Showing posts with label Carasauga Festival 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carasauga Festival 2012. Show all posts

Saturday, April 21, 2012

The Magically of Javanese Dance

Ramayana's Dance
Javanese dance is the dances and art forms that were created and influenced by Javanese culture. Javanese dance is usually associated with courtly, refined and sophisticated culture of the Javanese kratons, such as the Bedhaya and Srimpi dance. However, in a wider sense, Javanese dance also includes the dances of Javanese commoners and villagers such as Ronggeng, Tayub, Reog, and Kuda Lumping.
Javanese dance is usually associated with Wayang wong, and the palaces of Yogyakarta and Surakarta due to the nature of dance being a pusaka or sacred heirloom from ancestors of the palace rulers. These expressive dances are more than just dances, they are also used for moral education, emotional expression, and spreading of the Javanese culture.

Javanese dance reflects the stratified hierarchy of Javanese society, and roughly can be identified within two mainstream of traditions:
  1. Tari kraton (palace dances)
  2. Tari kawulo (commoner dances)

Tari Kraton

The courtly Javanese palace dance is the type of dances that developed, nurtured and fostered by Javanese Kratons, mainly Yogyakarta Sultanate and Surakarta Sunanate, the patrons of Javanese Mataram culture. Javanese sultans are known as the patron and the creator of Javanese court dances.
Kraton dances employs sets of rules about certain dance movements, body and hand gestures that requires discipline to learn. Gamelan orchestra is the prerequisite for Javanese court dance performances as well as for other Javanese art forms such as Wayang performances. The serene elegance, slow pace and constrains of its movements gave Javanese dance a meditative traits. Javanese court dances were heavily influenced by Javanese Hindu-Buddhist legacy. As the result the costumes, jewelry and story, often reflects or based on Hindu epic tales of Ramayana and Mahabharata.
There are three basic types of courtly Javanese kraton dance:[citation needed]
  1. Beksan putra – These are the dances for men, which serve two purposes: a military close-order drill and highlighting martial skills. Dancers may learn beksan putra dances to familiarize themselves with the movements for narrative dances.
  2. Beksan putri – Putri is the Javanese word for female, and these dances include courtly dances designed for royal events with very precise movements and distinct staging with subtle layers of meaning. Such dances were often used for entertainment or courtship.
  3. Beksan wayang – These are narrative dances from epic poems, and usually are named after the characters in them, usually an alus-style hero and a gagah-style villain.

 Kawulo Dance

Also known as "Tari Rakyat", is the popular dances of the commoner. This is the type of Javanese dances that developed in villages or cities that located relatively quite far from Javanese kratons as the center of Javanese palace culture. Kawulo dances is lack in Javanese courtly dance discipline, constraints, and refinements. This type of dance relatively more open and adaptive to foreign influences.
Several dance is functioned as courtship or social dance, such as Ronggeng, Gandrung and Tayub, while others as celebratory dances such as Reog and Kuda Lumping. The movement of social dances, such as ronggeng and tayub are somewhat more vigorous and erotic, closely related to Sundanese Jaipongan. Because of this erotic nuances, this type of dance often gained shady reputation as the dance of the prostitutes. 

Ronggeng Dance

Ronggeng is a type of Javanese dance in which couples exchange poetic verses as they dance to the music of a rebab or violin and a gong. Ronggeng might be originated from Java, but also can be found in Sumatra and the Malay peninsula.
Ronggeng probably has existed in Java since ancient time, the bas reliefs in Karmawibhanga section on 8th century Borobudur displays the scene of travelling entertainment troupe with musicians and female dancers. In Java, a traditional ronggeng performance features a traveling dance troupe that travels from village to village. The dance troop consists of one or several professional female dancers, accompanied by a group of musicians playing musical instruments: rebab and gong. The term "ronggeng" also applied for this female dancers. During a ronggeng performance, the female professional dancers are expected to invite some male audiences or clients to dance with them as a couple with the exchange of some tips money for the female dancer, given during or after the dance. The couple dances intimately and the female dancer might perform some movements that might be considered too erotic by standard of modesty in Javanese court etiquette. In the past, the erotic and sexual nuance of the dance gave ronggeng a shady reputation as prostitution disguised in the art of dance.

Wayang wong

Wayang wong also known as Wayang orang (literally human wayang) is a type of classical Javanese dance theatrical performance with themes taken from episodes of Ramayana or Mahabharata. Ramayana wayang wong performance is routinely performed in Prambanan temple, Yogyakarta, while the episode Mahabharata performed routinely in Sriwedari park theatre in Surakarta city and in Bharata Wayang Orang theatre in Jakarta.
While wayang gedog usually considered as cross variant of Wayang wong and Topeng dance, where the dancers wear mask. This theatrical performance that took the themes from the Panji cycles stories from the kingdom of Janggala, in which the players wear masks known as wayang topeng or wayang gedog. The word "gedog" comes from "kedok", which, like "topeng" means "mask". The main theme is the story of Raden Panji and Candra. This is a love story about princess Candra Kirana of Kediri and Raden Panji Asmarabangun, the crown prince of Jenggala. Candra Kirana was the incarnation of Dewi Ratih (goddess of love) and Panji was an incarnation of Kamajaya (god of love). Kirana's story was given the title "Smaradahana" ("The fire of love"). At the end of the complicated story they finally can marry and bring forth a son, named Raja Putra. Panji Asmarabangun ruled Jenggala under the official names "Sri Kameswara", "Prabu Suryowiseso", and "Hino Kertapati". Originally, wayang wong was performed only as an aristocratic entertainment in four palaces of Yogyakarta and Surakarta. In the course of time, it spread to become a popular and folk form as well.


Saturday, March 24, 2012

Jaipong Dance (The West Javanese Original Dance)

Jaipongan, also known as Jaipong, is a popular traditional dance of Sundanese people, West Java, Indonesia. The dance was created by Gugum Gumbira, based on traditional Sundanese Ketuk Tilu music and Pencak Silat movements.

In 1961, Indonesian President Sukarno prohibited rock and roll and other western genres of music, and challenged Indonesian musicians to revive the indigenous arts. The name jaipongan came from people mimicking of the sounds created by some of the drums in the ensemble. Audiences were often heard shouting jaipong after specific sections of rhythmic music were played. Jaipongan debuted in 1974 when Gugum Gumbira and his gamelan and dancers first performed in public.
The most widely available album of Jaipongan outside of Indonesia is Tonggeret by singer Idjah Hadidjah and Gugum Gumbira's Jugala orchestra, released in 1987, and re-released as West Java: Sundanese Jaipong and other Popular Music by Nonesuch/Elektra Records.

Jaipongan, also known as jaipong, is a musical performance genre of the Sundanese people in the Sundanese language of West Java, Indonesia. Jaipongan includes revived indigenous arts, like gamelan, but it also did not ignore Western music completely despite the ban on rock and roll. It used its sensuality and the sensuality found in a traditional village music and dance, ketuk tilu. However, many believe it is something purely Indonesian or Sundanese in origin and style. It is developed predominately from rural folk forms and traditions as a purely indigenous form. The rise of cassettes and films has led to the popularity of the musical form of jaipongan. It has spread from its home in West Java’s Sunda, to greater Java and Indonesia. It can be seen as many regional varieties of gong-chime performance found through much of Indonesia. As also an urban dance form, it is based primarily on the village forms of ketuk tilu and on the Indonesian martial arts, pencak silat. The musical genre is largely influenced from ketuk tilu with traces of the masked theater dance, topeng banjet and the wayang golek puppet theater. Ketuk tilu is its biggest influence, as a traditional Sudanese musical entertainment form.
Gong-chime performance is characterized by such features as: use of an ensemble dominated by idiophones, metallophones and knobbed gongs. It is a stratified polyphony, with lower-pitch instruments playing parts of lesser density and all parts are structured colotomically around time-cycles. This can be found in traditional Indonesian gamelan. There is improvisation on certain instruments. The modes used are grouped into two broad types: slendro and pelog.
Ketuk tilu was a musical genre based on ritual and celebration in the villages of the Sundanese people, meaning three kettle gongs. It was known for complex drumming coordinated with equally dynamic solo female dancers. The music was performed for planting and harvesting rituals and later celebrated village life, circumcision and marriage, expressed fertility, and displayed sensuality, eroticism and even sometimes “socially accepted prostitution.” Ketuk tilu was very popular in the Sundanese villages, but the urban Sundanese considered it unrefined and inappropriate because the music involved males and females dancing together suggestively, or mixed dancing between men and ronggeng, or prostitutes. Ronggeng probably has existed in Java since ancient time, the bas reliefs in Karmawibhanga section on Borobudur displays the scene of travelling entertainment troupe with musicians and female dancers.
Jaipong is less strictly associated with ceremonial functions, but performances are common in the Rayagung festival month, and with circumcisions and marriages. The performances now have the character of secular social functions, attended by young and old, primarily for entertainment and socializing. Public performance is now extremely frequent especially in clubs or street performances.
The cassette industry and its boom in Indonesia helped popularize jaipongan greatly and promoted regional styles rather than hurt them. Many learned the dance through cassette rather than the performance. The mass media have made jaipong ubiquitous. It has created competition in the styles of the drummers among ensembles. It has also helped to bring about many dance schools, altering dance and its label on females in West Java.
The song repertoire of jaipongan is varied, and that is why it is better understood as an intertwined performance style of music and dance. Many songs are associated with ketuk tilu or other wide reaching regional varieties, not traditional gamelan. It consists of songs of more recent origin often composed for jaipongan. Song topics vary, encompassing amatory, moralistic, bawdy, topical and spiritual subjects, often emphasizing grass roots culture.

Jaipong Music Instrument
Jaipongan takes much of its instrumentation from ketuk tilu ensembles. The ketuk tilu group is composed of pot-gongs. Besides the core three main kettle gongs (ketuk, tilu meaning three), the instruments include a rebab, a small upright bowed instrument, also known as a spike fiddle, other small gongs — a hanging gong and two iron plates, and two or three barrel drums. The traditional singer is female or a sinden, but also dances and invites men to dance with her sensually, so it is assumed she is a prostitute or ronggeng. The ensemble is small enough to be carried from village to village to places where a saron or kempul may be added.
Ketuk tilu songs, following a free rhythmic introduction, are structured sectionally, juxtaposing segments of short gong cycles (about 10 seconds) with those of longer gong-cycles (about 30 seconds) each section having a characteristic sequence of dance steps associated with it.
Gumbira took and retrofitted the dynamic and intense ketuk-tilu music. The role of the singer was emphasized to concentrate just on the vocals. He added to it traditional gamelan by expanding the drum section of the ketuk tilu as more of an urban, unique gamelan orchestra from two drums to six. He also sped up the music significantly, increasing the dance role. He also modified the accompanying dance. The modifications retained some of the original sensual moves of ketuk tilu, joining to them a popular martial art called pencak silat. Gumbira called it jaipong. Jaipongan cassettes really feature the singer with their name and alluring cover photos. The singer is given greatest prominence, no longer seen as a prostitute but professional and respectful. This goes with the market demand for solo-superstars.
The idiophonic accompaniment of jaipongan may also include a few saron or a gegung (an L-shaped row of gong chimes), and often a gambang (xylophone). Otherwise instruments are the same as in ketuk tilu.
The large hanging gong and smaller gongs used in jaipong, like ketuk tilu and gong-chime performance, serve colotomic functions, punctuating the time-cycles at regular fixed intervals. The several ketuk play a standardized three-pitch figure, high, low, medium-low. The spike fiddle often imitates the singer and solos when the singer is silent. All the musicians, and especially the drummer, freely supplement the texture with rhythmic cries and yells called senggak. The most important roles become the singer and the drummer. The drummer is more aggressive and assertive than in other Sudanese/Javanese ensembles, commanding attention with a variable cadential figure before a large gong stroke. Jaipongan drumming is more virtuosic and flamboyant, the drummer performs lively improvisations throughout, building up tension that culminates and is released at the gong stroke. A distinctive Sundanese feature is the variation of the pitch of the main drum, whose head tension is governed by the foot of the drummer. The singer is the central figure carrying the melody and dancing at the same time. It is this lively interplay between the drummer and the singer that was carried from ketuk tilu, and is an identifying feature. The dance is centered around the gong cycles, in which the tension is built up before each large gong stroke where the dancers will gracefully jerk their heads toward each other.
The male jaipongan dance style is less acrobatic and martial than that found in ketuk tilu, simpler. Whereas the female dancer in jaipongan is very active, more than the ronggeng in ketuk tilu. It is very choreographed with a sophisticated polish different than the coyness role played by the ronggeg for the male advances in ketuk tilu.
The sectional formal structure of ketuk tilu is one feature that has not carried over to jaipongan. A jaipongan piece opens with a few gong cycles, often in a different tempo than the rest of the piece, during which the spike fiddle player improvises over the idiophone and drum accompaniment. The vocalist then enters, usually singing four gong cycles consecutively, then allowing the spike fiddler to improvise for two of theses gongan. The piece alternates in this way until it ends with a deceleration leading to the final gong.
The melodies are set to madenda, the Sundanese variant of the pelog mode, or slendro, or a free combination of the two, or an alternating combination. The melodies are usually in the pelog or madenda scales, while the fixed pitch idiophonic accompaniment is strictly in slendro. This combination contrasts with the gamelan tradition. The scales of these modes, intonation and tonic are difficult and not consistent, for more detail on this see:.[1] Intonation may be further obscured by the characteristic vibrato. These melodies in jaipongan can also be stereotypical; so much of the expressiveness and uniqueness comes in the introduction, improvised or pre-composed. It often establishes the modal pattern.
The verses are often organized into quatrains, each is one gong cycle, and in rhyme scheme aabbcc, each line having about eight syllables, as in most Sundanese folk and popular verse.



