Participating artists and projects

AROUND A TREE- URBAN TREE FESTIVAL, June 2010
Artists, activists and you!

"WHAT HE TOUCHED, HE ARORNED!", May 2010
Suresh Jayaram
Raghu Tenkayala
1.Shanthi Road

KATTE-BEING AT HOME, Mar 2010
Elisabeth Lengheimer, Salon Emmer
Tanja Dinter, Salon Emmer
Deepak Srinivasan, Maraa

Samstag, 26. Juni 2010

Tree Festival - Schedule of Events



SCHEDULE OF EVENTS - TREE FESTIVAL
26th June Streets of Bangalore, Citywide 10.00 am-2.00 pm:
Maragala Meravanige, a mobile poster gallery Call 9343763497

26th 1ShanthiRoad 6.30 pm onwards:
Vriksha Chitra, Film and video art screenings on trees Call 9343763497
..........
27th June Local Park, Amar Jyoti Layout, Domlur (next to mother earth store)8.00am-10.00am Manegondhu Maraa! A tree planting initiative Call 9964533379

27th June Koramangala side street, opposite Raheja and close to Forum
10.00am-12.00am CITY SPECS SERIES: Call 9886928582
Missing My Green, an interaction with a reticent city dweller who shares his unique passion and work

27th June 1ShanthiRoad, Shanthinagar:
DODDA MARAA CHIKKA MAATU, short talks on Bangalore's trees Call 9343763497
5.00pm-6.00pm Greening of Bangalore - A talk by Vijay Thiruvady
6.00pm-7.30pm Trees and Traffic - Hasiru Usiru
7.30pm -8.00pm Native Trees of Bangalore - A talk by Sheshadri
Display of Mobile Poster exhbits
........
3rd July Mantri Mall, Sampige road 11.00am-1.00pm
"Moving In-Between" , A participative installation Call 9886928582

3rd July Bandstand, Cubbon Park 5.00pm onwards
"Ajab Sheher!" songs of Kabir on nature with filmmaker and artist, Shabnam Virmani Call 9343763497


3rd July Bandstand, Cubbon Park Display of Mobile Poster exhbits
.......
July 4th Cubbon Park 11.00am- 4.00pm
Eco-Art, theatre & Storytelling Workshop for Children Call 9886928582

July 4th Jaaga, Opposite Hockey Stadium, Shantinagar 6.30pm onwards
Jaaga Jaatre! An evening of music and jamming Call 9880755875

Donnerstag, 24. Juni 2010

“Maragala Meravanige!” A mobile poster gallery



Maragala Meravanige(tree procession )is part of AROUND A TREE, an urban tree festival in Bangalore.

Ever since the city of Bangalore began a rapid transformation in its appearance, aesthetics, infrastructure and ecology, tree felling has stood out as a traumatic loss for inhabitants of the city. These trees have many meanings and utility for different groups of people, childhood memories of trees, landmarks and visual landscape, fresh air, shade and even urban identity. From vendors to school going children, the middle aged and youth, from auto drivers to two wheeler owners, from traders to residents, the groups are diverse and yet fragmented in their lament.
Some voices have come together in different parts of Bangalore to protest against loss of trees and the changing landscapes. Public parks like Lalbagh and Cubbon Park have been under threat by various governmental plans to create Metro stations or amusement parks and cut down trees that are our natural heritage. Some of these protests have worked, some not.

Here, today we bring you a collection of visual expression on trees. Angst, anguish, plea, awareness, celebration and reflection….

Participating artists

Abhiskeka Krishnagopal
Balraj K N
Bhavani G S
Giridhar Khansis
Javad Quraishi
Mishta Roy
Nandish
Nirali Lal
Nooreen Lallamode
Prashant Seal & Rahul Bhatacharya
Priya Sebastian
Racheal Hegnauer
Ravisha Mall
Seersha Mukerjee
Shymala Billava
Sneha Prasad
Suvi Kadur
Suresh Jayaram
Tamara De Laval
Tamilarasan Anandam
Vasudev S G
Yattish L Shittgar

AROUND A TREE, AN URBAN TREE FESTIVAL




AROUND A TREE, an Urban Tree festival
(part of Khoj- Negotiating Routes initiative)

26, 27June & 3, 4 July 2010, Bangalore

Trees have been the source of memory, inspiration and identity for old Bangaloreans but with massive changes in the infrastructure of Bangalore, a severe loss of the urban majestic greenwood is being experienced and grieved. Maraa & 1Shanthiroad collaboratively bring to the city AROUND A TREE, an urban tree festival to revive the spirit of trees and the role they played in the lives of the city’s inhabitants.
The festival is unique and participative, involving local artist, academic and activist groups, art & media forms, communities of children and talks in Indian languages. Amongst activities proposed for the festival, some interesting activities include

- Traveling mobile poster gallery : 26th June, 2010, Citywide

Since the city has seen an outpouring of concerned citizens’ activity around tree felling and loss of green in the city, it made sense to call for creative posters from various quarters, artists to activists, from adults to children.
The response has been overwhelming, with a lot of artists sending in posters to the event. A set of curated posters will travel the city in a mobile van and be hoisted at different public places like street corners and public parks that will work as instant open gallery spaces.

