Showing posts with label Mekong Arts and Media Fest 2009. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mekong Arts and Media Fest 2009. Show all posts

16 February 2010

ข่าวเทศกาลแม่โขงจากเดอะเนชั่น

MEKONG: Where cultures’ paths CONVERGE
Posted by dance_and_theatre , The Nation


The Mekong Arts and Media Festival weaves disparate visions into a brighter future.

The Mekong Arts and Media Festival is a well-organised, multifaceted festival that proves how dance and theatre serve not only cultural purposes, but social, educational and economic ones.

Attended by a few hundred artists, students, drama teachers, public officials and cultural and development workers from 11 countries, as well as a few thousand Cambodian spectators, the five-day festival in Phnom Penh in November was set up by the Philippine Educational Theatre Association's (PETA) Mekong Partnership Programme. in collaboration with Phare Ponleu Selpak (PPS), Save the Children UK’s Cross Border Program, and the Center for Community Health Research and Development. The main support came from Rockefeller Foundation, and additionally from European Union, Japan Foundation, Heinrich Boell Foundation-Southeast Asia, Terres des Hommes and Ambassade au France de Cambodge.


Unlike many Asian dance and theatre conferences held by European and American scholars, this was by Asian artists and cultural workers, and aimed for their peers—no academic jargons were used and ample time was allowed for informal discussion after each morning’s presentation. Among the topics were, for example, roles of arts and culture in social development, new media and forms of artistic expressions, fusion of traditional and contemporary forms, as well as partnership and support for creative communities.

I've been to many performing-arts festivals in the region, but the Mekong Festival stood out despite its meagre budget by offering traditional, classical and contemporary work that communicated coherently from a stage without hierarchy.
The works were created with true passion, and without concern for being "world class"--the classic term for begging invitations to Europe and America.

Performances by senior members of Burma's Mandalay Marionette and young members of the host country's Apsara Arts Association and Cambodian Living Arts were proof that classical pieces will survive into the future, with substantial support from both government and private and both local and foreign agencies.

Cambodia's Performing Arts Department’s senior artist Em Theay, her daughter Thong Kim Ann and granddaughter Nam Narim presented one of the festival’s most memorable works Mother's Hope.

Through classical and contemporary dance movements and a monologue, the performance straightforwardly and effectively demonstrated the necessity of preserving classical dance in the face of political interference and foreign influences.

Dance theatre productions, filled with jaw-dropping circus acts, by Cambodia's PPS and the frequently hilarious object theatre of Laos' Kabong Lao, on the other hand, showed how European forms can be successfully adapted to local stories.

Interestingly enough, there’s no encouragement for any intercultural collaboration between artists of different cultures and countries, a major trend in performing arts world now. Obviously, artists from different countries have specific artistic styles, based on their backgrounds as well as issues in their respective societies, and both artists and audiences can learn from observing their similarities and differences, and discussing, without any need to merge.

Three Thai companies staged works that were diverse in style and content, all developed with the support of the Mekong Partnership Programme.


Crescent Moon Theatre presented Purgatory, a social drama-comedy commenting on the changing roles of women today.

Khandha Arts 'n Theatre offered For a Little Less Noise: Mae Nam, a dance theatre inspired by butoh and advocating a better understanding of HIV/AIDS.

And Wandering Moon and Endless Journey staged The Reborn of the Butterfly, a shadow-puppet show exploring relationships between men and women in different times and cultures.

"Unlike other performances at the festival, ours had some movements and a lot of dialogue in Thai," noted Crescent Moon artistic director Sineenadh Keitprapai, "but thanks in part perhaps to the English and Khmer translations on the screen, we heard a lot of laughter, even from the younger viewers.”

"Evidently it's not the form—some people might not be familiar with it—but the content that's more important."

“Given the shorter time than the performing arts laboratories in the previous years, the overall festival had less time for us to exchange, but of course showcased a wider variety of works. I’m particularly impressed to see how many young members of PPS, whom I saw in the labs, have developed, as well as the quality of their works which are no longer purely circus acts but have some dramatic stories.”

Sineenadh praised a workshop by Indonesian dancer Martinus Miroto and at another seminar traded tips with artists from other countries on using symbols.

“It’s the same kind of media that are part of our audience’s life and it’s interesting to hear many different possibilities in how to use them.”

