The excellence, custom and craft of Dayak Dance
The eminent choreographer Dedy Lutan as
of late exhibited his most recent work, Hutan Pasir Sunyi, or The Silent
Sand Forest, at Galeri Indonesia Kaya in the Grand Indonesia mall in
Central Jakarta.
The execution opened with a lady lit by a
spotlight, rising up out of the dimness. At that point, two men in
loincloths — one more established and attentive, one more youthful and
unbridled — entered the venue while a young lady, shining in a
conventional Dayak outfit of beaded sapei inoq shirt and ta skirt, moved
gravely and absolutely over the stage.
A gathering of stone-confronted men, evidently older folks, entered and sat down in advance as the activity developed beneath. More ladies clad in comparable outfits went ahead stage, all grasping involved quill plans as they moved.
Before long, a gathering of
untouchables, all ladies, bearing blades and clad in what seemed to be
basic calfskin outfits, stood up from their seats in the crowd and went
to challenge the feathered dance specialists.
As the young fellow kept running up the
stairs of the amphitheater, whooping in the midst of the grown-ups and
numerous youngsters in the group, the ladies pursued an adapted fight
that built up and finally finished with the lady in outline gazing
intently at the pariahs, who turned their cleavers on themselves.
The troupe — senior citizens and
warriors alike — then started circling the more youthful man, sweat
spilling down his face, before clash swung to stasis and the execution
finished.
Dedy, the country’s principal
choreographer, has invested decades going by Dayak groups in the remote
woods of Kalimantan, meeting move maestros, taking in their ceremonies
and afterward arranging their moves in Jakarta — in the wake of
performing his translation for the neighborhood group, obviously.
He says that moves, for example, Hutan
Pasir Sunyi are not samples of workmanship for the purpose of
craftsmanship: they have custom significance and in addition excellence
Making a move needs long and lone pondering,” Dedy said. “It’s never been a moment and brisk procedure.”
Galeri Indonesia Kaya, which offers free
shows about Indonesian society, lies simply inverse the Blitz megaplex —
an odd juxtaposition of narrating venues.
The exhibition’s 150-seat amphitheater, on the other hand, makes for a shockingly suggest execution space.
Then, Dayak and Javanese dance artists
from Surakarta, Central Java, displayed a more expound rendition of
Hutan Pasir Sunyi at the Bogor Botanical Gardens on May 14 — a domain
closer to the woods of Kalimantan than the shopping center of Jakarta
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar