Showing posts with label Denmark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denmark. Show all posts

Friday, December 18, 2009

Masks from the National Museum of Denmark

[post 049]

Copenhagen's NationalMuseet is sponsoring several excellent exhibitions relevant to the climate change summit, including Indians of the Rain Forest; Climate: Denmark from Glaciers to Global Warming; and especially Many Strong Voices, featuring projects and speakers from Arctic and Small Island Developing States who are already struggling with the results of global warning.

During my two visits there, I also found time to tour the superb ethnographic collection and was fascinated by the vast array of masks from indigenous cultures. This is one of those museums where they jam fifty examples of an artifact into one glass display case with minimal explanation. You don't always know exactly what you're looking at, but you do get to experience a rich variety of human expression. It was therefore easy for me to think of many of the masks as being clownesque, even if this was not necessarily their official function.

I only had my Flip video camera with me, and I was shooting through glass and unavoidable glare, but it wasn't a total disaster, as you can see from the shot above and those at the end of the post. First, though, some masks scanned from the museum's publication, Ethnographic Collection: Peoples of the Earth, complete with actual explanations.


Theatre mask. Painted wood
19 cm h.
(Mus. no. CC. 224).
Java.
Ca. 1860.
Javanese mask theatre (wayang topeng), like the shadow play, is led by a dalang who recites the plot and conducts the orchestra and actors. The actors' movements and performance of the roles are deliberately impersonal, as they seek to imitate the appearance of shadow puppets. The facial features of the heroes and villains reveal their spiritual qualities. This mask represents a coarse, ungainly demon character — a total contrast to the refined princely mask type. Mask theatre is
limited on Java today, but much more widespread on Bali.




Mask. Wood, rattan, hornbill feathers.
38 cm x 53 cm. (Mus. no. C.6121)
Dayak, Mahakam River, Kalimantan
(Indonesian Borneo). Ca. 1920.

This hudoq mask represents one of the animal spirits central to the ceremonial celebration of the sowing of rice. These spirits were to ensure that the rice spirits were comfortable in the rice paddy and would provide a good harvest. The masks were worn by male dancers dressed in costumes of banana leaves that hid their bodies. During the dance other masked dancers attempted with exaggerated clumsiness to copy the movements of the hudoq dancers and the
dance turned into a comic performance. Rice ceremonies and mask dances are still performed today but on a much smaller scale since the conversion of many Dayak to Christianity or Islam.





Mask. Wood, skin and bone.
2S-5 cm h, 13.7 cm b.
(Mus. no. L19.17S).
Ammassalik, East Greenland. 1933.

Masks were used during some drum dances and originally came from the religious ceremonies held during the winter. The masks represented different spirits. Masks that are more than 100 years old are discarded or buried with the dead. The mask with a skin strap shown here is carved with grooves representing tattoos and a wide mouth representing a stick inserted to puff out the cheeks. The teeth are pieces of bone, and the eyebrows are made of dark, depilated sealskin.




Mask. Woven painted rattan.
49 em h. (Mus. no. 1.3771).
Sepik.
Papua New Guinea. Ca. 1920.
Woven masks covered with coloured clay were traditionally seen as manifestations of demonic spirits. Such masks were worn during the initiation of boys into adulthood and the secret spirit world of the clan that was only accessible to initiated men. During the initiation rites the masks were worn by older men hidden under a cloak of frayed plant fibers to make them look like formidable spirits. Their real identity was not revealed until they removed their masks as part of the ceremony.


Ritual dance costume 330 em h.
(Mus. no. Da.s82a-o).
Tamil Nadu, India. 1894.

Once a year the village goddess is celebrated at a feast for the entire village. When her figure is taken in procession through the streets it is often accompanied by male dancers who possessed by the goddess and wearing masks and women's dress stamp their feet to the rousing
rhythms of drums. Others pierce their cheeks and tongues with long spears or walk on hot coals, after which the village tries to appease the formidable, aggressive goddess by sacrificing chickens and goats.











Mask. Wood, metal.
31 cm h, 21 cm d.
(Mus. no. C.1478).

Karo Batak, Sumatra. Ca. 1900.

Among the Batak of Sumatra masks like this one were worn during the dances and ceremonies at the funerals of influential individuals. The dancers were enveloped in black cloth and held a pair of wooden hands. After performing their dance outside the home of the deceased they escorted the coffin to the burial site. They placed a mask on the grave, presumably in order to keep evil spirits at bay and guide the deceased to the kingdom of the dead. Several years later the deceased was honored with reburial in a sarcophagus or stone urn. Reburial is still common among the Toba Batak today, although now the tomb monuments are made of cement and decorated with both local and Christian symbols.





Shadow puppet (Rawana).
Painted leather, buffalo horn.
64 cm h.
(Mus. no. C.4511 ).
Surakarta, Central
Java. Ca. 1930.
The noblest characters can be identified by their slender form and narrow eyes and noses — the outer symbols of moral and spiritual strength. The coarser figures, like the demon prince Rawana, have round eyes, bulbous noses and often sharp canines. The good characters stand to the right of the puppeteer and the bad characters to the left. The world of shadow play, however, is not only black and white: The villains on the left may also perform heroic deeds for their family and country, whilst the heroes on the right are occasionally driven by lust, the desire
for revenge, and other equally base feelings.


Okay, eau-quais, enough with quality pics and reasonable explanations! Here are those stills extracted from the Flip camera footage. Let your imagination provide the interpretation.







































































Sunday, December 13, 2009

On the Streets at the Copenhagen Climate Summit


[post 048]

Greetings from COP 15, the U.N. climate "Conference Of Parties" in Copenhagen, Denmark. In case you don't get out much, COP 15 is considered a big deal not only because it was designed to forge an environmental treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, but because global warming trends have proven to be even worse than what the "alarmist" scientists were predicting just a few years ago. Thus not only do all the nations of the world have delegates at the conference, like it or not they have us "unofficial delegates" in town in the form of environmental activists staging their own Klimaforum, and taking to the streets with a variety of theatrics and actions intended to pressure the politicians and hopefully grab some international media attention.

Truth be told, it's a madhouse here, with so much going on at any given time that, like the parable of the six blind men and the elephant, it's impossible to ever get much of an overview. Saturday's big 6-kilometer march from Parliament Square to the Bella Conference Center attracted somewhere between 60,000 people (police estimate) and 100,000 (organizers' estimate). The march — I almost wrote "parade" — was quite theatrical, with the clear intention of engaging onlookers and attracting major media. Of course most of the headlines focused on the arrest of a very small number of violent protesters, even in newspapers you would think more attuned to the actual issues and to the not insignificant fact that this was the largest and most international climate change protest ever.

Of course the problem with political theatre is that you are mostly preaching to the choir, but I guess if that choir is empowered and goes on to preach to others, picking up a few tricks along the way, then all is not in vain.


So how do you visualize the politics of climate change? Here's what I saw:

• Depictions of the rich and powerful as puppets, robots or clowns.

• Images of imminent extinction, with the earth's most vulnerable inhabitants dying a grim death. Our 350.org contingent included a boat ("we're all in the same boat"), plus a dinosaur on poles created by a couple of Bread & Puppet Theatre vets.

• Masks, puppets, floats giving voice to the powerless, including endangered species — polar bears, penguins, and assorted wildlife.

• Personifying the positive: the wholesome qualities of the environmental movement (organic, natural, green, warm, fuzzy, etc.). Clowns, bright
costumes, and green noses were part of this joyous branding of the movement. The motto for Mr. Green's Circus (see below) is "We are gonna save the planet — and we will have fun doing it."

• Imagery centered on the desirable number 350 (target for safe number of carbon particles per million in the atmosphere).


Here are some images and video of the spectacle. I don't have time for everything while I'm here, but will add some more to this post later, so check back!

Here's my friend Adnan Saabi, from IndyAct in Lebanon, in action inside the Bella Center, in clown nose and glasses unsympathetically portraying a member of the oil lobby. The 850 refers to the amount of carbon in the atmosphere this character is apparently willing to tolerate, and the "recruiting e-mail hackers" refers to the recent brouhaha in England. So in this case the clown persona is basically saying the guy's a bozo.



The Greenpeace puppet of a rich cigar-chomping industrialist manipulating the world's political leaders (including Obama) on marionette strings; all of the "puppets" were in fact human performers.



Mr. Penguin and Mr. Dinosaur.



Clowns on a mission.


Frosty the Snowman says: "I fell down and I can't get up!"



Three puppets (about 35' tall) swaying in the wind, from Seven Meters, whose poster you see toward the top of this post. Seven meters is the height water will rise if all the ice in Greenland melts.


Partial view of our "We're all in the same boat" contingent.


Mr. Green's Circus.


And here's one of their videos.




And here they are at the mall. Not sure what they're doing there, but at least you get to see the whole group in action.





Okay, I admit it, this last one isn't from Copenhagen, but I figured I could sneak it in while we're on the subject of climate change. Besides, it is visual and I did learn about it in Copenhagen. If you like 3D street art, I think you'll love this ice-age video of the summer 2008 work of German street painting artist Edgar Müller .




Physical Comedy in the 21st-Century

One way for physical comedy to break new ground is to move it outside of your standard performance structures and into a remix with everyday life. The work of Improv Everywhere (motto: "we make scenes') offers some good examples of this, as does the history of street theatre. But with street theatre, we're usually talking about a band of outsiders trying to shake up the complacent and the powerful. Think Abbie Hoffman throwing dollar bills onto the floor of the NY Stock Exchange.


You may be pleasantly surprised, therefore, to see similar shock tactics being employed by an actual government, though one that itself is very much on the outside of world power. I am talking about the Maldives, whose president, Mohamed Nasheed, I will in fact be hearing speak later today. The Maldives are an island nation in the Indian Ocean and because of global warming they are literally sinking. Here are the text and the image from an excellent Daily Beast slide show, Our Sinking Earth:

What does it take for a small country like the Maldives to get noticed on the world stage? The nation’s cabinet recently held a meeting underwater, in scuba gear, to call attention to the state — the lowest-lying country on earth. Using hand signals and white boards 20 feet underwater, the cabinet produced a document calling for all countries to cut their carbon dioxide emissions before the Copenhagen meeting.



More to come....