Truly Thai spirits

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STAGE REVIEW

'Dancing with Death' is inspired by the annual Phi ta khon festival in Loei. Photo/Bernie Ng

‘Dancing with Death’ is inspired by the annual Phi ta khon festival in Loei. Photo/Bernie Ng

Pichet Klunchun's 'Death with Death' wows audiences in Singapore. Photo/Bernie Ng

Pichet Klunchun’s ‘Death with Death’ wows audiences in Singapore. Photo/Bernie Ng

Pichet Klunchun himself steps out on his own in the latter part of 'Dancing with Death'. Photo/Bernie Ng

Pichet Klunchun himself steps out on his own in the latter part of ‘Dancing with Death’. Photo/Bernie Ng

Pichet Klunchun’s “Death with Death” wows audiences in Singapore

The Pichet Klunchun Dance Company returned earlier this month to Singapore’s Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, where a few years ago as artists-in-residence, he and his troupe developed “Black and White”, a compelling contemporary dance work now on tour and which helped company members further develop their artistic and personal bonding. The Esplanade’s support continues with the commissioning of “Dancing with Death”, the company’s largest work to date.

This was a true company work as, except for the latter part, in which Pichet stepped out and through his movements became a spiritual leader conducting this celebration of life and death, but always remained part of this tightly knit company.

Taking inspiration from Loei’s Phi ta khon festival, Buddhist teachings, works by late world-class choreographers like Kazu Ono and Pina Bausch as well as each individual dancer’s background, the work risked being an intercultural hodgepodge. Instead it was a keenly unified performance that reflected the many influences on Thai culture from past to present.

The venue was also experimenting, as the set featuring a large yellow oval with many slopes was too large for the theatre studio where “Black and White” was staged, and the audience’s sightline in the main theatre wouldn’t fit either. The Singaporean producer then turned the upstage area of the main theatre’s huge stage into a medium-sized theatre. The new temporary space nicely fit the performance but the slope degree of the stand was too low and many in the front section didn’t get the angle Pichet wanted. With the oval shape of the slope stage and the fact that he wanted to involve the audience, at least spiritually, I’m wondering if a theatre-in-the-round format might better suit.

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Flynow’s designer Piyaporn Bhongse-tong’s costumes showed the sharp contrast between the Phi ta khon-inspired costumes and the off-white attire of the dancers when they represented the spirits. Working in a totally new space, Japanese lighting designer Asako Miura’s job wasn’t simple and while all the dramatic requirements were met successfully, I would have liked to see the dancers float more up and down the slopes. Her compatriot, sound designer Hiroshi Iguchi, keenly combined the soundscape he recorded in Dan Sai and Northeastern Thai tunes led by the khaen, a reed mouth organ, with electronic sound.

Five days before the Southeast Asian premiere of “Dancing with Death”, Pichet conducted a two-hour workshop with local dancers, choreographers and advanced dance students. I wasn’t present at that workshop but like the rest of the audience watched as many of them walked from backstage and the audience stand to join and blend in with Pichet Klunchun Dance Company dancers towards the end. Their movements, and more importantly their celebratory spirit, were an excellent reminder of the Dan Sai people, who are not professional dancers, at the Phi ta khon festival. This once again provided proof that sheer understanding can always accompany skills in performing arts, no matter whether these are traditional or contemporary.

LIFE AFTER ‘DEATH’

– Pichet Klunchun Dance Company didn’t find the funding to bring “Dancing with Death” to Thailand so the company will take a brief pause.

– Next year, “Dancing with Death” will head Down Under, to the Arts Centre Melbourne’s Asia-Pacific Triennial of Performing Arts and the Adelaide Festival Centre’s OzAsia Festival. For details, check Facebook.com/PKLifeWork.

– Back in Singapore, the Esplanade is hosting the first “Super Japan – Japanese Festival of Arts” until Sunday. For more details, check http://www.Esplanade.com.

 

Bae gets the bird

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CONTEMPORARY ART

Platform-L Contemporary Art Centre in Eonjuro, Gangnamgu, Seoul. Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

Platform-L Contemporary Art Centre in Eonjuro, Gangnamgu, Seoul. Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

'Abstract Verb – Can You Remember?' by Bae Young-whan Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

‘Abstract Verb – Can You Remember?’ by Bae Young-whan Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

'Speech, Thought, Meaning' by Bae Young-whan. Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

‘Speech, Thought, Meaning’ by Bae Young-whan. Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

Photo/PlatformL Contemporary Art Centre

A new art centre in Seoul promotes contemporary art

A new art centre dedicated to showcasing contemporary art and fostering young artists opened Thursday in Sinsa-dong, Seoul.

To mark the opening, the Platform-L Contemporary Art Centre, founded by Taejin International – which manufactures and sells leather goods under the brand Louis Quatorze – is holding two exhibitions that show multimedia works of Korean artist Bae Young-whan and Chinese artist Yang Fudong.

“We aim to make the space one that offers a lot of opportunities for young artists – whether they are designers, architects, curators or art critics. Anyone engaged with contemporary art forms can share and evaluate ideas here,” the centre’s director Park Manu says.

According to Park, Taejin International has been an art patron for a decade, sponsoring a number of arts projects, including the 2014 National Museum of Korea exhibition of masterpieces from the Musee d’Orsay in Paris and the Seoul screenings of “Factory Complex” by Korean filmmaker Im Heung-soon which won the Silver Lion at the Venice Biennale in 2015.

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The new seven-storey building, designed by architect Lee Jeong-hoon of Joho Architecture, is a space for multidisciplinary art – visual art displays, film, performance, theatre, music and dance. The centre features exhibition space, a lecture room for public programs and seminars and a versatile live hall that can showcase films and dance performances.

The exhibitions celebrating the opening are solo shows of Bae and Yang who explore contemporary lives and people through photography, video and sound.

Bae, whose works have been featured at the Venice Biennale in 2005 and the Sharjah Biennale in 2013 and other international exhibitions, features birds as self-portraits of people living in contemporary society in his sculptures and videos. On show at the Platform-L Contemporary Art Centre is a sculpture of a blindfolded parrot emitting sounds of world news broadcast through speakers as if they were the sound of the parrot’s singing.

In a four-channel video installation, a dancer wearing a feather costume dances along to drum beats that makes the dance look like a primitive movement, or a street dance, depending on the viewer’s perspective.

“I wondered whether we are living in a time when we just can’t fly, or suppress our desire to fly,” said Bae, during the press preview. “The desire to fly is represented through the birds in the exhibition.”

Shanghai-based artist-filmmaker Yang Fudong showcases a five-channel video installation that screens his new film “The Coloured Sky: New Women II.” The work portrays the desires of young women aspiring to become movie stars as a metaphor for a sentiment that was prevalent in China under the influence of Western culture in the early 1900s.

“I imagined a picture where a young girl longs for a distant future,” says Yang, who shot the film against artificial settings of a beach, desert and hills.

The art centre will hold four to five exhibitions annually and collect commissioned artworks.

“The direction of the art centre lies in the long-running process of the work we do with young artists. We hope this place will become a creation centre that allows artists and curators to produce creative works and projects,” Park says.

 

Risk averse

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CANNES FILM FESTIVAL 2016

Director Jodie Foster attends an afternoon photocall for her new film 'Money Monster' at the Cannes Film Festival. Photo/AFP

Director Jodie Foster attends an afternoon photocall for her new film ‘Money Monster’ at the Cannes Film Festival. Photo/AFP

Big studios won’t take chances on female filmmakers, says Jodie Foster

Jodie Foster, whose latest directorial effort “Money Monster”, premiered last week at the Cannes Film Festival, says many Hollywood bosses still mistrust female directors and say they are “too great a risk to take”.

The Oscar-winning actress, who began her career at the age of three and is one of a handful of females in Hollywood to carve out a successful directing career, highlighted the challenges women face in the industry at a conference on the sidelines of Cannes.

She noted “drastic changes” on film sets from her years as a child actor, when the only women on set were the person playing her mother or the make-up artist.

But “the one arena where it hasn’t really changed at all is directing for mainstream studio movies”, she said.

In the US, only nine per cent of directors are women, according to a San Diego university study last year. Another study released this month by the European Women’s Audiovisual Network found that only one film in five in Europe was made by a female director.

Foster said the turbulent economy and changing technologies make studio bosses more risk-averse than ever.

“I think studio executives are scared, period, [and] for some reason women are lumped into that category of ‘too great a risk to take’.”

However Foster, who won Oscars for her roles in “Silence of the Lambs” and “The Accused”, admits that having grown up in the industry it was easier for her to become part of the boy’s club than for other women struggling to make it.

The 53-year-old was taking part in the “Women in Motion” conference at Cannes. The series will also feature Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis.

