organic gooseberries. What better wine to accompany this than Chateau Suduiraut, Premier Grand Cru Classe, Sauternes 1996? The balanced, sweet wine sported hints of tropical fruit, honey and orange peel, making it a highly enjoyable with the creamy, sweet chocolate |ice cream.

Find out more about wines in Bordeaux and the Official Classification at http://www.Crus-Classes.com.

Tables Grill is at the Grand Hyatt Erawan Bangkok Hotel. Call (02) 254 6250.

Behind the scenes with the Rebel Heart

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Gina Brooke

Gina Brooke

For her “Rebel Heart” tour, Madonna wanted to look “strong and fierce, but feminine at the same time”, says her makeup artist, Gina Brooke, who’s spent 10 years on and off the road with the American superstar.

“The look comes from a process of collaboration among Madonna, myself, the hairdresser and the other stylists,” Brooke said before Tuesday’s concert.

“Of course she has to have beautiful, glowing skin and a ‘full mouth’ because we felt that’s what really signifies a woman’s strength, as well as strong lashes and brows. She had to look like a rebel ready to stand up for what she believes in – love.”

Brooke has worked with Madonna on five world tours and numerous videos. “I don’t do the whole tour, but I train the makeup artists and set the looks. I come in for different countries and make sure everything is working.”

Brooke has decided she likes the final segment of the current show best. “It’s like the 1930s, because she wears a sort of flapper dress. So I made eye shadow out of real gold for her and apply it to her lips as well, with a bit of eight-hour cream on top to make it glossy. I love that era and she wears it very well.”

Brooke confirms that a concert tour is anything but glamorous. “It is very hard work, very demanding. Madonna is one of the hardest-working artists I’ve ever worked for. There is really no one like her. She’s very structured. She likes things a specific way, all the time, the same thing.

“She doesn’t meet people before show. She has the regimen she follows very rigidly. You really have to be professional – when she asks a question, you want to make sure you give her the answer right away, because if you take a minute away from her, it could cause you your job.

“Most artists show up just before the show and just perform,” Brooke said. “Madonna shows up hours before show time, checks the lights, goes through all the songs, makes sure the sound is working and so on. And what’s always amazed me is that, after all that and just before the show, she’ll sit with the head of each department, all of them with a notepad and pen. And she’ll say, ‘When I sing this song, this or that went wrong.’ She can remember every single detail of what happened at that moment and knows how it needs to be fixed. She’s a real perfectionist.”

There’s a big of magic involved in the quick costume changes, Brooke reveals.

“Underneath the stage is a small changing room, with two stylists, the makeup artist and the hairstylist, some chairs, a clothes rack and a mirror.” And every speedy change is practice-perfect. “We have to choreograph our movements for three or four weeks,” she laughs.

No Strings attached for the AEC

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/No-Strings-attached-for-the-AEC-30279006.html

THEATRE

Dallae's story/Photo courtesy of Art Stage SAN

Dallae’s story/Photo courtesy of Art Stage SAN

Two South Korean puppet companies bring history to a tour of Jakarta, Bangkok and Hanoi.

While we’re all familiar with South Korean music, television and film not to mention its cuisine and cosmetics, the same cannot be said for contemporary Korean theatre – and that’s despite the presence of non-verbal comedy “Cookin’ Nanta” performing nightly here in Bangkok, albeit mostly to tourists.

Now, thanks to South Korea’s Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism’s Korea Arts Management Service (KAMS), that’s about to change with the arrival in the Asean Economic Community (AEC) of two puppet theatre performances. Art Stage San’s “Dallae’s Story” and Performance Group Tuida’s “The Tale of Haruk” kick off their tour tomorrow at the Ice Palace in the Indonesian capital.

“Travelling Korean Arts is a new initiative to introduce Korean arts abroad in cooperation with Korean Cultural Centres (KCC). We now have 28 Korean Cultural Centres in 24 countries [including one here in Bangkok] and KAMS is supporting the presentation of performing arts and visual arts programmes of quality in cooperation with its local partners, be they venues, museums or festivals,” says Eunhee Kim, manager of KAMS’s International Business Development Office.

“It can be customised depending on region, genre and target. This upcoming Travelling Korean Arts Family is a targeted event focused on children’s theatre.

“For the Travelling Korean Arts initiative, we’ve set up a pool of programmes to represent Korean arts abroad from dance, music to children’s theatre. Indeed, we’ve received requests for children’s theatre from the KCCs in the AEC region. ‘Dallae’s story’ and ‘The Tale of Haruk’ have been highly acclaimed both at home and abroad. We believe these two works are a good starting point to introduce Korean children theatre to local audiences and artists.”

Based on the story of the Korean War in the 1950s, Art Stage San’s contemporary puppet theatre “Dallae’s Story” is not directly about the war itself, but shows the earnest attempts of a family to overcome all kinds of hardships.

Portrayed through a puppet, it shows how the title character used to admire the spring blossoms in the spring, go fishing with her father in summer, chased dragonflies and picked apples in autumn, and made a snowman in winter. Her life changes completely when the war breaks out and her dad enlists.

Korean traditional music, simple but effective sets, and a uniquely vivid combination of human performers and puppets have been combined into a wordless yet exciting performance that both children and their parents can equally enjoy.

The top prize winner at the Tolosa International Puppetry Festival in Titirijai, Spain, the show was highly praised by the festival co-director Miguel Arreche, who commented: “Art Stage San intelligently directs a production in which the charm and magic of puppets are combined with beautiful choreography. In my opinion, we’re facing one of the universal puppet theatre masterpieces of the last 10 years.”

Part of the French-Korean Year 2015-2016, “Dallae’s Story” was staged last month at Theatre de la ville, Paris and won rave reviews.

Performance Group Tuida, meanwhile, uses traditional Korean puppets made of paper, unique native masks and percussion instruments made of such eco-friendly materials as Korean paper, straw and hemp and even trash in telling “The Tale of Haruk” in a contemporary style. This lyrical and beautiful story of Haruk who ate everything he saw breaks down barriers of region, race, religion and rebirth to become an everyman’s tale with which anyone can sympathise.

Acclaimed the Best Production at the Seoul Children’s Theatre Awards when it premiered, the work later won both Best Production and Young Critics prizes for the first time in Russia’s International Theatre Kingfestival’s history.

Looking to the future, Kim cites a recent example of Korea-Thai collaboration, “‘Something Missing’ by Korea’s Theatre Momggol and Thailand’s B-Floor Theatre as already paving the way for collaboration in performing arts between the countries. The show actually became one of the winning productions at the Bangkok Theatre Festival awards last November.

“We hope exchanges and collaborations in the arts between Korea and AEC countries will become more active and fruitful. The ‘Travelling Korean Arts Family’ can be an opportunity to learn more about each other.”

The writer thanks KAMS’ Caiya Kang for all assistance.

BEYOND K-POP

  • Art Stage San’s “Dallae’s Story” (non-verbal) will be performed at 7.30pm on Monday and Tuesday.
  • Performance Group Tuida’s “The Tale of Haruk”, in Korean with English and Thai surtitles, is at 7.30pm on February 18 and 19.
  • Both are part of World Performances@Drama Chula at the Sodsai Pantoomkomol Centre for Dramatic Arts on Henri Dunant road, a 10-minute walk from BTS Siam, exit 6.
  • Admission is free but reservations are necessary. Call (081) 559 7252 or (02) 651 0165-8 or check http://www.Facebook.com/dramaartschula and http://www.Facebook.com/koreanculturalcenterTH.

Calvin Klein and the New York capsule

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Calvin-Klein-and-the-New-York-capsule-30279004.html

Handsome hunks and celebrities turn out to catch the design house’s eveningwear colllection

One of the major menswear brands to opt for not bringing its full collection to the recent CFDA New York Fashion Week: Men’s, Calvin Klein nonetheless compromised by showcasing Italo Zucchelli’s autumn 2016 eveningwear capsule during a special presentation.

The collection’s runway show, which debuted during Milan Men’s Fashion Week last month, offered formal men’s eveningwear that maintained the spirit and messaging of the brand.

The capsule consisted of tuxedos and outerwear exquisitely tailored and rendered in rich fabrics, sumptuous textures and unexpected accents. The lustrous silver, gold and rose gold metal foil that infused the runway collection with such a vibrant energy was also incorporated throughout the capsule, as well as in the presentation’s set. Calf-framed derby shoes were worn with each look, while earrings and necklaces mirrored after bolts and screws amplified the sense of masculine sensuality that permeates the season.

Notable guests in attendance and wardrobed in Calvin Klein Collection included independent hip-hop recording artist Joey Bada$$, who is currently featured in the Spring 2016 Calvin Klein global advertising campaign; actor Ben Walker; New York Jets’ Eric Decker; DJ Brendan Fallis and musician Mack Wilds, as well as men’s ambassadors New York Giants’ Victor Cruz and Johannes Huebel.