Khandha's Nammon Joiraksa, whose trip was partly subsidised by the Office of Contemporary Art and Culture, was moved by the performances of PPS.

"I can see how they grew out of sheer necessity. Their village evolved from a refugee camp and many of the performers are orphans. Without their school and their company, which has just been to Europe, there's nothing else for them to hold on to.”

"From their formal presentation in the conference and my informal conversations with them through the whole festival, I learn how we can continue to develop our group in the future through management and grants. Each and every one of us now wants to improve our skills and thinking process so that we develop along with the group."

“The festival has had a strong effect on Khandha. Each and every one of us now wants to improve our skills and thinking process so that each of us develops along with the group. Before this trip, we already had plans for our next year’s workshops and performances, and after the Mekong Festival, we’ve been more active fighting for these plans to realize.”

"The whole experience reconfirms the significance of networking," Monthatip Suksopha, head of the all-women Chiang-Mai based Wandering Moon who also gave two shadow puppet workshops, one for adults and the other for children and youths, said of the festival.

"Or, to put it in simpler terms, helping each other. The festival encountered many financial problems, but in the end we found that money wasn't the most important factor—willpower and management were the keys. Many who’re behind the success of this festival, especially the young people from the Cambodian co-host PPS, worked voluntarily yet whole-heartedly and they could make it happen."
Monthatip noted that local young people took a keen interest.

"One of my Cambodian friends said she'd never seen such a large gathering of youths in Phnom Penh before. They're from Battambang, not the capital, and they have a clear and strong vision.”

"I wish these kinds of extraordinary dynamics could happen in Thailand, but frankly I don't know how yet. In Chiang Mai there are many troupes with diverse identities, and it seems we can't find a way to join hands."

Give youth a chance

PETA’s Mekong Partnership Program is heading into a slightly different direction from that of the past five years, to now focus more on children and youths, with a new major partner Save the Children (UK).

Concurrent with the conference and workshops for adult participants was the Youth and Children Bloc, three-day integrated arts course and daily workshops.

Yiumrung "Mint" Thanpermpoon of Khandha, a business-administration major at Bangkok University, got to attend her first international workshops.

"Although many of us don't speak English very well, we did our best, had a lot of fun and became friends," she said.

Mint told us that in fact most workshops were not language based, but rather introduced how to use physical movements and other media to tell stories.

"I was particularly impressed with the PPS’s circus workshop. Having worked with Khandha for about five years, my body had been trained for a certain extent. PPS members taught me how to use the trampoline and, when I found I could do it, it was just amazing and encouraging."

“On the last day, we all got to perform, and on stage I had a dialogue with a Korean artist—we both spoke our mother tongues. I said that I would always respect adults and listen to their suggestions but at the same time I would also like to share my opinions. It’s like we’re tuning into each other.”

Mint summed up her whole Mekong Festival experience, “I was known as a very talkative and rather restless girl, but after returning from Phnom Penh, I’ve become more focused and calm—my friends thought I was possessed by some spirits.”

The writer's trip to Phnom Penh was fully supported by PETA and Save the Children (UK).




written by Pawit Mahasarinand
ขอขอบคุณข้อมูลจาก
published in THE NATION on Monday, December 21, 2009
see more:
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/danceandtheatre/2010/01/26/entry-1


เก็บตกข่าวเทศกาลแม่โขงจากหนังสือพิมพ์บางกอกโพสต์

Weaving culture, weaving lives
A report on the 2009 Mekong Arts and Media Festival, held in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Published: 11/01/2010 at 12:00 AM
Newspaper section: Outlook : Bamgkok Post


At the end of the 2009 Mekong Arts and Media Festival, "Weaving Culture, Weaving Lives", held last November in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, the organisers, the Philippine Education Theatre Association (Peta), had successfully used its special blend of talent, skill, and experience to encourage artists to work in the communities they are part of. The event provided hands-on help to build a network of artists from across the Mekong sub-region that is multicultural, transnational, creative, energetic, interactive, and starting to show signs of self-sustainability.

This year's event was the fifth of its kind run by Peta in the Mekong sub-region, the first having been held in Manila, The Philippines, in 2005. It was evident that the young, talented, and eager artists had grown since the programme began five years earlier, in large part due to the encouragement and resources provided by Peta.




The well-organised five-day event showcased an array of performances, workshops and presentations, and learning experiences about a variety of active and ongoing projects, emerging from the great energy of the young artists at the festival which, like all earlier festivals, had its own parallel conference, workshops, performances, and other activities to get young people together to learn to share and create art projects.

As a fitting opening, the festival began with a parade involving the young artists performing classical music and dance, and guiding a gigantic naga and two big elephant puppets, along with a real, famous Phnom Penh elephant through the Cambodian capital.

The festival was interspersed with various art exhibitions, circus shows, classical dance pieces, and international events from the six countries bordering the great Mekong River.

Opening day parade by youth participants. PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE MEKONG ARTS AND MEDIA FESTIVAL

All the youth programmes were run by young people who brought leadership skills learned through their work with Peta over the past five years, while artists from different countries shared new techniques and knowledge.

The festival brought the city of Phnom Penh to life with a vivid spirit, energising the streets and people with a happy feeling of the hopeful power of youth that guide their lives with infectious good will.

Most of the local kids in attendance were from Phare Poulou Silpek in Battambong, Cambodia.

The programme was indeed successful in creating new networks of artists across the region. These young people were so proud and eager to learn and to share what they know, showing great physical and spiritual strength to overcome their often-difficult living conditions. The happy hearts and minds of these young people showed brightly through the five days. They seemed to realise the strength that the arts and training had provided them and took full advantage of the opportunity to speak out and share their new knowledge with their friends.



Less visible, but at least as important in the long run, are the management skills learned by those who have worked with Peta. These skills have grown appreciably during the last five years. After receiving some funding from the Rockefeller Foundation, during the last five years, the Peta-run partnership has also gained new funding from other organisations including Save the Children and Doctors Without Borders. Perhaps these may be the new threads that will make the arts more lively, helping create hope among new generations.

Parallel to the young artists' activities was a conference where a diverse range of artists and scholars from Japan, Cambodia, China, Burma and Thailand presented their work and shared innovative ways to create and collaborate with their communities.

Sixty international artists attended the festival, performing and sharing their art, knowledge and progress in their thinking and talent. Many of them have learned about the importance of good management to create an environment for them to enable dance, theatre, and puppet performances in a sustainable way.

The Crescent Moon Theatre and Wandering Moon from Thailand joined the workshop.

After working for five years with Peta, the confidence and ability of these artists-turned-managers has matured considerably. Most of the young artists - especially those from Phare Poulou Silpek - have become teenagers or young adults and are now strong circus artists. During the recent festival, these artists shared and inspired each other, regardless of nationality or background. Although English was the main language used to communicate, at the eating tables, those from Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand shared their thoughts in a mix of languages.

The laboratory, which was arguably the most difficult aspect of the programme to facilitate due to the amount of information to share, translate, seemed to work out well in the end.

The laboratory started when artists began recognising certain things that could benefit the performing arts among the varied communities in the Mekong sub-region. As time has passed, Mekong artists and the communities have adapted what they have learned and shared in the festival's laboratories for the benefit of the societies they live in.

The ongoing success of the annual event is due largely to Peta's concept of working with others and by providing regular opportunities to share ideas.

It also gives young artists the opportunity to grow and learn from senior artists about channelling inspiration and creativity with discipline and management into arts projects that are fun and suitable for their local audiences. Most aspects of the project deal with young people and aim to promote their self-esteem and empowerment, and offer health education that is so needed in communities along the Mekong. They also share ways of fundraising, managing and promoting artists and their needs. It was wonderful to see the various peoples of the Mekong sub-region mingling together through the support and care of the Peta organisation, who has also seen its value and has opened up the project to artists from Singapore, Indonesia, and Japan. We know that creating a self-sustainable partnership takes time, and Peta has laid the foundations of doing just this.

After all, we all are part of a common work in progress that aims to improve the lives of those in the Mekong area through encouraging creativity, organisation and inspiration.



ขอขอบคุณข้อมูลและภาพจาก

http://www.bangkokpost.com/entertainment/art/30839/weaving-culture-weaving-lives

29 November 2009

Picture of Purgatory in Mekong Arts Fest

กลับมาแล้ว

สาวๆจากไฟล้างบาปกลับมาถึงกรุงเทพแล้วอย่างปลอดภัยแล้ว "ไฟล้างบาป" เราแสดงในคืนวันที่ 24 พฤศจิการยน 2552 แสดงเป็นรายการที่สาม(รายการสุดท้ายของคืนนั้น) ก่อนหน้าเรา มีเต้นจากเพื่อนศิลปินจีน Inzhong และการแสดงหุ่นของกลุ่มเพื่อนศิลปินลาว Krabong Laos

เราแสดงที่โรงละคร Jaktomok มาให้ดูกัน โรงละครนี้จุคนพอๆกับหรือมากว่าหอเล็กธรรมศาสตร์เล็กน้อย เวทีขนาด 10x18 เมตร กับการให้เวลาซ้อมกลุ่มละ 2 ชั่วโมง ช่างระทึกใจดีแท้ๆ แต่เราก็ผ่านมาได้ด้วยดี ได้รับเสียงตอบรับ เสียงหัวเราะ และเสียงปรบมืออย่างประทับใจ

มาดูภาพการแสดง ซึ่งถ่ายโดยคุณ Gueriaud Ludovic ช่างภาพหนังสือพิมพ์ และเป็นช่างภาพของงาน ซึ่งเราต้องขอขอบคุณเขาอย่างมากที่ให้ภาพเรามาด้วย










21 November 2009

Purgatory in Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009

A Women Play “Purgatory”

in Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009


Crescent moon theatre (THAILAND) will present a women play “PURGATORY” at the Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009 to be held in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, from November 23 to 27, in the Main Performance at Chaktomuk Conference Hall.

The play, with 4 cast including Sineenadh Keitprapai, Sumontha Saunphonrat, Farida Jiraphan and Jarunan Phantachat was staged for the first time at the PETA Mekong Laboratory 2006 in Hanoi, Vietnam.

The play talks about the women point of view about their status and their feelings and inspirations from the Lab 2007 theatre, art activities and gender issue.


The story of the play talk about life after the death, three women meet in the cauldron of Hell. They share their life stories and questions why they are there. They ask the God of the Underworld to judge their guilt and decide if they can go to Heaven, not knowing that the God has another plan for them.

This play has been staged 13 times at Bangkok Theatre Festival 2006 and toured to universities in Bangkok and provinces in 2007.This time they change one of performer from Jarunan Phantachat to Sarawanee Yodnoon because Jarunan went to perform “The Soil Girl” in Tokyo. After they come back from the festival, they will perform at Crescent Moon Space, Bangkok for 5 shows on December 3-7.

The Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009 is a cultural , art and theatre activities of artists from Mekong region, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Viet Nam, and China. The Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009 is organized by the Philippine Educational Theater Association’s Mekong Partnership Project, Phare Ponleu Selpak,Save the Children UK, and Center for Community Health Research & Development.

20 November 2009

Performances in Mekong Arts Fest 2009

ตารางการแสดงในงานเทศกาลแม่โขงออกมาแล้ว


ช่วงครึ่งวันเช้าจะเป็นช่วงประชุมสัมนา ช่วงบ่ายเป็นช่วงการอบรม ช่วงเย็นชมการแสดงกลางแจ้ง หรือชื่อเก๋ๆว่า ช่วง Twilight Performances ส่วนช่วงค่ำเป็นช่วงการแสดงหลัก Main Performances ในโรงละครหรือหอประชุมจตุรมุข


ดูตารางการแสดงได้ที่นี่




PERFORMANCE CALENDAR

DAY 1


Opening Ceremony


DAY 2


Twilight Performances, Garden Area,
WISHES OF THE HANDS, Moe Satt (Myanmar)
Performances artists, Moe Satt does an interactive piece that allows audience to throw in thier messages how they feel on issues affecting them.
PRINCE AND PRINCES, Mandaly Marionettes (Myanmar)
A magnificent and sentimental duet about the Prince who comes back from his studies and brings his love to the palace.


MAIN PERFORMANCES
Zhang Yinzhong (China)
Dream, National Puppet Theatre Troupe- Kabong Lao (Laos)
The Performance is a reflection of how human beings are getting punished by the environment for the damage that we have caused. Told through the dreams of Grandpa Chan and Grandma Chan, four scenes: The Shower Head, Elephant, Samurai and Sunami show our careless and irresponsible actions towards the environment and wildlife and the negative consequences of actions.
PURGATORY, Cresent Moon Theatre (Thailand)
After their death, three women meet in the cauldron of Hell. They share their life stories and questions why they are there. They ask the God of the Underworld to judge their guilt and decide if they can go to Heaven, not knowing that the God has another plan for them.





DAY 3

Twilight Performances, Garden
CHAPEI DANG WENG, Cambodian Living Arts (Cambodia)
Chapei is a traditional musical instrument which can be played on its own or as an accompaniment to peotry, narrated stories and riddles, as well as in duets and debates.
LES BALLAYETTE, Phare Ponlue Selpak (Cambodia)
A song and dance peice about how women should have a choice. The English translation of Les Ballayette is the brush, used here as a symbol of how women should clean out the notion that they should always say yes.


MAIN PERFORMANCES (Main Theater, Chaktomuk Conference Hall)
THE MAGICIAN, Manadalay Marionette (Myanmar)
According to poppular belief Zaw-Gyi is a demigod clad in red, full of vigour, and lives in the forest. He always carries a magic stick. He has a friendly face which express his philosophical mind. As he is an Alchemist, he grinds medical plants with his magic stick on a stone slab. When he achieves success, he dances about and does a lot of acrobatics and sits on his magic stick. He is puppet character who is capable of flying through the air and boring through the earth.
FOR A LITTLE LESS NOISE MAE NAM (Mother of Water),
Khandha Arts'n Theater Company (Thailand)
A multidisciplinary contemporary theatre piece for the advocacy of HIV/ AIDS, Mae Nam is a dramatic interpretation with HIV from her beloved husband. The performance consists of different scenes, each highlighting social anbd cultural conditions, contemporary Asian society prejudices as well as its spirituality.
PUTHOU!, Phare Ponlue Selpak (Cambodia)
Puthou! is a celebration of life. It depicts love, jealousy, deception, anger and all youthful emotions. In Khmer, Puthou means, Oh My God! This performance is a co-production by Phare Ponlue Selpak and the Philippine Educational Theater Association and is the first show to be produced by the second generation of students composed of 13 teenagers who spent a whole year together abroad for training in a circus skills. Some of them trained at Vietnam Circus School and the others at Ecole de Cirque de Lomme in France.


DAY 4

Twilight Performances, Garden
BROUGHT YOU A FLOWERS WILL YOU MARY ME
PETA- Metropolitan Teen Theater League (Philippines)
A young man sets out to ask a girl he loves to marry him. A product of the performance laboratory for the young artists of the Philippine Educational Theater Association, entitled Toilet Bowl, this is a solo performans that tackles the issue of adolescent sexuality.
FACES AND FINGERS, Moe Satt (Myanmar)
F n' F is a performance art based on how the combination of hand gesture can combine with different facial expressions to present various meanings. For instance a hand sign of the gun could only present a gun. But when it is coupled with different facial expressions, it begins to mean differently. Moe Satt shows this to the audience by presenting different hand signals with different facial expressions and letting the audience find out the meaning of the signs.


Main Performances, Main Theater, Chaktomuk Conference Hall
THE REBORN OF THE BUTTERFLY
Wandering Moon Performing Group and Endless Journey (Thailand)

The Reborn is based on the Shadow theater performance ncalled the Butterfly Series. It tackles sensitive women issues like indentity crisis, sexual desires and abortion. Wandering moon expresses their views on these issues using their artistic craft through shadow theater.
HOW TO MOVE FORWARD TO THE NORTH - TO THE NORTH EAST
Ho Ho-Do (Japan)

This peice has been performed in 14 cities in Japan and abroad. Ho Ho-Do uses the wind blowing from huge running fun as a motif to show a collection of continuous small dance like moments. Then piece keeps evolving every time it is performed.
STEREO MAN, Youth Theater (Vietnam)
Stereoman is an exploration of the modern dance genre, created with Philippine choreographer Agnes Locsin. Through dance and movement, four male dancers capture images of men society has shaped them to be. The movements express the discourse that while a human is made of two parts-the yin and the yang, the masculine and the feminine, oru society tells us that only one side is allowed to be shown, thereby creating an imbalance.


DAY 5

CLOSING PERFORMANCES, Main Theater, Chaktomuk Conference Hall
ISMAEL AT ISABEL, Philippine Educational Theater Association (Philippines)
In line with the 20th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of the Rights of the Child, PETA produced this moving story about two children, a Christian and a Muslim- Ismail and Isabel who were once blind to their religious differences until the war reached their small village in Mindanao. Now faced with the reality of discrimination, intolerance, war and violence, the two are chattered and can only find peace in telling and re-telling the folktales once told by their parents.
ECLIPSE (excerpts),Phare Ponlue Selpak (Cambodia)
Excerpts from the performanceset in a fictional village, Eclipse where locals discriminate anyone different. A strange looking man who falls victim to this discrimination prays for divine intervention. The gods responded by turning hin into a beautiful woman who steals the hearts of all the village men.


19 November 2009

Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009

Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009
Breaking Barriers, Converging Arts: The Arts and Media Festival 2009

งานเทศนี้เป็นการรวมตัวของนักการละครในประเทศลุ่มแม่โขง และรวมทั้งประเทศอื่นๆด้วย เป็นงานสรุปของโครงการ Peta Mekong Project ที่จัดโดย PETA หรือ The Phillipines Educational Theatre Association กลุ่มละครที่ทำงานด้านการพัฒนาและการศึกษาที่มีประวัติการทำงานยาวนานกว่า 30 คงเกือบๆ 40 ปีแล้ว เค้าจัดโครงการอบรมแลกเปลี่ยนให้กับศิลปินนักการละครในลุ่มแม่โขงมา 3-4 ปีแล้ว พระจันทร์เสี้ยวการละครก็มีส่วนร่วมในงานนี้กับเขามาตั้งแต่แรก

คือตั้งแต่การทำรีเสริ์ชหาข้อมูลกลุ่มละครไทย ปี 2003 เราได้รับเชิญให้นำละคร "Venus Party" ไปแสดง ที่ฟิลิปินส์ ในปี 2006 ตัวแทนของเราได้รับเลือกให้เข้าร่วมอบรมแลกเปลี่ยนใน Mekong Laboratory 2006 ที่เวียดนาม ในครั้งนั้น นาด กับ ฟา ไปเข้าร่วม และเราได้งานละครเรื่อง "ไฟล้างบาป" กลับมา และนำมาจัดแสกงต่ออีกหลายครั้ง

ปีถัดมา Mekong Laboratory 2007 ที่กัมพูชา คือ พนมเปญ เสียมเรียบ และ พระตะบอง เกรียง กับ โบ ไปเข้าร่วมอบรม นาด ได้รับเชิญให้ไปเป็นศิลปินที่ให้การอบรม และ ในปี 2008 จัดที่เยงใหม่ ครูคำรณ และ นาด ก็ได้ไปเป็นผู้ให้การอบรมอีกครั้ง

เราเอาข้อมูลประชาสัมพันธ์งานนนี้มาลงไว้ที่นี่แล้ว


The Mekong Sub-Region composed of Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam holds the remarkable distinction of being one of Asia’s cultural lifeblood. Its interesting cross-cultural diversity and the rich mix of history and art provide for a great backdrop for organizing the Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009 this November 23-27 at Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Organized by the Philippine Educational Theater Association – Mekong Partnership Program in conjunction with Phare Ponleu Selpak, Save the Children-UK, and Center for Community Health Research and Development, the Festival is seen as an opportunity for artists, media practitioners, cultural workers, and key players in development work to showcase and exhibit artistic works that have contributed to the development of new, innovative communication channels for advocacy and transforming communities. The Festival is also slated to be one of the highlights and culmination of PETA’s five-year engagement in mobilizing the creative communities in the region using the arts and other creative media as tools for advocacy and development work.

The Festival is a five-day event that will converge the diverse cultures and various art and media forms of Mekong. During the Festival, the arts communities will go center stage and present the range of forms and creative expressions that they have been continuously developing for the past years as alternative tools for advocacy and social transformation.

En route to a new path of meaningful expression by blending arts and media, the Festival hopes to cover the potential range of talents by providing venues for sharing of skills, techniques and building partnerships for collaboration. Delegates and visitors can expect performances, conferences of interest groups, workshops, visual arts and photo essays, short films and documentaries. Special events like the opening and closing parade will feature in full regalia the various cultural symbols and icons of the different countries in the Mekong Region. To get a taste of each culture, a Mekong cultural trade fair will showcase and sell various arts,crafts and products of the participating countries while respected individuals of the Asian art scene will also facilitate the different workshops.


To preview what’s in store at the Festival, click this link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1OgVHPrnRYI.

18 November 2009

Mekong Fest in the Nation newspaper


About Thai Theatre performance in Mekong Arts and Media Festival 2009

Go to Read : http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/danceandtheatre/2009/11/17/entry-1