Jaipong Dance in Social Community
In 1961, the president of Indonesia, President Sukarno created a ban on western music, mainly the genre of rock and roll, due to the fact that western ideas, themes, values and morals began to infiltrate the area. With the ban, Sukarno urged the public to “return to and revive the musical traditions of the past”. Gugum Gumbira heard this and deiced to create a genre of music that would revive the musical interests of the past and added sexual undertones and a sense of elegance in order to bring it into the future. In addition to being a musical reincarnation, jaipongan also reincarnated martial arts and traditional dance. It became so popular that the government decided that it needed to be taught to be people of all generations.
When jaipongan was first introduced in 1974, there was a lack of acceptable music in the area of West Java; Sunda more specifically. It gained popularity instantly because it was a completely non-western form of music that the government accepted and promoted. It had all of the values of traditional Sundanese music to entice the older generations, yet had enough energy, vibrancy, and sexuality to entice the younger generations. Jaipongan was also based on the life of the lower class and elevated their stories and struggles. It allowed the people to see themselves in the music and feel as if they were a part of their culture. Once it became popular, many other musicians began recreating it.
When situations in Sunda became more political, the music shifted and took on themes of moral, political, social, spiritual awareness. Once the shift occurred, the government tried its best to end jaipongan. Due to its popularity with the people, it was able to maintain its craze, and even out lasted the ban on Western Music.
The sexual nature of the songs was taken from the idea of prostitution, and was then elevated in order to make it a more elegant, civilized part of art. This broke gender barriers because it changed the way in which men and women interacted. Never before had men and women danced or interacted together in promiscuous or sexually explicit or suggestive ways in performance in Indonesia. Even though jaipongan was created to stay away from musical themes of sex, love, drugs, and rock and roll, it incorporated some of these themes in small increments. When the government discovered the sexual nature of the songs and dances, they looked to curb the popularity of jaipongan, but it had already become the music of the people and their efforts were thwarted.
Jaipongan was a way for the Sundanese people to take back their culture from the Western ideas and rid themselves of the colonial Dutch influences. Jaipongan elevated the idea of village music or music of the people. It focused on love, money, agriculture, and as the world became filled with more turmoil, it became a vehicle for moral, political spiritual, and social awareness.
Jaipongan became so popular that in 1976, two years after its creation, it was recorded on cassettes on Gumbira’s record label Jugala. With the cassette’s release international popularity rose and helped to create a larger musical industry in Sunda and Indonesia at large. All of which was and still is used to help preserve the culture and history of the West Java and the Sundanese people.
The rapid popularity of Jaipongan along with the boom in cassette tapes helped the genre to spread and become popular in Asia, Europe, and America during the 1980s. In addition it created a tourism industry in Sunda. People from all over the world came to learn about and experience Jaipongan first hand. Music and dance schools were created in order to preserve the art form and history of the Sundanese people. The government felt that Jaipongan was such a cultural staple that it needed to be taught to all citizens.

Jaipong Dance Today and The Future
In 2011, the international popularity of jaipongan has decreased, but in Asia, it’s still extremely popular. It’s most popular in the areas of Sunda, where it was created, as well as the surrounding villages and cities.
Although it’s most popular in Asia, there are jaipongan dance troupes and musical ensembles in Europe in addition to the United States (like Harsanari of San-Francisco) and throughout other parts of the world.
In 2011, jaipongan is noted as a modern classical concert genre of music, which is often sampled in other Asian music, and has multiple subgenres. There is still is a large market for jaipongan CDs and mp3s.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Carassauga Festival 2012





 



 Carassauga Festival 2012
Carassauga is an annual multi-cultural festival in Mississauga, Ontario, founded in 1985. The Festival was developed in response to a challenge put out by Mayor Hazel McCallion to all ethno-cultural groups at a meeting she called in the old City Hall in the fall of 1985. From that point on, volunteers from different ethnic communities have organized a festival celebrating diversity and cross-cultural friendship. With a name based on a similar Toronto event, the Caravan Festival of Cultures and Brampton's Carabram, Carassauga's first event included Italian, Scottish, Ukrainian, and West Indian pavilions. In 2011, the festival had over 298,000 visits to 31 pavilions representing over 68 countries.
Each pavilion offers patrons their distinctive cuisine, crafts, and information about their heritage and history through traditional and modern cultural dance performances.
Carassauga Mississauga's Festival of Cultures 2012 dates: May 25, 26, 27  2012
Mississauga Transit runs free services connecting the pavilions, for people presenting a passport to the festival.