A newer, younger you

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/A-newer-younger-you-30279002.html

French skincare brand Sisley releases an updated and improved version of its famed anti-ageing treatment

One of the world leaders in luxury cosmetics, French skincare brand Sisley recently introduced its new Sisleya L’Integral Anti-Age treatment that promises spectacular results.

“It is almost impossible for a brand to stop producing its best-selling product and our Global Anti-Age treatment, which we launched in 1999, has been our key success. Now thanks to our research into epigenetics, we have found something better,” Nicolas Chesnier, Sisley’s regional managing director for Asia Pacific, told XP during the recent launch at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, which was attended by several of the brand’s loyal customers.

“Our extensive research has proved that behavioural ageing such as stress and the choices we make like smoking, overexposure to the sun or poor dietary habits mark the face even more than genetic ageing and are responsible for the majority of ageing overall.”

Combined with previously identified environmental factors such as UVA-UVB rays, pollution and free radicals, these factors deregulate the lifecycle of cells by modifying “cellular rhythm”, in which the cells protect themselves during the day, and repair themselves at night. Also affected are “cellular energy” which enables cells to function and renew correctly and “cellular longevity” which is determined by the length of the telomeres, the protective extremity of each chromosome, the length of which correlates with cellular life expectancy and preserves the integrity of the DNA. In a young person, this lifecycle is well organised and functional. However, in a more mature person or a person who has undergone various behavioural stresses, this cycle becomes “jammed,” and if only one of the three factors is affected, the whole cycle is disturbed. The consequences on the skin are premature visible signs of ageing including wrinkles, loss of radiance and firmness.

Among the many active ingredients added to the initial Sisleya formula, three major new ingredients now optimise the functioning of this lifecycle to protect the skin from the visible signs of behavioural ageing. These active ingredients target the three parts of the cells’ lifecycle to help compensate for their being weakened. Lindera extract helps to resynchronise the skin’s biorhythms, restoring the ideal rhythm of activity for younger skin to the cellular metabolism. Persian acacia extract promotes optimal energy production at the level of the cells (mitochondria) to protect against and repair skin damage caused by cellular fatigue while yeast and soya protein complex helps protect telomeres. It also helps to maintain the integrity of cellular DNA against behavioural stresses, for optimised cellular longevity.

Eight different clinical tests have been carried out with more than 300 women and the results show an improvement in the quality of the collagen network and the dermo-epidermal junction. This was examined using in vivo microscopy, which enables all of the layers of the skin to be viewed from the epidermis to the dermis so that all of major constituent parts can be measured and the quality of their structure characterised.

A canvas for calm

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/A-canvas-for-calm-30279001.html

onty P Satiadarma, the first certified Indonesian art therapist in clinical psychology/ANN

onty P Satiadarma, the first certified Indonesian art therapist in clinical psychology/ANN

Indonesia’s first certified art therapist says painting can help the mentally ill

Mentally illness has affected countless artists over the centuries – Vincent van Gogh and Salvador Dali, to name just two – and all have used their art as their channel to reach out to society.

This therapeutic method was first used to expedite the recovery of trauma victims after World War II in hospitals in Britain, a method that was later adopted by the Americans because of its success.

In the US, this therapy was expanded by two art educators, Edith Kramer and Margareth Naumburg, and integrated with medical treatment in the Veteran Affairs New York Harbour Healthcare System.

Scientific studies on expressive therapy were soon initiated to examine the psychological nature of art.

“There have been questions as to how art could cut the time for healing. It was later found out that being in hospital added stress to the patient as a result of being away from family, work and the thought of paying the hospital bills. Art helped in relieving the tension,” says Monty P Satiadarma, the first certified Indonesian art therapist in clinical psychology, whose mentor was Robert E Ault, holder of a master of fine arts degree and co-founder of the American Art Therapy Association.

Satiadarma was educated in the leading speciality psychiatric hospital of the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kansas, which developed inventive therapeutic methods.

The foundation has since moved to Dallas.

He explains that neuroscience has found evidence of a relationship between art and the human limbic system, the brain. “When we draw or visualise something, we actually recollect memories and re-experience emotions that connect to the hypothalamus.”

The hypothalamus is an important area of the brain that links the endocrines and the nervous system, helping to control the pituitary gland particularly in response to stress.

