16 June 2009
david hare: wall
P.S. Hare has written two monologues about Palestinian-Israeli issues. An excerpt from the first, Via Dolorosa (1998) here.
glu glu
"Is a dance project," explains the undeniably Italian cameraman, ushering the bewildered belly out of the shot, "Contemporary dance project!"
A shared peal of laughter, an inside joke. Artists and amateurs, sitting cross-legged in an airy room of the splendid Museu do Oriente.
Complicity.
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Déjà vu.
Grade 8, 9, 10.... Amman or Dubai, maybe Cairo, one of those international schools. It's the first night of the arts festival: the showcase. We strut and show, so that the next morning we can get down to the dirty business of working, creating together.
Pointe to Point is a project bringing together 20 young choreographers from Europe and Asia. The Lisbon phase is their first real meeting. The public is invited to participate in their introductions, to meet the artists as individuals before they form groups and begin to collaborate. Over the weekend everyone shared something: a short dance piece, a presentation of previous work, installations, videos, conversations.
Like our high school showcases. Thankfully, no American School of Dubai-style cheesy jingles. (EMAC Fine Arts Festival, Festival, is full of fun/EMAC Fine Arts Festival, and we are ASD!!)
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This project is co-organised by the Asia-Europe Foundation and alkantara, the Portuguese independent arts organisation that makes my heart skip a beat. If all goes well, I will be their most enthusiastic intern next year and their festival will be the topic of my thesis.
As exciting as everything I saw this weekend was, I couldn't help feeling overwhelmed. What can I possibly offer these people? There were so many of them, young, all with haircuts more assymmetric than mine.
The pond is turning out to be a bit bigger than this little fish thought.
04 June 2009
vilnius
There are holes in the sides of Vilnius's buildings. Sometimes at street level, sometimes near entrances, sometimes facing allies. Regularly rectangular, so you know they're there on purpose.
The history is in the walls. Heaters fixed on green paint, peeling away to reveal bright geometric patterns and carefully carved Greek letters.
This is the hidden story of may of Vilnius' churches and chapels, gothic and baroque, Catholic and Orthodox. The old town's skyline is defined by pristine steeples, freshly painted bell towers and copper onion domes not yet oxidised. Gaps have been filled, edges smoothed, character whitewashed. 'Restored' -- to sterility.
03 June 2009
out
“In and out, in and out,” I reply vaguely.
I have been “in” – which is to say, in Lisbon – since Sunday. Today is Wednesday, and as the Scandinavian landscape from my porthole confirms, I am definitely out.
It’s been three hours since we took off from a mercifully cooler Lisbon towards Copenhagen, via Stockholm. The pilot has just announced that rain and chilly temperatures (10 degrees) will greet us – which rather accurately describes the 5-day forecast for my final destination of Vilnius, Lithuania.
In Vilnius I will be attending the Erasmus Mundus Students and Alumni Association General Assembly, in my capacity as course representative. On either side of the conference programme I have given myself a day for which I have made no attempt to prepare. Guidebook-, companion-, and preconception-less, I intend to wander, eat mysterious food and get soaked by several days of heavy rain.
I’ll be in again next Monday, out to Brussels for a few days at the end of the month, in for the first two weeks of July, out to the Avignon Festival in France from the 17th to the 24th, before pushing still outwards to Amsterdam to round off the month in the company of S and J.
All of August will be in – which is to say, in the sun, in the sea, at the beach.
01 June 2009
walter
Mademoiselle.
He pauses, adjusts his spectacles.
The post office has been open since ten o’clock this morning.
Another pause. He looks down at his watch, causing the specs to slip to the end of his nose. It occurs to me that when he raises his head he will be eyeing me over the frames. I brace myself.
It is not at five minutes to closing that one attempts to send a large parcel.
I could explain that this is the second time I have been to his post office today. I want to whine about the lies on the website and the uninformed lady at the first post office. I consider sobbing that if he doesn’t take my things I will be bootless and bookless in Nice come September.
Instead, I say, very quietly
There are three.
Eyebrows are raised. Nostrils flare. Lips tighten.
He flings a fistful of forms across the counter and spits
Sit. Fill. Return. Fast.
I fill the forms to natural light because someone turns of the fluorescents. By the time I return it is down to me, him and the security agent turning people away at the door.
He rings up the total. I breathe and unsheathe my visa.
More Pinter pausing. The nostrils eventually communicate what words do not.
I consider protesting the ridiculously of the
Instead, I say, very quietly
Well, nothing.
It has been a harrowing afternoon and, frankly, I’m spent.
He sends me to the ATM outside. I am behind a couple who takes ages because, judging by the cloud of shopping bags, they no longer have any money to take out.
He must be worried I’ve dumped my boxes on him and run away laughing because he comes out of the post office to look for me. Which is convenient, because I need him to get past the equally anxious to leave security agent.
We exchange money and receipts. He stands, pulls up his pants and sighs
Bon week-end.
I want to tell him that I didn’t do it on purpose. I can’t decide whether to apologize. I almost hug him.
Instead, I say, very, very quietly (remember I am spent)
Merci.