Foster has directed several feature films, as well as episodes for such television series as “Orange is the New Black” and “House of Cards”. Her latest feature “Money Monster”, starring George Clooney and Julia Roberts, premiered at Cannes last Thursday.

She said she did not think there was “some big plot” by men trying to put women down in the film business, but it was more about being stuck in traditional models.

She described the difficulty in placing trust in a first-time director, and placing the vision of a multi-million-dollar film in their hands.

“Everyone, before they shake hands to bring a director on kind of quakes in their boots because they don’t know what is in front of them,” she said. “I was once in a movie where a director – who was a really smart guy – spent the entire movie in his bathroom calling his wife.”

“You’re looking for the best bet and it is hard to look at a face that is 100 per cent different to yours and that you carry traditional perceptions about and you worry you are going to make a bad choice.”

She said there were many scripts out there written for diverse women, they were just not getting financed.

Foster was asked about the perception that audiences don’t want to see movies about women.

“I dont know who those people are. I want to look at human lives. I don’t know anyone who would be disinterested in half of the human race.”

Foster said that as a female director, she was able to see herself in all of her characters, even the men, something that was harder for male directors to do.

“One of my biggest pet peeves as an actor, whenever a male writer was searching for motivation for a women they would always just go to rape. It was ridiculous.

“They were uninterested in any kind of complex merging with the female character.”

Party girl Ying Yae says marriage too distracting

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SOOPSIP

Ying Yae and Song

Ying Yae and Song

After just three months of marriage, Internet idol Nontaporn “Ying Yae” Teerawattanasuk and surgeon Nopparat “Song” Rattanawaraha have announced they’ve separated, citing that saddest of reasons, irreconcilable differences.

It seems like only yesterday (in fact it was Valentine’s Day) when we congratulated the couple on marrying after nine years of dating. They tied the knot in an extravagant, fairytale-like wedding.

Ying Yae, 29, who was a “pretty” before she found fame on the Web, tells our sister newspaper Kom Chad Luek that troll chatter on the social media about infidelity spoiling their marriage is simply untrue. They’d simply realised they lead completely opposite lifestyles, she says.

“I guess I am a very different person now than I was nine years ago when I started dating Song.” Ying Yae says while hinting at the 10-year age gap between them.

“I was too young to know what I really wanted and I found myself doing what I was told without questioning because Song was much more mature than I was.

“Now that I’ve grown up and know myself better, I realise I’m the outgoing type and Song is the complete opposite. He hates it when I go out and then come home late. It breaks my heart that I realised this too late – I shouldn’t have agreed to marry him in the first place.”

And Song says in another interview that they tried hard to compromise, but the difference was just too great. “It won’t work,” he says. “We both know it and there’s no need to push. I’d like to take a few days to talk things through with Yae and then we should have a joint announcement to clear things up.”

Joey Boy turns green

How about those pictures on Facebook of rapper Joey Boy meeting officials at Parliament House and looking very serious? No, he wasn’t having his attitude adjusted and he’s not pondering a jump into politics. He was there to get backing for his forest-preservation campaign in Nan.

“I would never have thought in this lifetime I’d be having a meeting at Parliament House,” he text-chuckled later on Facebook before turning serious and asking for everyone’s help with “this crucial task”.

The 41-year-old music maker, having recently become a publisher as well with his own outdoor-lifestyle-travel magazine, Tan, raised Bt600,000 for the tree project last month. He’ll be getting his hands dirty, quite literally, helping plant more trees in the degraded woods up North.

His good deed comes in response to a call for help from Nan Governor Suwat Promsunant, who been slammed on the “Take Back Thailand” Facebook page for not stopping the destruction of trees. Fuming at comments suggesting the salaries paid provincial authorities are “a waste of tax money”, Suwat asked for “actual aid, constructive advice and not just yapping” in efforts to restore a half-million rai of woods.

The challenge was rap music to Joey Boy’s ears. “I’m not from Nan and I’m not an Internet troll,” he says, “but if the governor needs help, I will give him my best and I urge everyone to take part.”

Travel plans made PERFECT

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SPECIAL FEATURE

Expedia is looking to use your facial muscle response to help make your holidays happier

A RECENT SURVEY by a British marketing firm revealed that a massive 80 per cent of us today book our vacations online and that nine out of 10 of us use the Internet to research all aspects of what we can expect to find at our chosen destination.

While Expedia Inc, a leading global player in the online travel market, is well aware of the figures, it has also come to understand that the planning of a holiday is a surprisingly stressful endeavour. To try and make the lead-up to a well-earned vacation to lessen those levels of stress, it has turned to the medical world.

The travel giant recently flew journalists from all over the world to its headquarters in the US state of Washington to introduce its new Innovation Lab, which uses electromyography or EMG to understand how and why people shop and book their holidays.

EMG, which is used extensively in the medical world to assess the health of muscles and the motor neurons and to some extent, in the video game design process to gauge player emotions as they proceed through the levels, assesses facial muscle movement to determine the subjects’ emotional state while browsing through their website.

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It’s an expensive process but, says Scott Jones, vice president of Expedia’s Global Product Design and User Experience division, the results are worth every cent.

“A holiday sounds great fun, but planning it is usually not,” Jones says. “It is expensive and it involves a lot of decision making, pressure and expectations. Our research found that people tend to shop around online for months in advance, looking for the best deals out there and making sure they’re taking the right decision. On average, holidaymakers run at least 48 searches for flights and 22 for accommodation before making bookings – that’s a lot of effort. After all, unlike other e-commerce products, you can’t return a holiday, and you have no way of knowing how good your choice is until you’re there.

“Our job, besides giving them a vast selection of products to choose from, is to make sure our service on all platforms benefits them the most, and assist them in finding what they’re looking for at ease with the least stress, so they can finally get to the most fun part of the trip: planning what you’re going to do where they get there. Obviously you can’t plan anything until you know how you’re getting there and where you’ll be staying,” Jones says.

In the lab, participants of random background, age and gender, are asked to browse through the Expedia website to look for flights, accommodation and whatever else they consider essential on their trips. They are hooked up to an eye tracker and face sensors that measure movement of the muscles around the forehead and mouth – ones that indicate emotions more prominently. Specialists, sitting in an adjacent room, then analyse their emotions as they go through their quests, and ask them questions to confirm the results.

“From the experiments we have some ideas of why a consumer is frustrated. He or she can’t find the filter she’s looking for, tries to figure out two room types that look exactly the same but whose prices are significantly different, or wants more information about the location of the hotel. We then take this information to our product development team and figure out how to serve our customers better and give them better experiences.” Jones explains.

“We also run tests and experiments across departments because every little detail counts, and after all, a good holiday is made up of the little things.”

In 2015 alone, Expedia spent a staggering $830 million on tech and content. And later this year, Expedia will set up another lab in Singapore to run studies for the Asia-Pacific.

Expedia, of course, serves more than just users; it also has to keep its suppliers happy. And the numbers are high. To accommodate the demands of more than 15 million flight shoppers and 28 million hotel shoppers on Expedia across the website, mobile app and other devices in 33 countries, Expedia offers 269,000 hotels and 1.2 million vacation rentals in 200-plus countries, 200,000 cruise staterooms to book online, 475 airlines, 150 car rental companies and 15,000 unique activities in hundreds of destinations.

“The suppliers must have a good experience of doing business with us too if we are to make the market lively and beneficial to all,” explains Benoit Jolin, vice president for LPS Global Product.

“We encourage competition and interaction between users and suppliers to further develop the products and hence enhance the consumers’ experiences through the new feature, Expedia Partner Central.”

Launched in January, the rollout is designed as an easy-to-use platform that opens the lines of communication between booked guests and hoteliers via a message centre. Guests can start a conversation by asking a question or submitting a special request at time of booking. Alternatively, the hotelier can reach out directly to the guest.

“We give the suppliers real time feedback from customers, so they can prevent those “bad reviews” from ever happening.” Jolin says.

“Also, we help the suppliers to tread through the market more wisely by showing them how customers look at their products, how prices change, who they have lost their bookings to and other information that ensures they serve their customers better and know how to take advantage of the market.”

On the Web:

http://www.expedia.com

http://www.expedia.co.th

http://www.facebook.com/Expedia.co.th

 

Club Scene

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AFTER DARK

Paradise Bangkok

Paradise Bangkok

Find good parties in Bangkok

House in the house

Get moving to stripped-back house and tech tonight at Glow on Sukhumvit Soi 23 as DJs Felix Braun and Koish spin back to back into the wee hours. Bangkok-based Moreno has a global rep for eclectic and driving sound |blending house with disco, soul and funk, while Munich-born Koish sets the perfect platform for the night to evolve. Entry with a drink is Bt250. Call (086) 614 3355.