According to Satiadarma, art, especially the visual arts, trigger the association process between memories and emotions and the values the person believes in.

As a result art helps to release pleasant, calming serotonin and oxytocin hormones.

Even if the artistic results appear horrifying for others to look at, the therapist says they have the same metabolic effect on the painter, relieving the tension as the person shares memories and emotions.

But as the results rely on the kind of association coming out, can art always be therapeutic?

“Not always without clinical psychology intervention,” Satiadarma admits.

This is where art therapists step in to diagnose mental conditions and to alternate the way the person channels their emotions.

“If a patient tends to paint flames, an art therapist could suggest the patient paint candlelight instead,” says Satiadarma, explaining that different painting techniques also have different psychological effects.

“You cannot allow someone with an anxiety disorder to colour an object repetitively because it may increase stress.”

The professor of Tarumanegara University in Jakarta leads the teaching of art therapy in the postgraduate programme of psychology studies, in which students are required to master arts and to take on clinical patients.

The Tarumanegara Art Therapy Community is currently holding a series of exhibitions and seminars on different topics through to April at the Oasis Heritage Restaurant on Jl Raden Saleh, Central Jakarta.

The art therapists exhibited their works in January side-by-side with the works of their patients and of the community of Bipolar Care Indonesia.

Two paintings in particular on display, done by a patient in the early period of treatment, depicted his imagination of hell.

The painter was a Balinese who had adult schizoid personality disorder and was living at Panti Sosial in Kedoya, West Jakarta, the Jakarta administration’s official rehabilitation home for the homeless and other less fortunate people.

“I took him on as a patient and he now lives as a painter back home in Bali,” said Annisa Prameswari, who was completing her postgraduate degree.

Unlike other patients who hide their identity in their works, Anindhita Lakshmi Ardhanarishvara, 27, enjoyed seeing her works included in the exhibition.

While making the abstract series of paintings, titled “Cotton Candy and Flower Bursts”, she said she let go of the baggage she had carried.

“I didn’t plan the paintings to be like these. I splashed paints on the canvas and I felt calm afterward,” said the student of interior design and who has been diagnosed as bipolar.

For most clinical cases, the patients are required to take regular medication.

“Art therapy is not a curative method but it promotes the improvement of well-being and personal development,” Satiadarma says.

Just hop on down

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Children play during the official reopening of the 'Nijntje Museum' (Miffy Museum) in Utrecht. Miffy is a small female rabbit character created by Dutch author and illustrator Dick Bruna. The museum has replaced the closed Dick Bruna House. / AFP

Children play during the official reopening of the ‘Nijntje Museum’ (Miffy Museum) in Utrecht. Miffy is a small female rabbit character created by Dutch author and illustrator Dick Bruna. The museum has replaced the closed Dick Bruna House. / AFP

Miffy the rabbit gets her own museums

To some she’s just a plain white bunny, to others she’s a prime example of minimalist art. But for six decades Miffy has been delighting young kids around the world, and now she’s getting a museum of her own.

After a two-year renovation project, what was formerly known as the Dick Bruna Huis (house) in the Centraal Museum of the Dutch city of Utrecht, is reopening this weekend as a bright, playful space dedicated to Miffy herself and carefully re-imagined as a hands-on experience for her young fans.

The original space devoted to Miffy’s creator – Dutch artist, author and graphic designer, Dick Bruna, who was born in Utrecht – opened in 2006 and drew some 50,000 visitors a year from all over the Netherlands, but also largely from Japan where she is a huge star.

But it was primarily more of an adult museum, packed full of a permanent collection of Bruna’s original drawings. And the question on every child’s lips was “where’s Miffy?” says curator Yolanda van den Berg.

So now children are getting an invitation to visit Miffy’s house – divided into 10 rooms designed specifically with kids in mind, where they can play and learn, and find out a little more about the man who created their idol.

Although she celebrated her 60th birthday in 2015, Miffy has changed very little down the years. Bruna wrote more than 120 picture books of which 32 are devoted just to Miffy.

Small and square, designed to fit little hands, each book tells a simple tale such as a outing to the zoo, a day at school or playing in the snow. They have sold more than 85 million copies and been translated into more than 52 languages, including Russian in 2011.

It is her endearing simplicity, along with her friends like Poppy the kind pig lady and Snuffy the dog, which has cemented the books’ universal appeal to pre-schoolers down the decades.

