Skip to content Skip to navigation

Global Village 2012

On a busy Monday afternoon of 30th April, the people around Latashil field and The High Court were caught by surprise when some young boys and girls approached them with a bottle of “Future Milk”. Priced at Rs. 200 for just 100 ml, this “Future Milk” can do wonders. One sip a day can make you lose weight, have beautiful hair and glowing skin. Topping the list, it also provides all the nutrition required by a human body in a day and even if you skip meals, you will still feel energetic and healthy! Interested? Contact “The Yellow Cab”, a city based group of young people who in their own words “aspire to promote our views using multiple methods like video projection, digital text, news print, performance & visual array to achieve our goal…. Our idea is to project ART & its demand to project social change with a contemporary perspective.” The Yellow Cab in collaboration with Artefacting Guwahati had performed that brilliant piece of what they call “Public Art” depicting increasing corporatization of our basic eating habits. In what would the artists at The Yellow Cab say “ people have forgotten even to make best from either cultivation or livestock farming. In this particular work, the packed milk product personifies such extent of industrialization and the common man’s dependability on such products.”




It was interesting to observe peoples responses to this. Some thought these guys were engaged in some kind of marketing activity. Some even asked if they would seriously “lose weight” after drinking the milk. 40% of the people approached agreed to buy that. Of course the artists then explained the concept and returned the money. Some loved the idea while some laughed at it.
Undaunted, the artists continue with the Art performance till evening. Many like the lawyer outside the Circuit House contributed the amount as a goodwill gesture.

This performance was the start up of the bigger event by Artefacting Guwahati which is scheduled for 19th May.

Their three month project, titled “Global Village 2012” has seen a diverse collaborative of local artists from the northeast, mixing with the Artefacting team members from Europe, USA and India to work together creatively towards common objectives and education. International exhibitions and a feature film will intimately deliver these experiences and Artefacts to viewers across India and abroad through curated exhibits in museums, galleries and theatres. With the assistance of Artefacting leaders and key partners, relationships with communities will spurn effective working environments that can lead to meaningful and profound collaborative work.
The team’s diverse assets, backgrounds, abilities and networks will give a capacity to allow small projects to materialize into events of cultural and community significance; a festival, the creation of land art, a photo shoot, film production or a deep immersion & recording of a cultural tradition.





The main faces at Artefacting Guwahati team are Arne de Knegt who as a photographer and idealist, views Artefacting as a way to re-shape the way we think about our world and the many components it consists of. With him is Parasher Baruah who hails from Dibrugarh, a filmmaker who tries to bring north east into the mainstream through films, photographs and of course Artefacting. Annalisa Iadicicco is a mixed media artist who works in installations and photography. She worked with several years with major movie and television productions she is now focusing on creating art from raw materials and photography. With them there are a host of local collaborators from Assam like Utpal Das, Sanjib Sabhapandit, Tanmoy Thakur, Dilip Tamuly, Aiyushman Dutta and Alak Pathak to name a few. Actively participating and contributing are the enthusiastic students from Guwahati College of Architecture, The Yellow Cab, Anga Studio, NDTV IndiaCan Broadcast Journalism Institute and Gauhati Artists Guild.

In Guwahati, the main event is proposed to be held by the Uzan Bazaar riverside. The viewer will be led to a centre point from where one can explore the various audio-visual experiences. The layout will leave the viewer to decide for themselves between the various installations; resembling the ''cross roads' that the modern generation is facing - in deciding where to go, what to do, who to become - that of a 'culture in transition'.


- Mayuri Rajkonwar

Comments

nandita's picture

so nice

Pages

Add new comment

Assamese Translator

Assam Times seeks English to Assamese translators!
Join our volunteer team.
Email editor@assamtimes.org.

Random Stories

MAJONI scheme launced in Sivasagar

1 Mar 2009 - 3:49am | shariefzamanborah
MAJONI a scheme for the girl child under the Assam Bikash Yojuana of Government of Assam was launched yesterday(27-02-09)in Sivasagar by Pranab Gogoi, Hon'ble Minister, Sericulture, Handloom...

AGP to sit in strike on Aug 21: Goswami

17 Aug 2008 - 2:18am | editor
The main Opposition Asom Gana Parishad will sit in strike demanding steps to seal the Indo-Bangla border and an updated national register of citizens. Disclosing this, party president Bindabon...

Jhajimukh Festival on February 18-19

30 Jan 2012 - 8:25pm | Anup Arandhara
Jhajimukh Festival will be held on February 18-19. MLA from Teok constituency of Jorhat district and President of the Organising Commitee Membor Gogoi has laid the foundation stote of the pandal...

GSP supports UPPL-BJP coalition

13 Dec 2020 - 9:55am | AT Kokrajhar Bureau
Kokrajhar: Ganasakti Party has also come in support of UPPL-BJP coalition to form BTC since ruling BPF fell short of 3 seats at the end of the poll counting on Sunday we hours. State BJP president...

Other Contents by Author

Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on Friday appealed to the political parties not to indulge in blamegame on the BTAD clash and massive exodus of north east people from the southern side. He said it when he convened an all party meeting in Dispur on Friday. The meeting decided to dispatch an all party delegation to the riot hit areas.
The overall situation in Rangiya is by and large normal on Friday where curfew was relaxed. According to police, security forces are maintaining a strict vigil in Rangiya, as well as other trouble-torn areas of Kokrajhar, Chirang, Dhubri and Baksa districts. Shops and markets in Rangiya opened in the morning after relaxation of the curfew. Senior police and administration officials are camping at Rangiya to oversee the situation.
Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on Thursday appealed to the north east living in Mumbai, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh not to give in to rumours of attack. Addressing a press conference in Guwahati, Gogoi said that there was panic amongst the students and people hailing from north east. Gogoi said,“a lot of rumours are doing the rounds and this is creating panic amongst the people. There is no need to panic, people should not give in to rumours.” DoNER minister also said a circle of unidentified people are spreading rumours spread resulting in the exodus. He spoke to the Karnataka Home Secretary and appealed to the people not to panic or believe rumours.
Over 6,000 people hailing from Assam have left Bangalore are arriving the home state on Thursday following rumours of attack by miscreants after the BTAD clashes. According to reports, the people, mostly, students fear safety and security as they received anonymous SMSes saying they would be targeted in retaliatory attacks.In a scene that suggests utter panic, many people were seen boarding trains out of Bangalore on Wednesday, even after Karnataka's Home Minister R Ashok asked them not to leave the IT city. Karnataka DGP Lalrokhuma Pachuau appealed to the Northeast students to not panic. He said that they should not panic as there is not a single attack anywhere. Railway PRO in Banglore...
The Centre on Thursday said that there was no threat to the people of Assam in any part of the country.Reacting to the spreading rumour and panic thaty gripped among the people of Assam, he said that there is no need to panic. Following rumours of attack on some of their compatriots, about 5,000 people from returned to their home towns even as Karnataka chief minister Jagadish Shettar assured them of security.Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde spoke to Shettar on Wednesday night and were understood to have asked him to ensure the safety of people from Assam.
There is report of fresh violence in BTAD areas. The violence broke out in Baksa district when police opened fire at the mob on Thursday morning. Police opened fire to disperse mob which had reportedly torched a bus and bridge in Baksa district. Army has been deployed in Tamalpur area of Baksa district.
BJP President Nitin Gadkari said that the fresh violence in BTAD violence is unfortunate and that immigrants are behind the clashes. He observed that the strings of violence in Assam are unfortunate, there seems to be a foreign angle to this. The violence comes a day after government's deadline to the villagers to return to their homes ended. The violence that have so far claimed 77 lives, is appearing to be spreading in the other parts of the state.
Assam chief minister Tarun Gogoi says on Wednesday that his government will continue the initiatives to help the state develope on all fronts. Unfurling the national tri colour at Khanapara in the morning, Gogoi said that the development initiatives are paying dividends. Gogoi said that the violence-hit people in the refugee camps would be taken care of. Gogoi, who unfurled the tricolour for 12th times took salute of the armed forces and NCC.
Pune police are running a massive drive to find out the miscreants behind spreading MMS clip and text SMS on the recent BTAD and Dhubri incidents. At least 10 students from north east have been beaten up in a string of incidents in the last three days in Kondhwa and Pune Camp areas of the city. Eleven others have been arrested in two of these cases so far for doctoring MMS clips and text messages on recent ethnic riots in BTAD areas and Dhubri district. According to reports, hunt is on to find out the masterminds of these attacks and ascertain how these videos were circulated. Investigations so far seem to indicate those involved in the attacks since August 8 had seen doctored videos on...
More than 400 students are believed to have fled from Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharasthra fearing attack in the time of BTAD riot. According to reports, 400 Bodo, Koch-Rajbongshi and Adivasi youths have come back to Kokrajhar district after being humiliated by some miscreants in those States following the clash in BTAD. This is apart from 30 Bodo students who have come back to Chirang in the past few days fearing attack in these states. AASU and ABSU leaders have expressed concern over the exodus of students and urged the government to provide them security in those states.