- Experimental visual protest:

• Public art installation : June 26, 10am, Sampige road, Bangalore
• Video art screening : June 26, 6.30pm, 1Shanthiroad, Bangalore
While a duo of visual artists, Pallavi and Mithali work towards an art installation as a form of protest around trees marked to be felled for road widening,
Siddharth Pillai from an active film club from the city, Bangalore Film Society helps put together a short video art montage of scenes with tree images from world cinema!

- A series of talks have been organised on the evening of 27th July at 1Shanthiroad- on historic perspectives of greening of the greater Bangalore region, indigenous tree species of this region and the conflict between trees and traffic decisions in the modern metropolis. Mr Vijay Thiruvady, Mr Sheshdri and representatives from the Hasiru Usiru collective present SHORT TALKS.

- On the evening of 3rd July come over to Cubbon Park’s Bandstand for soul stirring strains of Kabir, the 16th century saint’s dwellings on the natural world. Performed by filmmaker and artist, Shabnam Virmani.
4th of July evening will see a jamming session of various musicians at Jaaga as a tribute to the strong and solid image and spirit of the tree.

manegondhu maraa ( a tree for every home ) Tree Planting


In the wake of the changing landscape of Bangalore, we have seen an unprecedented depletion of tree cover. This is the price we pay for city development and unorganized planning. The government has made few attempts of transplanting trees. There have been no conscious efforts to put into place Arboriculture and other scientific approaches to tree management nor is there an attempt at making it a collaborative effort with the citizens. Negotiating Routes-Ecologies of the Byways* is an attempt to involve the public in planting the trees they love. This is a private-public partnership to green the city in a small way while keeping in mind the urgent need for bio-aesthetics by planting local trees. This project has been initiated by KHOJ New Delhi with local collaboration with VAC/1.Shanthiroad, Maara and Amarjothi Layout Residents Welfare Association, Domlur.


In this project each family living in the locality will plant and nurture a tree in a designated park. This will specially involve children who will be encouraged to adopt a particular tree. A ledger will then be maintained by the children who will be assisted to monitor the progress of the tree. This will be compiled into a book by the welfare association.


Venue: Domlur (adjacent to Mother Earth, Intermediate Ring Road)
Time: 8am - 10 am
Date: Sun 27 June 2010
Contact: 9964533379


*Negotiating Routes: Ecologies of the Byways



Inspired by the need to render "the world a big forest, making towns and environments forest-like.", Negotiating Routes: Ecologies of the Byways, is a 2 year project inviting reflection by artists on the anxiety of ‘development’ embodied in the rank infrastructural development across India and its coexistence with local ecologies.
Over two years, Negotiating Routes hopes to map the various project sites across the country to create an alternative road map where artists and communities have come together and have been involved in discussions on the regeneration of the local ecology of the cities or villages that they inhabit.
This project was initiated by Varsha Nair and is co curated by Pooja Sood at KHOJ.


All are welcome!

Mittwoch, 2. Juni 2010

Narratives from the "Garden city".

“Everything happened too soon”

The map of Bangalore has been drawn and redrawn to envision an identity for an evolving city. Each of these political moves has had a social and cultural impact that unfolded diverse visions that located the city in the trajectory of local, national and global agendas. The city planners and technocrats were etching a social and cultural context to a changing city.

With the coming of public sectors and institutions in the Nehruvian era, the face of the city would change yet again. The vision of Bangalore as a garden city began to be sacrificed for the development of industry.

This city, once envisioned to balance nature and urban development, was soon wrought with basic planning problems. The influx of a work force from around the country and newfound wealth generated a need for housing and other basics of infrastructure. Most long-term plans for the city were compromised, leaving a chequered development, with illegal occupation of reserved land, and filling up of lakes for civic infrastructure. Lack of respect for heritage, nature and culture was rampant, and left the city scarred. The Urban Arts Commission, designed to monitor the aesthetics of the growing city, had little authority. The institution was seen as redundant and was axed to open up the urban landscape to unscrupulous elements who fashioned the city according to the greedy needs of the new elite.