Miffy is a white girl bunny drawn with thick black outlines, pointy ears (although in her early days they were slightly more floppy), two dots for eyes, and an X for her mouth. She is always drawn against a background of bold primary colours, especially mixed for Bruna, mainly blue, green, yellow and what is known as “Bruna red”.

“What he wanted to do with his books was to create a safe world in which children can explore by themselves,” says Van den Berg. “And that’s what we’ve tried to do in the museum as well.”

Absent from the museum though are the computer animations and games seen in many exhibits today. “If it’s not a real experience, but a virtual one, it’s different,” says Van den Berg.

Bruna, 88, was born in Utrecht in 1927, and had been expected to follow his father’s footsteps and join the family publishing company, which was once the largest in the Netherlands.

But drawing and art were his first love, and during a long study tour in Paris in the 1940s he became heavily influenced by the works of French painters Henri Matisse and Fernand Leger.

Returning to Utrecht, he started drawing book covers for the novels published by the Bruna company.

It was during a family holiday in 1955 on the North Sea coast that he spotted a white rabbit hopping around the garden, and turned it into a drawing for his young son Sierk. Thus Miffy was born.

The simple pictograms in the Miffy books “have room for imagination and fantasy. They’re very clear lines,” says Evaline Reeskamp, education officer with the museum.

Bruna himself retired in 2011, and now the Utrecht museum has faithfully preserved his fastidiously neat, light-filled top floor studio where he worked for 30 years, and opened it up to the public to visit.

In celebration of South Asian art

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/In-celebration-of-South-Asian-art-30278997.html

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The third Dhaka art summit is declared a success

A sampling of South Asia’s most avant-garde arts went on display last week as the Bangladeshi capital played host to the third Dhaka Art Summit (DAS), which is billed as the biggest event for contemporary arts in South Asia.

As the largest non-commercial and research-based exhibition platform for South Asian Art, DAS offered a cornucopia of diverse arts including paintings, video, installation, photography, performance, architecture, film, critical writing and panel discussion.

The event, which ran from February 5 through Monday, saw more than 600 global art connoisseurs, curators, researchers, critics and enthusiasts turn out for the event along with 300 leading artists, curators, and writers from across South Asia.

“To develop DAS as a research platform, we invited curators from different institutions like Tate Modern, Centre Pompidou, the Guggenheim, and the Kunsthalle Zurich to extend their work deeper into South Asia. Works from the National Gallery archive, the National Museum of Bangladesh, and various private collections are also on display at the exhibition,” said Nadia Samdani, president of the co-organiser, Samdani Art Foundation.

“Many enigmatic things happen around us and we don’t know the reasons for them. Some images simply evoke pure joy and a sense of beauty in our hearts,” said actor, entertainer and politician Asaduzzaman Noor,

“This inexplicable yet easily communicable feeling helps us understand art. We are proud to be a part of the world’s largest display of South Asian art in Bangladesh thanks to the noble initiative of the SAF. The DAS offers a unique opportunity for artistic exchange and interaction between our artists and the artists of the world. I think, this exchange will help our arts and artists reach beyond border,” he added.

The six curated exhibitions at DAS included 17 “Solo Projects”, curated by the SAF’s artistic director Diana Campbell Betancourt; “Rewind” (highlighting 12 South-Asian master artists active before the 1980s); “The Missing One”, curated by Nada Raza; “Mining Warm Data” curated by Diana Campbell Betancourt; “Architecture in Bangladesh”, curated by Aurlien Lemonier; “Performance Pavilion: Shifting Sands Sifting Hands”, curated by Nikhil Chopra, Madhavi Gore and Jana Prepeluh; and “Soul Searching”, curated by Md Muniruzzaman.

There were also durational performances, films, panel discussions, book launches, a children’s workshop and a critical writing ensemble held in collaboration with the Office of Contemporary Art Norway and Pro Helvetia-Swiss Arts Council.

“Through the showcase of art and its diverse facets in this platform, Bangladeshi art reaches the international arena, augmenting country’s image. I hope the number of foreign tourists will double at the 2018 summit,” said Civil Aviation and Tourism Minister Rashed Khan Menon.

DAS was organised in conjunction with Unesco’s celebration of February 21 as the International Mother Language Day, which was initiated in 1999. This year, a sculpture based on the Language Movement by Mrinal Haque is on a month-long display in front of the United Nations in New York.

“This is the best and the largest art summit of Asia and we take great pride in it. We will continue to support it all the way,” said Ama Muhit, the Bangladeshi finance minister who is also an art connoisseur.