Pavilions
Countries, continents, states and geographic or cultural regions that have been represented at Carassauga through the years include Africa (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, & Togo), Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bolivia, Canada, Caribbean, Chile, China, Colombia, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, El Salvador, England, Germany, Greece, Guatemala, Hawaii, India, Indonesia, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Lebanon, Lithuania, Macedonia, Malaysia, Mexico, Myanmar, New Zealand, Pakistan, Panamá, Perú, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Scotland, Serbia and Montenegro, South Pacific, Tahiti, Turkey, Ukraine, United States and Venezuela.

Sponsorship
Carassauga receives sponsorship from all levels of government (municipal, regional, provincial and federal), as well as numerous businesses, unions and cultural organizations.

For more information and ticket:: Consulate General of Indonesia - Toronto
contact number:  416 360-4020 
email: pensosbud@indonesiatoronto
Normal price ticket: CAD$. 12 for 3 days event.
Price ticket from consulate: CAD$. 8 for 3 days event
Indonesian performances dance show: Friday, 25 May 2012 (8:10 pm - 8:30 pm; 9:10pm - 9:30pm; 10:10 pm-10:30pm); 
Saturday  (4:10 pm-4:30 pm; 5:10pm-5:30pm; 7:10pm-7:30pm; 9:10pm-9:30pm); 
Sunday: (3:10pm-3:30pm; 4:10pm-4:30pm); 5:10pm-5:30pm; 5:40pm-6:00 pm). 
Please look at this link for a details  http://www.carassauga.com/?pavilion=indonesia.



Festival Internasional Seni Dekoratif di Moskow


KBRI Moskow telah berpartisipasi dalam Festival Internasional Seni Dekoratif ke-4 “Tradisi yang tidak terlupakan (Nezabytie Traditsii)” yang berlangsung tanggal 22 Desember 2011 hingga 5 Februari 2012 di Galeri “Belyaevo”, Moskow.

Barang-barang seni dan budaya Indonesia menghiasi Festival tersebut, seperti peta Indonesia dalam kain batik, wayang, miniatur becak dan ukiran-ukiran kayu, termasuk patung kayu pasangan pengantin Jawa. Gong Bali dengan ukiran kayu berwarna keemas-emasan memberikan daya tarik tersendiri bagi pengunjung.

Festival diikuti oleh para peserta dari Rusia dan negara-negara asing. Selain Indonesia, terdapat Jepang, Estonia, Belarus, Ghana, Latvia, Panama dan Benin. Tujuan dari Festival tersebut adalah melangsungkan tradisi budaya bangsa melalui karya seni dekoratif dan sebagai upaya meciptakan seniman-seniman baru berbakat. Karya-karya seni yang ditampilkan seperti karya seni dari kain, kaca, keramik, logam dan juga kostum.

Direktur Galeri Marina Sergeevna Bushueva menyampaikan apresiasi yang tinggi atas peran aktif KBRI Moskow ikut serta dalam Festival tersebut. Menurutnya, Indonesia memiliki keanekaragaman seni dan budaya yang dapat diketahui oleh masyarakat Rusia, seperti batik dan wayang kulit.

Sementara itu, Sekretaris Kedua Fungsi Pensosbud KBRI Moskow Enjay Diana mengatakan barang-barang seni dan budaya Indonesia yang ditampilkan dalam Festival ini merupakan bagian kecil dari keanekaragaman seni dan budaya Indonesia.

“Indonesia terdiri dari berbagai suku bangsa yang memiliki seni dan budaya yang berbeda-beda pula. Bali yang Anda ketahui hanyalah salah satu dari sekian banyaknya pulau di Indonesia”, kata Enjay Diana pada saat penutupan Festival.

Festival ditutup tanggal 5 Februari 2012 yang dihadiri pejabat Dinas Kebudayaan Administrasi kota Moskow Tenggara, seniman-seniman, Duta Besar Latvia di Federasi Rusia, Perwakilan Kedutaan Besar Estonia dan tamu undangan lainnya. Selama berlangsungnya Festival, lebih dari 5 ribu pengunjung menyaksikan berbagai karya seni dekoratif, temasuk dari Indonesia. (Sumber: Pensosbud KBRI-Moskow)

Kings Cultural Festival di University of Western Ontario

London, Ontario - Tanggal 2 Februari 2012, KJRI Toronto yang diwakili oleh Pejabat Fungsi Pensosbud telah menghadiri acara "King's Cultural Festival" di Bessie Labatt Hall, King University College, University of Western Ontario (UWO), London, Ontario.

Festival ini merupakan acara  multicultural tahunan yang diselenggarakan untuk memperkenalkan budaya dari masing-masing negara melalui kelompok atau perkumpulan mahasiswa di universitas tersebut.

Dalam festival ini Indonesia diwakili oleh perhimpunan mahasiswa Indonesia yang tergabung dalam Indonesian and International Student Association (IISA), menampilkan tari Pendet dari Bali yang dibawakan oleh 3 orang penari.

Dalam pidato pembukaannya Dr. David Sylvester, King's University College Principal memberikan ucapan selamat datang dan terima kasih kepada para peserta dan tamu undangan, diantaranya Mr. Harold Usher, City Councillor, City of London.

Selain dari Indonesia, kelompok mahasiswa lainnya yang berpartisipasi dalam acara ini, yaitu dari Philipina, China, Irlandia, Palestina, El Savador, Korea Selatan, Polandia, Pakistan, Afrika, India, dan beberapa negara Amerika Latin. Acara berjalan dengan sukses dan lancar dihadiri oleh sekitar 400 orang yang sebagian besar mahasiswa dari King's University College dan UWO. (Sumber: KJRI Toronto).

Promosi Indonesia pada “Cultural Awareness Fair” di Midwestern University, Greater Chicago

KJRI-Chicago berpartisipasi pada festival multikultural "Cultural Awareness Fair" yang di selenggarakan oleh Diversity Education Committee. Midwestern Univeristy di Greater Chicago, Illinois pada tanggal 1 Februari 2012. 
Partisipasi Indonesia dalam tarian, lagu, musik keroncong, pembacaan puisi, booth promosi pariwisata dan makanan menjadikan Indonesia sebagai “pusat perhatian” pada festival mumultikultural ini.

Festival multikultural ini merupakan yang pertama kalinya diselenggarakan oleh Midwestern University dan diikuti oleh beberapa negara antara lain Indonesia, Pakistan, Swedia dan komunitas Afro-American. Festival dipenuhi ratusan pengunjung yang terdiri dari mahasiswa, para dosen dan pimpinan Midwestern University .Indonesia menampilkan dua tarian Bali, yaitu Tari Topeng Ekspresi dan Topeng Keras yang dibawakan oleh Staf Fungsi Pensosbud, Ngurah Kertayuda. Pada acara “poetry reading” Konsul Pensosbud membacakan 2 buah puisi ciptaannya berjudul “I will” dan “Are you still a moon”. Tim KJRI juga menyanyikan lagu “Bengawan Solo” ciptaan Gesang diiringi dengan alunan musik keroncong KJRI Chicago.Booth” Indonesia menampilkan barang-barang seni budaya, kerajinan tangan dan brosur-brosur promosi pariwisata Indonesia dengan menonjolkan tema keindahan taman laut Indonesia dan keunikan Pulau Komodo dengan “komodo dragon nya.Selain promosi seni budaya dan pariwisata Indonesia, KJRI juga mempromosikan kuliner Indonesia dengan menyediakan “mie goreng” yang sangat disukai oleh para pengunjung. 
Pada kesempatan ini, KJRI mengumumkan penyelenggaraan acara “Indonesian Night: A Celebration of Cultural Journey” yang akan diselenggarakan oleh Permias Chicago pada tanggal 11 Februari 2011 di International House, University of Chicago, serta mengundang para pengunjung untuk menghadiri acara dimaksud.
(sumber: KJRI-Chicago).
Pendet's Dance: indonesian-traditional-art.blogspot.com

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Sanggar Caraka Buana news: Saman dance officially recognized by UNESCO

Aceh`s Saman dance has been officially included in UNESCO`s intangible world cultural heritage list, an official said.

The decision to include the Saman dance was reached at the 6th Session of the Intergovernmental Committee for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage being held in Nusa Dua, Bali, from November 22 to 29, 2011, I Gusti Ngurah Putra, a tourism and creative economy ministry spokesman , told the press here on Thursday.
"At the session, the Saman dance from Gayo Lues and environs in Aceh province was officially included in UNESCO`s List of intangible Cultural Heritage in urgent need of Safeguarding," he said.
The UNESCO meeting was being participated in by around 500 representatives from 69 countries, international NGOs, cultural experts, and the media.
Coordinating Minister for People`s Welfare Agung Laksono expressed his appreciation for the inclusion of the Saman dance in the intangible world cultural heritage list.
The recognition of the Saman dance by UNESCO should become the beginning of serious efforts to preserve and promote the saman dance, he said.
The Saman dance is originally from Gayo Lues and environs in in Aceh Province. It was created by a Gayo tribe in the 13th century and later developed by Syeh Saman to convey religious messages.
The Saman dance shows very dynamic movements and interesting harmonious sounds without the help of any musical instrument. In the dance, its performers sit cross-legged or kneel shoulder to shoulder in a straight line. They wear traditional Gayo clothes featuring the symbols of nature and noble values. In the past, all Saman dancers were male and their number was always odd.

Javanese Gamelan Performance at Linclon Center New York

Javanese gamelan performance
Just like its title, "What makes it great?" this is a story of one of Indonesia's classical music, Javanese Gamelan. Monday night (11/14), Kusuma Laras, a group of Javanese Gamelan supervised by Indonesian Consulate General in New York, has an honor to perform in front of New York's public at the one of the prestigious art and culture center in New York, the Lincoln Center. The performance that night was a part of White Light Festival which was held from October 20 until November 19, 2011. The White Light Festival offers experiences of passionate beauty and occasion of profound insights into the many dimensions of our individual selves and the collective shared forces of the human condition. This year is the second year of the festival.

There's something special in the performance that night. Unlike the past performances of Kusuma Laras, there is a special commentator, Rob Kapilow (an exclusive Schimer composer who has been widely known in America, Europe, Asia and Australia), who gave approximately an hour long elaboration about Gamelan Jawa and what makes it great. Kapilow started by introducing each musical instrument played in the Gamelan. Every time he finished explaining an instrument, he would asked to audience to join him in copying the sound made by the instruments.

Kapilow also explain the deep philosophy of Javanese culture embed in the classical music of Gamelan Jawa. The music of Gamelan Jawa was all about harmony and balance between unity and variety. Each instrument exists and played to complement each other in creating a wonderful music. The way Kapilow interacted with the audiences, sharing with them the beauty and mystery of Gamelan, has catch their attention. In the end of the performance, audiences who were captured by the greatness of the music were not only able to enjoy the music, but they also able to appreciate the music.

The performance was opened by a song titled Geger Sekutha before Kapilow began his elaboration. After Kapilow's presentation, the show was followed by more songs such as Laler Mengeng, Panjang Ilang, and Asmarandana. As many as 268 New Yorkers came to the performance, and went home with a new knowledge of the beauty, mystery, moreover, greatness of one of Indonesian Classical Music, Gamelan Jawa. (Source: KJRI New York).

Note: Kusuma Laras was formed 28 years ago at the Indonesian Consulate General in New York. Kusuma Laras ("Flowering Harmony") has enthralled audiences in the US and Indonesia with its authentic performances of music and dance from the classical repertoire of the courts of Central Java. The ensemble has been a treasure of the New York City cultural science since its first performance in 1983 in a Tribeca loft, using instruments built especially for the Indonesian Pavilion at the 1964-65 World's Fair in Flushing, New York.

KJRI-Bern: Charm of Saman Hypnotied audience 
Saman Dance performed by 16 dancers of Dance Students League Krida Budaya University of Indonesia (LTMKBUI) has hypnotized 389 guest who attended Indonesian Diplomatic Reception and Cultural performance, held in Theater National Bern, Thursday night (18/8).

The performance which has tagline “Colorful Indonesia” is held to celebrate 66 years of Independence of Indonesia and established through cooperation among Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia, Folkloreique Rencontre Internationale Committee and LTMKBUI. The Invited guests consisting of representatives from the diplomatic corps, government officials, businessmen, academics, press and media, travel agency, and friends of Indonesia.

Cultural performance “Colorful of Indonesia” is intended to promote arts and cultural diversity of Indonesia, especially in Switzerland, which in turn is expected to increase the number of tourist from Switzerland to Indonesia. 30 dancers and traditional musician, has performed wide range of traditional dances and musical performance, including dance Sprado (papua), Ubruk (Jakarta), Gantar Berlian (East Kalimantan), Delman, Pagelu (Tana Toraja), Jepin Kluang (West Kalimantan), Pajegan (Bali), Ganto and Saman (Aceh). The Guest also had the opportunity to watch the fashion show by Indonesian designer Aji Bram, which themed Unity in Diversity.

Aji Bram collection were presented by 20 models, swen on special fabric from Indonesia from Sabang to Merauke such as Lurik, Batik, Songket, and Sasirangan.

Cultural performance “ Colorful Indonesia” started by diplomatic reception, where guests had chance to taste Indonesian dishes, like Chicken Satay, Fried Rice, Fried Noodles, and Peanut Snacks. On his welcoming speech, Ambassador of the Republic of Indonesia for Switzerland and Liechtensetain has highlighted the importance of Indonesia-Switzerland relationship which next year will reach 60 years.

The Ambassador furthermore expressed how rich in culture Indonesia is and invited guests to visit Indonesia in order to witness the real diversity of arts and culture. LTMKBUI, which has invited by International Folklore Festival COmitte, will be in Switzerland from 15-21 August 2011. The committee converged dances group of Students from different countries to perform in Fribourg. LTMKBUI is always invited every 2 years to the festivals. At the end of the event, the Ambassador has given token of appreciation to the coordinator of LTMKBUI Fadhlan Al Abraar and Designer Aji Bram

Friday, October 7, 2011

The road to the Asia Festival

Sanggar Caraka Buana will be make a performance to The Road to Asia Festival in Toronto, Canada.

And we will  say goodbye to summer and head into fall, anticipation for The Road to Asia Festival is building. Mark your calendars for the weekend of Saturday November 5 and Sunday November 6, 2011. Make sure that you come and help us celebrate the 11th Anniversary of this fantastic multicultural festival of arts and culture!
SANGGAR CARAKA BUANA need your support and ask you to joint for the festival..... Finally, see our performances there!

And how far the place we'll trying to go there and the show must go on..... 








The beauty angels: The attractive dance will be shown.....

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Pentas Tari Musik Caraka Buana di Pretoria

Pada tanggal 18 Agustus 2011, KBRI Pretoria dengan dukungan tim kesenian Sanggar Caraka Buana dan EFEF Band di Musaion Auditorium kampus Universitas Pretoria telah menyelenggarakan Malam Budaya Indonesia.
 
Tujuan penampilan di kampus ternama Afsel tersebut adalah dalam rangka upaya untuk lebih meningkatkan citra budaya Indonesia yang pada kesempatan ini dalam bentuk penampilan seni tari dan musik untuk meningkatkan minat dan pengetahuan generasi muda Afrika Selatan terhadap budaya Indonesia dan lebih jauh lagi guna mempererat rasa pertemanan dan saling pengertian di antara generasi muda kedua bangsa pada masa yang akan datang.
 
Acara yang berlangsung dari pukul 19.00 sampai dengan 22.30 dibuka secara resmi oleh Duta Besar RI, Sjahril Sabaruddin dan dihadiri tidak saja dari kalangan mahasiswa Universitas Pretoria, namun juga dari kalangan masyarakat umum, media cetak dan elektronik serta “Friend of Indonesia”. Para penari telah cukup berhasil menampilkan tari – tarian Indonesia dengan baik antara lain tari Belibis, tari Kipas, tari Punjari, tari Jaipong Kembang Tanjung, tari Merak, tari Nandak Ganjen, tari Marpangir, tari Jaipong Bajidor Kahot dan tari Saman, serta mendengarkan lagu – lagu Indonesia seperti Jali – jail, Bengawan Solo dan lagu – lagu daerah lainnya yang dikemas dalam musik semi rock yang sangat menarik.
 
Penampilan tari Nandak Ganjen yang genit dan jenaka membuat para penonton tertawa riuh rendah, sementara penampilan tari Saman membuat penonton berdecak kagum atas keunikan gerakan jari – jari tangan para penari tersebut. Para penonton dibuat bangkit dari tempat duduknya ketika para pemusik muda EFEF Band menyanyikan lagu Afrika Selatan yang berjudul “Shosholoza”, mereka naik ke atas panggung dan berjoget ria dengan para pemain band dan pengunjung lainnya.
 
Acara “Indonesia Cultural Evening” tersebut ditutup dengan lagu Poco – poco serta lagu Kopi Dangdut dimana semua penari beserta penonton berjoget bersama di atas panggung. Penutupan secara resmi acara tersebut ditandai dengan penyerahan cenderamata dari Duta Besar RI kepada Direktur Seni Universitas Pretoria, Dr. Mashita Hoane serta foto bersama dengan para penari dan pemusik muda dari Indonesia, dan dilanjutkan dengan ramah tamah.

Selasa, 23 Agustus 2011
Sekali lagi, KBRI Pretoria dengan dukungan tim kesenian Sanggar Caraka Buana dan EFEF Band pada tanggal 20 Agustus 2011 di Pierneef Theater, Pretoria telah menampilkan acara Indonesian dance and music. Tujuan penampilan mereka di Theater milik masyarakat kulit putih tersebut adalah dalam rangka membantu KBRI Pretoria guna meningkatkan citra Indonesia dalam bentuk penampilan seni dan budaya serta untuk menarik minat masyarakat Afrika Selatan terhadap Indonesia.
 
Acara yang berlangsung dari pukul 10.00 sampai dengan 12.00 dibuka dengan kata sambutan singkat dari Pejabat Fungsi Pensosbud yang pada intinya menyatakan bahwa kedatangan tim kesenian dari Indonesia tersebut adalah untuk memperkenalkan seni dan budaya Indonesia kepada kalangan generesai muda Afrika Selatan serta lebih jauh lagi guna mempererat rasa pertemanan dan saling pengertian di antara generasi muda kedua bangsa pada masa yang akan datang khususnya masyarakat kulit putih Afrika Selatan.
 
Acara yang cukup meriah tersebut ternyata dihadiri tidak saja dari kalangan masyarakat kulit putih saja namun juga dari kalangan masyarakat kulit hitam serta “Friend of Indonesia”. Para penari menampilkan tari Belibis, tari Kipas, tari Punjari, tari Jaipong Kembang Tanjung, tari Merak, tari Nandak Ganjen, tari Marpangir, tari Jaipong Bajidor Kahot dan tari Saman serta memperdengarkan lagu-lagu Indonesia seperti Jali-jali, Bengawan Solo dan lagu-lagu daerah lainnya yang dikemas dalam musik gitar akuistik.
 
Penampilan tari Nandak Ganjen yang genit dan jenaka membuat para penonton tertawa riuh rendah, sementara penampilan tari Saman membuat penonton kulit putih berdecak kagum atas keunikan gerakan jari-jari tangan para penari tersebut. Para penonton dibuat bangkit dari tempat duduknya ketika para pemusik muda EFEF Band menyanyikan lagu Afrika Selatan yang berjudul “Shosholoza”, kefasihan para pemusik muda Indonesia dalam menyanyikan lagu tersebut mendapat acungan jempol dari penonton khususnya yang berkulit hitam. Diakhir acara tersebut, para penonton meminta kepada pihak KBRI guna memberikan kesempatan kepada mereka untuk dapat melakukan foto bersama dengan para penari dan pemusik muda Indonesia sebagai tanda appresiasi spontan mereka terhadap budaya Indonesia dan penampilan memikat dari para penari dan pemusik Indonesia tersebut.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Indonesian Cultural Evening at University of Pretoria



Dance in Indonesia (Indonesian: Tarian Indonesia) reflects the country's diversity of ethnicities and cultures. There are more than 700 ethnic groups in Indonesia: Austronesian roots and Melanesian tribal forms are visible, and influences ranging from neighboring Asian and even western styles through colonization. Each ethnic group has their own dances; makes total dances in Indonesia are more than 3000 Indonesian original dances. The old traditions of dance and drama are being preserved in the many dance schools which flourish not only in the courts but also in the modern, government-run or supervised art academies.
For classification purpose, the dances of Indonesia can be divided according to several aspects. In historical aspect it can be divided into three eras; the prehistoric-tribal era, the Hindu-Buddhist era and the era of Islam. According to its patrons, it can be divided into two genres; court dance and folk dance. In its tradition, Indonesian dances can be divided into two types; traditional dance and contemporary dance.
In Bali on November 19, 2011 UNESCO will announce the traditional Saman dance from Aceh province as a world intangible cultural heritage. Saman dance is unique due to there are no music instrument accompany the dance and just only sing and clap their hands together to create harmony in movement and sound.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Caraka Buana Indonesian Real Dance

Sanggar Caraka Buana Performance



























Terbangan from Bill Cunningham on Vimeo.



Terbangan from Bill Cunningham on Vimeo.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Traditional Indonesian Dances


Surung Dhayung from Bill Cunningham on Vimeo.




Sumunar Youth Gamelan from Bill Cunningham on Vimeo.

Kecak Dance




Kecak (pronounced [ˈketʃak], alternate spellings: Ketjak and Ketjack) is a form of Balinese music drama, originated in the 1930s and is performed primarily by men, although a few women's kecak groups exist as of 2006.Also known as the Ramayana Monkey Chant, the piece, performed by a circle of 150 or more performers wearing checked cloth around their waists, percussively chanting "cak" and throwing up their arms, depicts a battle from the Ramayana where the monkey-like Vanara helped Prince Rama fight the evil King Ravana. However, Kecak has roots in sanghyang, a trance-inducing exorcism dance.
History
Kecak was originally a trance ritual accompanied by male chorus. German painter and musician Walter Spies became deeply interested in the ritual while living in Bali in the 1930s and worked to recreate it into a drama, based on the Hindu Ramayana and including dance, intended to be presented to Western tourist audiences. This transformation is an example of what James Clifford describes as part of the "modern art-culture system" in which, "the West or the central power adopts, transforms, and consumes non-Western or peripheral cultural elements, while making 'art' which was once embedded in the culture as a whole, into a separate entity." Spies worked with Wayan Limbak and Limbak popularized the dance by traveling throughout the world with Balinese performance groups. These travels have helped to make the Kecak famous throughout the world.

Performer, choreographer, and scholar I Wayan Dibia cites a contrasting theory that the Balinese were already developing the form when Spies arrived on the island.[5] For example, well-known dancer I Limbak had incorporated Baris movements into the cak leader role during the 1920s. "Spies liked this innovation," and it suggested that Limbak, "devise a spectacle based on the Ramayana," accompanied by cak chorus rather than gamelan, as would have been usual.
(source: http://www.wikipedia.org)

Barong is a character in the mythology of Bali. He is the king of the spirits, leader of the hosts of good, and enemy of Rangda in the mythological traditions of Bali. Banas Pati Rajah is the fourth "brother" or spirit child that accompanies a child throughout life. Banas Pati Rajah is the spirit which animates Barong. A protector spirit, he is often represented by a lion, and traditional performances of his struggles against Rangda are popular parts of Balinese culture. The Barong is often portraited with two monkeys.
The animal/ mythical creature would dance along the street to the calonarang dance. A priest would throw Holy Water at it. It is known as the Demon Queen and Mother of All Spirit Guarders.
The lion barong is one of five traditional Barong. In Bali each region of the island has its own protective spirit for its forests and lands. Each Barong for each region is modeled after a different animal. There is a boar, a tiger, a dragon (or serpent) and the traditional lion. The lion is the popular one as it comes from the Gianyar region where Ubud (the home of tourist viewed ritual) is located. Within the calonarang, the dance drama in which the Barong appears, the barong responds to Rangda's use of magic to control and kill her to restore balance.