The pressure on civic bodies such as BMP (Bangalore Mahanagara Palike) - now known as BBMP (Bruhat Bangalore Mahanagara Palike) was enormous. The city was bursting at the seams with traffic problems, congestion, water clogging, bad roads and civic amenities. The avenue trees soon fell to road widening, flyovers and the Metro. The planned green avenues and traffic islands gave way to underpasses and magic boxes.

Krumbiegel’s pioneering venture into the globalisation of nature had begun to be pre-empted by the ambitions of another industry that metaphorically flattened the earth. Landscape was replaced by real estate. City aesthetics were sacrificed in the name of development and unprecedented urbanisation. The city’s utopian label of “Garden City” was soon being torn down to accommodate change and to celebrate mindless construction.

Recreating the utopian vision

The opening up of information technology in Bangalore during the 1990s was unmistakably the most significant catalyst in the change in the planning of the city. The vision of Bangalore as another Singapore and the city becoming known as the IT capital and “Silicon Valley of India” was decisive. The unprecedented economic growth of Bangalore has been enviable, and created a global identity that is responsible for Brand Bangalore This accelerated change was welcomed by industry and government. It fashioned new dynamics to the growth and planning of the city, and opened up the cosmopolitan urbanscape to be populated by young software professionals and entrepreneurs.

New promises were made by builders, about the sustenance of nature with gated communities and villas that aped the Bangalore of the past. More corporate gardens created lawns, and golf courses replaced farmland. The corporate horticulturist invested in farmland, and grew hybrid roses and ornamental plants for the world market. Lawns could be ordered by the square feet, and instant gardens transplanted by landscapists overnight. The well-to-do preserved private gardens and the last of the colonial bungalow gardens were retained by nostalgic owners. Nature and culture walks became popular, and serious attempts began to be made to dialogue and debate about urban environment.

The tag of “City Beautiful” was attributed to Bangalore for the systematic cultivation of nature. This involved selection of species, acclimatisation and propagation. The identity of the Garden City was difficult to retain in the process of the emerging metropolis, and the utopian vision had to be constantly recreated by the city to reclaim this loss. Today, in the wave of migration and the fear of loss of native identity by Kannada fans and sons of the soil, the city’s identity has been recast by the profusion of Kempegowda sculptures that dot the city to honour the founding chieftain and reclaim local pride in the language.

The opening up of cyberspace has created new vistas of another technological landscape. This is the new reality for the citizen, looking back in nostalgia for the erstwhile Garden City, and looking ahead with uncertainty and hope, and the pressure and price of living in a changing metropolis. In the midst of urban chaos, the dream has gone sour.

Envisioning a new legacy

Today, we witness protests by citizens who are anguished about the depleting green cover and diminishing green belt. Environmental laws have been bent to accommodate these shifts. We see more flyovers slashing across our skyline to connect people and their destinations. We also see the Metro pushing its way through, and hasty attempts to “paint” the city green. In the din of globalisation, the many voices that resist these changes go unheard.

If we are to save the city beyond this point, we need to our act together, and we need to do it now. We need a comprehensive development plan that will sustain our environment and heritage and take care of further needs without damaging the identity of the city. We need to take lessons from history and from those enlightened planners who were so selfless and passionate about our city.

It is never too late to have a private/public partnership that can re-envision our common future. To have an inclusive agenda, and to take pride in the development of the city. To curb greed. To hold responsible those whose myopic actions taken for short-term goals threaten the city’s long-term well-being. We owe it to the future citizens of Bangalore to inherit an environment that nurtures heritage and nature as a legacy.

Suresh Jayaram

Freitag, 5. März 2010

many thanks

deepak and maraa
suresh and 1 shanthi road gallery

all participants in our workshops, performances and discussions:
community of maraa and 1 shanthi road
students of sristhi
students of attakkalari
pupils of padmavathi-montessori school
pupils of visthar
students of school of peace
abhilash and bangalore dance collective

all people who supported our residency with their ideas and help:
ramesh and geetu, srishti college
rachel, teacher at srishti
rachel, intern at maraa
staff of attakkalari
nakula, teacher at attakkalari
david, director of visthar
...

artists, teachers and institutions we visited in chennai

special thanks to arkha, who forwarded us all important contacts before going to india

salon emmer
katté-being at home

Donnerstag, 4. März 2010

water

water bottles collected in our room during our three week stay at 1 shanthi road.



water filter playing music.

salon emmer
katté-being at home