G at the Mango

The latest G-Spot Night Party is at Mango Tree on the River at Yodpiman tomorrow, with a beautiful sunset, Pangina Heals onstage and Bt100 drinks. Be there by 6 for free-flowing Stoli and Sumerbys accompanied by ’90s beats courtesy of DJ Yui. Call (087) 015 6600.

Art bar toasts a year

The 23 Bar & Gallery on Soi Nana in Chinatown is celebrating its first anniversary tomorrow with various Bangkok-based artists contributing, some whose exhibitions there helped make the first year a success. There’s no admission charge. Au revoir, Molam

Molam International Band

The Paradise Bangkok Molam International Band is ready for a set at Studio Lam on Sukhumvit Soi 51 on Wednesday before heading to |Europe for a month-long tour. The beat goes on from 9.30 till late. Cover charge is Bt300.

Boogie and burgers

Whiteline on Silom Soi 8 is hosting its next YoMoFo session on Thursday with music, suds and burgers. RhuBarb & CusTard bring on the indie groups including the Ginkz, Degaruda, Count the Thief and Cold Black Vines while craft beer is poured. The Bt300 |admission fee gets you a Thai craft beer. Call (087) 061 1117.

Where books meet bullets

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CONTEMPORARY ART

Books banned in other Asian countries are leafted through at the Reading Room. Nation/Thanis Sudto

Books banned in other Asian countries are leafted through at the Reading Room. Nation/Thanis Sudto

Sutthirat Supaparinya's art installation consists of shredded photocopies of banned books and souvenir bullets from a Thai military camp. Nation/Thanis Sudto

Sutthirat Supaparinya’s art installation consists of shredded photocopies of banned books and souvenir bullets from a Thai military camp. Nation/Thanis Sudto

Chit Phumisak's 'The Face of Thai Feudalism', seen at lower right, used to be banned here. Nation/Thanis Sudto

Chit Phumisak’s ‘The Face of Thai Feudalism’, seen at lower right, used to be banned here. Nation/Thanis Sudto

Banning books is a habit with Asian governments, as the art installation “Paradise of the Blind” proves

It looks like somebody’s shot up all the books in the Reading Room off Silom Road. A second glance reassures you, though, that you’re actually just looking at an art installation.

The library that enjoys being an art gallery is hosting an exhibition on banned

books, “Paradise of the Blind”. The title comes from a novel that happens to be prohibited reading in Vietnam.

Chiang Mai-based artist Sutthirat Supaparinya has loaded a long table with 55 fiction and non-fiction works and a bunch of comic books – the subjects ranging from fantasy to democracy, religion to gender issues – and they’re all banned somewhere, mainly in Asian countries.

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“Whenever I come across a banned book, I like to read it to find out why it’s banned,” says the 43-year-old Sutthirat. “I started keeping a list and there were so many books banned in Asia! I searched for the titles in libraries and bookstores here and abroad so I could read them.”

Not surprisingly, she says, “a lot of the books banned in Southeast Asia are related to politics”. If the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations are looking for unifying elements, she says, they always have censorship.

Sutthirat delves into not just prohibitions but also the reproduction and destruction of books and the abuse of power and the law.

Before the police descend on the Reading Room with handcuffs and gasoline, it should be noted that all the banned material was legally acquired here. None of the intact books is currently under ban in Thailand.

In fact there was a soldier in civilian clothes at the opening, making sure the art didn’t threaten national security.

The one Thai title on display was once forbidden but has been restored to good graces – “Chom Na Sakdina Thai” (“The Face of Thai Feudalism”) by the late democracy leader Chit Phumisak, written in 1957 under the pseudonym Somsamai Srisootarapan. Reflecting shifting ideologies, it was banned in 1977 and yet is now on the government’s list of 100 recommended reads.

Sutthirat photocopied many of the banned books and ran the pages through a shredder, creating an off-white mountain of destroyed thoughts and ideas that she then moulded into art – a fresh concept emerging from all those that were lost.

Slim curtains of high-calibre bullets hang like wind chimes from the ceiling, aimed squarely at the pulped books and comics. The ordnance was purchased as a “souvenir” at a Thai military camp.

That some of the books on view are banned comes as a surprise. “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland”, the Lewis Carroll classic, was once verboten in China, and Singapore formerly took a dim view of “And Tango Makes Three”, a children’s book about penguin same-sex parents.

Indonesia won’t let its citizens read “All That is Gone” by one of its citizens, Pramoedya Ananta Toer, and you still can’t buy Salman Rushdie’s “The Satanic Verses” in many countries. Nothing by Rushdie is allowed in Malaysia. South Korea has barred a slew of books including Noam Chomsky’s “Year 501”.

Sutthirat opened her show on May 5, the 50th anniversary of Chit Phumisak’s death. Among the dozens of keen local and foreign readers discussing the issues was a soldier in plainclothes, there to ask her about Chit’s book and the intent of the show. No further action was taken, and the rest of the crowd was highly supportive.

“It’s a fantastic show raising the issue of censorship in this region,” said Vuth Lyno, an art curator from Cambodia. “In my country the government doesn’t care much about English-language books, but it does control Khmer publishing and blocks criticism of the government on any issue, not just political issues. Religious and sexual matter is taboo in Cambodia.”

“Paradise of the Blind” is the first instalment in “Sleepover”, a six-month series designed to turn the library-gallery into a “temporary platform for critical engagement”. It’s the brainchild of the Reading Room’s director, Narawan Kyo Pathomvat, who researched self-organised initiatives in contemporary art and culture in Japan on a fellowship from the Japan Foundation.

“I had the chance to rethink the Reading Room programme and came up with this idea of inviting individuals and organisations involved in socio-cultural matters to use the space,” she says.

“I’m really hoping to open up the Reading Room for multi-disciplinary exchanges and extend a sense of community and co-ownership for both practitioners and audience.”

Coming next month is “Southeast of Now”, in which Southeast Asian art historians and researchers will discuss what’s happening in contemporary art in the region. Patrick Flores from the Philippines and Keiko Sei from Japan will give the lead addresses, and the Reading Room will build a corner of books and catalogues on local art history.

In July writer-illustrator Teepagorn Wutipitayamongkol will be there, talking about the boom in popularity of board games, and SeaWrite Award winner Prabda Yoon will examine issues in contemporary literature in discussion with invited foreign writers.

September will be devoted to the new media, urbanisation and human rights in events involving the Social Technology Institute, the Boonmee Lab and the Thai Netizens Network. They intend to create an online application with which Bangkok residents can report problems to the authorities as they arise.

And, in October, acclaimed filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul will be given the stage to explain how the visual arts can deal with social taboos and political criticism.

To sleep, to dream

The “Sleepover” project runs through October at the Reading Room on Silom Soi 19.

“Paradise of the Blind” by Sutthirat Supaparinya continues through May 29.

June has “Southeast of Now” with Southeast Asian art historians. July has writer-blogger-illustrator Teepagorn Wutipitayamongkol, and August has writer Prabda Yoon.

In September the Thai Netizens Network, Social Technology Institute and Boonmee Lab are lined up, and in October it’s filmmaker Apichatpong Weerasethakul.

 

Now casting for Leicester City the movie

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Now-casting-for-Leicester-City-the-movie-30285722.html

SOOPSIP

Leicester City Football Club’s triumph in the English Premier League just one short year after being relegated to the lower Championship tier has been called a miracle and a fairytale.

Leicester City Football Club’s triumph in the English Premier League just one short year after being relegated to the lower Championship tier has been called a miracle and a fairytale. A description that’s certainly more apt is “Hollywood dream”, because the movie folks are likely to be all over it.

Writing in the Guardian, Andrew Pulver offered his ideal casting for a possible film version of the Foxes’ shocking leap to the pinnacle of the sport.

Leicester City’s Italian manager Claudio Ranieri, says Pulver, really ought to be portrayed by Tom Hanks, who’s neither Italian nor British but is at least a major fan of football (yes, the English kind). On the other hand, Hanks roots for Aston Villa, who are now taking their turn being dumped into the Championship league after a lousy season on the pitch.

A reporter asked Hanks what he thought about Aston Villa situation. “What are you trying to do,” he replied, make me cry on TV?” He was just being loyal to Aston Villa, but then he admitted that, way back at the beginning of the season, he’d actually placed a 100pound bet on Leicester City to win the title. The odds at the time were 5,000/1 against that happening.

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“So I think I’ll be okay,” Hanks gloated. By “okay”, he meant he’d won half a million pounds – assuming he wasn’t joking (or fibbing).

Pulver’s choice for the actor to play striker Jamie Vardy, who’s vault to superstardom has earned him a spot on the England national squad, is Tom Hiddleston, whose movie is “HighRise” is now in local cinemas.

Pulver suggested Jackie Chan, of all people, to play Shinji Okazaki, the only Asian in the Foxes lineup, ignoring the fact that Chan is in his 60s.

And if you think that’s crazy, he has an even more bizarre notion for the actor to portray Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, chairman of King Power Duty Free, which owns Leicester City. Since no one outside the club’s boardroom knows what he looks like, Pulver reasons unreasonably, how about Tilda Swinton? Yes, she’s a she, but she’s getting raves playing a very old man, the Ancient One, in the new movie “Doctor Strange”.

Pulver is just being funny (we think), but a lot of people are miffed about Swinton playing the Ancient One because in the Doc Strange books he’s very much an Asian. It’s the Hollywood whitewashing issue all over again.

Male or female, Asian or Caucasian, we’d much prefer that the mooted movie shows how a Thai billionaire bought the club and moulded historic victory from it. And, if the casting were up to us, we’d go for Nirut Sirichanya, who’s already done plenty of foreign films, not just in Hong Kong but also Hollywood.

 

Beauty in a jar

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Beauty-in-a-jar-30285721.html

BEAUTY

Fran Johnson

Fran Johnson

England’s highly reputed organic skincare brand, Neal’s Yard Remedies, finds a new home in Bangkok

WITH AN increasing number of women reporting allergies, no matter how slight, to the chemicals contained in beauty products, it’s not surprising that organic skincare brands are grabbing a growing |portion of the market.

The latest to arrive in Thailand is Neal’s Yard Remedies, a British brand with a strong ingredients policy that follows specific criteria for safety, sustainability and efficacy. The brand recently launched at Siam Paragon.

A firm believer in the dictum that holistic health brings out the beauty from within, owner Peter Kindersley, who acquired the brand from its founder Romy Fraser in 2005, points out that plants grown in their natural ecosystem are the healthiest and most vibrant of ingredients.

A small shop opened in 1981 by Fraser in Neal’s Yard, Covent Garden in the very heart of London, Neal’s Yard Remedies today has more than 50 branches throughout the UK, and has expanded to 21 countries on five continents. Its success has been guaranteed by more than 50 awards from leading organisations and publications.

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Fran Johnson, manager of natural health for Neal’s Yard Remedies, was in Bangkok for the grand opening and celebrated the event by holding a workshop on the brand’s highly reputed essential oil.

Since joining the company at its factory in Dorset 11 years ago, Johnson has been responsible for developing new products, and told XP that she particularly enjoys the challenge and limitations that using essential oils can bring/

“Not many people realise we smell all the time and the sense of smell is strongly linked to our memory. For example, vanilla reminds many of us of the kitchen, taking us back to the days when our mothers baked cakes at home.

“So essentials oil not only work physically on the skin but the fragrances themselves have emotional effects. So when you use an essential oil product, you get double the treatment,” she says.

Essential oils contain volatile aroma compounds from plants and are extracted from the flowers, the leaf, the stem and the root. Each essential oil is made of hundreds of natural chemical constitutions. Each constitution has the smell of the oil and one or more specific activities. Frankincense, for example, has fantastic constitutions that rejuvenate and tone the skin, while rose extract helps to nourish and reduce inflammation.

“Essential oils have been used medicinally for centuries, More recently, they have become part of the pharmacopoeia for wellbeing and wellness because they work in many different ways and have different benefits as well. So you can use essential oil for treating everyday wellness as well as long-term illnesses. You can use them in the bath or in a diffuser. You don’t need a degree to be able to use them, though you must study their safety background,” Johnson explains.

“Ethics are the very foundation of the brand and our focus on essential oils and herbs has not changed. While we do update our formulations in term of texture, we don’t need to alter fragrances.”

In comparison to other natural derivatives, organic vegetable sources are not processed. “Certain processing can release toxins and at Neal’s Yard we don’t follow any of those processes,” Johnson says.

“Products still work even when they are processed. It’s all down to personal ethics. We choose to use organic raw materials where we can because of the lack of chemicals. We choose to support a non-toxic lifestyle. That’s who we are and organic certification is the way we ensure and prove what we are doing.”

Neil’s Yard Remedies already had a following among Thais. Lifestyle guru Ploy Chariyaves fell in love with the products – as well as the brand’s vibrant deep blue bottles – during a visit to Covent Garden in the late ’80s.

“Personally, I like everything that is organic. Most people think that it takes a long time to see the results of using organic products but that’s not true. I’m very impressed with the Rose toner, the smell is just like fresh roses and feels very clean too,” Ploy says.

Young celebrity Anutara Kiengsiri says she likes the gentleness of the Frankincense collection to protect and tone her skin. “I’ve been a fan since my days studying in England,” she says.

 

Growing pains in Singapore

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/life/Growing-pains-in-Singapore-30285720.html

ART

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The art market takes steps back, but experts says all it really needs is time to develop

WITH THE CLOSURE of a commercial art museum and the exit of several galleries and art fairs from Singapore over the last two years, a persistent cloud of gloom appears to be hanging over the city-state’s art market.

The Singapore Pinacotheque de Paris, plagued by poor attendance and financial challenges, bowed out last month, less than a year after it opened.

The Gillman Barracks gallery cluster saw the departure of two tenants earlier this year, following an exodus in April last year – when nearly a third of the 17 galleries then chose not to renew their leases, citing poor sales and visitor numbers.

Two art fairs, Singapore Art Fair and Milan Image Art and Design Fair Singapore, have also been missing from the scene after high-profile debuts in 2014.

Industry observers say the spate of closings points to growing pains in a still developing art market, but they are mostly optimistic that the market will take off in time, if efforts to grow the visual arts scene continue.

While the economic value of the visual arts industry has increased over a 10-year period, it belies the struggle of galleries, such as Silverlens from the Philippines, which left Gillman Barracks last year. The gallery’s director, Isa Lorenzo, 41, says the art cluster, which opened in 2012 with 13 galleries, “was a case of too much, too soon”.

“The weakness was that there wasn’t much of an audience. We were aware there was a lack of a ready audience, but we didn’t realise the full extent of it,” Lorenzo says.

Malaysia-based gallerist Richard Koh, 51, who closed his eponymous gallery at Artspace@Helutrans in Tanjong Pagar Distripark last year, echoes the sentiment that Singapore has a “very small” art market, given its modest pool of collectors.

Yet it is this budding art market that drew the Affordable Art Fair to set up shop in Singapore in 2010. Its mission, says the fair’s regional managing director for Asia, Camilla Hewitson, 37, is to provide a platform that serves as a “starting point” for art buyers and artists.

“That Singapore is a young market is a benefit to us because it gives us the opportunity to convert people into art lovers,” she says.

Douwe Cramer, 55, show director of the Singapore Contemporary art fair, which launched this year, is equally upbeat about the potential for fairs such as his, noting that the country ranks among the richest in the world and is a major centre for private wealth management.

Experts agree that what the art market here is time to develop fully.

Art expert Matthias Arndt, 48, who has a gallery in Gillman Barracks, says: “Singapore is only 50 years old. Art and culture need time to develop and the art market in Singapore is still developing.

“We are seeing growing pains, but we have to build on what we have successfully created and, with the dedication of the galleries, fairs, art institutions and art associations, and the support of collectors, I believe we can achieve great success.”

Not all businesses in the art market, however, have the wherewithal to stay for the long haul.

Ute Meta Bauer, 56, founding director of the NTU Centre for Contemporary Art Singapore, which anchors the art cluster at Gillman Barracks, says some of the galleries which were in the area told her they would like to return, but in a different capacity, perhaps as pop-up galleries.

She is confident that Singapore’s art ecosystem, which has a “healthy foundation”, will allow the art market that is part of the ecology of artists, galleries, museums, collectors and audience to grow. “We now have National Gallery Singapore, free access to museums, a bigger group of society that sees art as interesting and a solid group of collectors here and in the region,” Bauer says.

It is for this reason that Silverlens continues as part of Singapore art scene. It held a nine-day pop-up exhibition featuring Filipino artist Gabriel Barredo at Artspace at Helutrans in November to coincide with the opening of the National Gallery Singapore, which drew artists, curators and art lovers from around the world.

Similarly, Koh’s gallery in Malaysia continues to take part in art fairs here because he is able to meet and sell to regional collectors at these events.

Indeed, many art industry observers, such as Bala Starr, 50, director of the Institute of Contemporary Arts Singapore at the Lasalle College of the Arts, believe Singapore’s strength as an art market is influenced by its place in the wider art world.

“The art scene here needs to be connected to the world. Commerce occurs in the context of the wider scene. The biggest advantage for Singapore is to form a positive and consistent reputation as a backer of the arts in Asia,” she says.