Legong is a form of Balinese dance. It is a refined dance form characterized by intricate finger movements, complicated footwork, and expressive gestures and facial expressions.
Legong probably originated in the 19th century as royal entertainment. Legend has it that a prince of Sukwati fell ill and had a vivid dream in which two maidens danced to gamelan music. When he recovered, he arranged for such dances to be performed in reality. Others believe that the Legong originated with the sanghyang dedari, a ceremony involving voluntary possession of two little girls by beneficent spirits. Legong is also danced at public festivals. Excerpts from Legong dance dramas are put on for tourists.
Legong dancers are always girls who have not yet reached puberty. They begin rigorous training at about the age of five. These dancers are regarded highly in the society and usually becomes wives of royal personages or wealthy merchants.


Classical Legong enacts several traditional stories. The most common is the tale of the King of Lasem from the Malat, a collection of heroic romances. He is at war with another king, the father (or brother) of Princess Ranjasari. Lasem wants to marry the girl, but she detests him and tries to run away. Becoming lost in the forest, she is captured by Lasem, who imprisons her and goes out for a final assault against her family. He is attacked by a monstrous raven, which foretells his death.
The dramatics are enacted in elaborate and stylized pantomime. The two little actresses are accompanied by a third dancer called a tjondong or attendant. She sets the scene, presents the dancers with their fans and later plays the part of the raven.

Jaipongan, also known as Jaipong, is a popular traditional dance of Sundanese people, West Java, Indonesia. The dance was created by Gugum Gumbira, based on traditional Sundanese Ketuk Tilu music and Pencak Silat movements.

Jaipongan, also known as jaipong, is a musical performance genre of the Sundanese people in the Sundanese language of West Java, Indonesia. Jaipongan includes revived indigenous arts, like gamelan, but it also did not ignore Western music completely despite the ban on rock and roll. It used its sensuality and the sensuality found in a traditional village music and dance, ketuk tilu. However, many believe it is something purely Indonesian or Sundanese in origin and style. It is developed predominately from rural folk forms and traditions as a purely indigenous form. The rise of cassettes and films has led to the popularity of the musical form of jaipongan. It has spread from its home in West Java’s Sunda, to greater Java and Indonesia. It can be seen as many regional varieties of gong-chime performance found through much of Indonesia. As also an urban dance form, it is based primarily on the village forms of ketuk tilu and on the Indonesian martial arts, pencak silat. The musical genre is largely influenced from ketuk tilu with traces of the masked theater dance, topeng banjet and the wayang golek puppet theater. Ketuk tilu is its biggest influence, as a traditional Sudanese musical entertainment form.
Gong-chime performance is characterized by such features as: use of an ensemble dominated by idiophones, metallophones and knobbed gongs. It is a stratified polyphony, with lower-pitch instruments playing parts of lesser density and all parts are structured colotomically around time-cycles. This can be found in traditional Indonesian gamelan. There is improvisation on certain instruments. The modes used are grouped into two broad types: slendro and pelog.
Ketuk tilu was a musical genre based off ritual and celebration in the villages of the Sundanese people, meaning three kettle gongs. It was known for complex drumming coordinated with equally dynamic solo female dancers. The music was performed for planting and harvesting rituals and later celebrated village life, circumcision and marriage, expressed fertility, and displayed sensuality, eroticism and even sometimes “socially accepted prostitution.” Ketuk tilu was very popular in the Sundanese villages, but the urban Sundanese considered it unrefined and inappropriate because the music involved males and females dancing together suggestively, or mixed dancing between men and ronggeng, or prostitutes. Ronggeng probably has existed in Java since ancient time, the bas reliefs in Karmawibhanga section on Borobudur displays the scene of travelling entertainment troupe with musicians and female dancers.
Jaipong is less strictly associated with ceremonial functions, but performances are common in the Rayagung festival month, and with circumcisions and marriages. The performances now have the character of secular social functions, attended by young and old, primarily for entertainment and socializing. Public performance is now extremely frequent especially in clubs or street performances.
The cassette industry and its boom in Indonesia helped popularize jaipongan greatly and promoted regional styles rather than hurt them. Many learned the dance through cassette rather than the performance. The mass media have made jaipong ubiquitous. It has created competition in the styles of the drummers among ensembles. It has also helped to bring about many dance schools, altering dance and its label on females in West Java.
The song repertoire of jaipongan is varied, and that is why it is better understood as an intertwined performance style of music and dance. Many songs are associated with ketuk tilu or other wide reaching regional varieties, not traditional gamelan. It consists of songs of more recent origin often composed for jaipongan. Song topics vary, encompassing amatory, moralistic, bawdy, topical and spiritual subjects, often emphasizing grass roots culture.

Kipas Dance: The kipas (literally means fan) is a folding fan which people used to keep themselves cool in Southeast Asia's tropical heat. Although created in China (where it is known as tieshan), the fan is common to many Asian cultures, as can be seen in traditional Indonesian-Malay dances. As a weapon the fan should be able to open and close easily with one hand, particularly if two are being wielded at once. Usually made of bamboo, more combat-worthy kipas are constructed from harder wood or iron. The smallest fans measure only six centimetres in length but some are quite large and can reach as many as fifty centimetres long.


Saman Dance: “Saman” the most popular dance in Aceh and the dance that has become well-known abroad with the name “Thousand hands”. It has its origin from the Alas ethnic group from Gayo plateau central Aceh and is normally performed to celebrate the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad and other important occasions.

It’s an energetic, dynamic and require excellent coordination among its players.  The movements are intense and powerful because, those movements also formed the rhythm for the dance.  Because beside the sound of claps, chest slapping or hand hitting the floor there’s only one person reading a narrative in Acehnese tone.   If it’s not powerful then nobody will hear anything and if it’s out of control, not only it will ruin the rhythm but somebody may get hurt.  However, those are the charm of this dance.  It’s dynamic and excellent coordination.
Eight to twenty male performers kneel in a row on the floor and make different kinds of torso movements accompanied by songs, clapping hands, slapping chests, slapping hands on the floor, etc. The songs usually are praises to Allah or prayers or part of Islamic teachings. The dance starts with slow movements and increases its tempo gradually to great speed and finally come to a sudden stop. There are many different regional versions of “Saman”.