Post Natyam in March

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Feb 28, 2007, 5:52:48 PM2/28/07
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Post Natyam Collective- March 2007 Newsletter



Dear Friends,

This month Sandra is teaching workshops in Munich as well as performing at the Stree Sharira Conference in Chennai, Sangita is premiering her documentary Dancing Kathmandu at the One World Festival in Prague (Czech premiere) and Tasveer's Aaina Festival in Seattle, WA (US premiere), Anjali is choreographing "Punyakote/Govina Haadu" for Kannada Sangham in Kansas and also performing as part of the Telegu Association's Ugadi Festival, and Shyamala is working with Artwallah to curate an event at the new Billy Wilder Theater in the Armand Hammer Museum in Los Angeles (see our pointers).

Amidst all of our bustling around, we would like to take a moment to congratulate an amazing artist we are fortunate to know and be inspired by, Astad Deboo, for receiving the prestigious Padma Shree award from the Indian Government.  He is performing this month in Prague, Czech Republic (March 15) and Gauhati, India (March 19), the details are listed in our pointers.

Best to all!
Post Natyam



Post Natyam Performances
:


Munich, Germany
March 3/4, 2007
10:00-13:00 hrs
Contemporary Indian Dance workshops with Sandra
Kulturzentrum Wörthhof
Wörthstr 10 (Innenhof)
EUR 75, for the weekend, EUR 40 for one day
To register, please email: work...@sandrachatterjee.net

March 4, 2007
18:00 – 19:00 hrs
An informal performance of classical dance by Sandra
Kulturzentrum Wörthhof
Wörthstr 10 (Innenhof)
EUR 5 contribution

Prague, Czech Republic
March 5, 2007
Czech Premiere of Dancing Kathmandu at One World/Jeden Svet Festival (
www.oneworld.cz). Event includes a dance performance and post screening discussion with Sangita and the production team.

Chennai, India
March 16, 2007
Sandra is performing at Stree Sharira: Exploring Sites of Women's Sexuality in India Today

Locations:
Anokhi: Old #47 (New #85), Chamiers Road, R A Puram, Chennai-6000028
Alliance Francaise de Madras: #24, College Road, Nungambakkam, Chennai-600006

As an organization committed to exploring new discourses in the politics of gender, sexuality, and cultural practice, the Prakriti Foundation is proud to announce a three-day conference on women and sexuality in India, dedicated to the late Chandralekha. Titled Stree Sharira: Exploring Sites of Women's Sexuality in India Today, this conference-- based in Chennai--will present the work of academics, artists, and activists in an attempt to initiate a multi-valanced dialogue on the experience, performance, representation and regulation of women's sexuality in India. We invite all interested people to attend!

Please RSVP to Padma Govindan at Padma.P....@gmail.com or 09940025231 if you plan to attend the conference.

(for details about the conference, please see our pointers)

Seattle, Washington, USA
March 18, 2007
US Premiere of Dancing Kathmandu at Tasveer's Aaina Festival (
www.tasveer.org). Event includes post screening discussion with the film director. More information on: www.bollynatyam.com
You can see the schedule below in our pointers.


Munich, Germany
25 March 2007
15:00 hrs-19:00 hrs
Contemporary Indian Dance Workshop with Sandra
Kulturzentrum Wörthhof
Wörthstr 10 (Innenhof)
EUR 45, if registered and paid in advnace by 20 March
EUR 50 without registration by 20 March
To register, please email: work...@sandrachatterjee.net


Post Natyam Pointers:



Summary
:

Events:


1.    Los Angeles, USA: 2 March 2007: V-Day LA 2007-Eve Ensler's Vagina Monologues,
       1st all Asian Pacific islander cast (lead by Tamlyn Tomita, our friend D'Lo is part 
       of the cast)

2.    Irvine, USA, 4 March 2007: Nandanar, dance performance by Dominique Delorme
3.    Toronto, CA, 9 March 2007: International Womens Day Celebration:
       Browngirlworld 7- featuring D'Lo

4.    Prague, CZ, 15 March 2007: Astad Deboo Dance Company at tha National Theatre
5.    Chennai, India, 16-18 March 2007: Stree Sharira: Prakriti Foundation's first
       annual conference on Women's Sexuality

6.    Seattle, USA, 16-18 March 2007: Aaina Film Festival
7.    Bangalore, India, 17 March 2007: SANCHARI, an evening of Contemporary Dance,
       by Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts

8.    Gauhati, India, 19 March 2007: Astad Deboo at the Festival of Choreography
9.    Heidelberg, Germany, 22 March 2007: Dance:Anita Ratnam and Alexandra
       Romanova: WOMAN IN SKETCHES – SACRED AND PROFANE

10.  Los Angeles, USA, 22-23 March 2007: Parijat Desai Dance Company
11.  Los Angeles, USA, 24 March 2007: ArtWallah event: Preview to Indian Splendor



Opportunities:

1.    REMINDER : Wales, UK: Call for papers – Second International Conference on
       Consciousness, Theatre, Literature, and the Arts, deadline: March 1, 2007

2.    REMINDER: Brooklyn, USA: call for applications MULTIMEDIA ARTIST RESIDENCY,
       deadline: Thursday, March 1, 2007

3.    New York, USA: Film/Video/Visual Arts Grants: Creative Capital, deadline: 5
        March 2007

4.    Los Angeles, USA: Call for submissions of art, any genre,
AMPS Echo Chamber,
      
deadline 6 March 2007

5.    Los Angeles, USA: DANCE AUDITIONS:  PAHELIYAN: A BOLLYWOOD ALICE IN
       WONDERLAND, Sunday, March 11, 2007

6.    Richmond, USA:
call for writing, VISIBLE: A FEMMETHOLOGY, deadline 15 March
       2007

7.    UK: GRANTS/fiction: apprenticeships in fiction 2007, deadline 20 March 2007
8.    San Francisco, USA:  Call for visual art: TEA PARTY MAGAZINE THE TRANS• ISSUE,
       deadline 2 April 2007

9.    Bangalore, India: Call for Film Entries: VOICES FROM THE WATERS 2007 2ND
       INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ON WATER, deadline 15 April 2007




Detailed Listings:

Events:


1.    Los Angeles, USA: 2 March 2007: V-Day LA 2007-Eve Ensler's
       Vagina Monologues, 1st all Asian Pacific islander cast (lead by 
       Tamlyn Tomita, our friend D'Lo is part of the cast)


The Center for the Pacific Asian Family presents
The Vagina Monologues
 by Eve Ensler
Friday, March 2, 2007, 8PM
Aratani Japan American Theatre

Actress Tamlyn Tomita leads the first all Asian and Pacific Islander cast in Los Angeles of the Obie award winning play about women empowerment through the reclaiming of their bodies, in particular, their vaginas.  The Vagina Monologues has been performed for V-Day events in over 90 countries around the world with the intent of raising awareness and funds to end the violence against women and children.

All proceeds from this performance shall go to the Center for the Pacific Asian Family (CPAF), which runs shelters and prevention programs in Los Angeles County for Asian and Pacific Islander survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault and to the 2007 V-Day spotlight of women in conflict zones throughout the world.
Don't miss this very special performance!  Join us to help stop violence against women in the Asian and Pacific Islander communities.

www.cpaf.info



2.    Irvine, USA, 4 March 2007: Nandanar, dance performance by
       Dominique Delorme


Nandanar

Danced, sung and choreographed  by  Dominique Delorme

Music by 
V.S. Muthuswamy Pillaï, T.V. Gopalakrishnan (India),
The Ghyuto Monks (Tibet), Peter Gabriel (USA).
Lyrics by
Gopalakrishna Bharati,

excerpt from "Nandanar Charithram".
The temple door is closed for him,
Forbidden is the image of Lord Shiva.
His only freedom is the secret words
that fly from his heart to God;
Immediate then is the meeting and the union
between the disciple and the beloved

Tickets
Limited Seating
 Advance Puchase: $12, $10 (Students and Seniors)
At the Door: $15, $12  (Students and Seniors)


For Details Call: (949) 874-3662 (949) 300-8912
Email: in...@arpanadancecompany.org
in...@ektaacenter.orgThe Ektaa Center
2691 Richter Ste 105
Irvine CA 92606
2 Shows:  2:00 pm, 7:00 pm Sunday, March 4, 2007


3.    Toronto, CA, 9 March 2007: International Womens Day
        Celebration: Browngirlworld 7- featuring D'Lo


advance tix on sale now at Toronto Women's Bookstore! but we have door tickets too. come support, get your mind blown and shake your ass!

Brownstargirl Productions and the Toronto Women's Bookstore present:
Browngirlworld 7: dreaming of freedom
An official International Women's Day party!

Come celebrate International Women's Day at Browngirlworld 7: dreaming of freedom, bringing you yet another night of the fiercest, sexiest spoken word, drag and performance by queer and trans artists of colour! On International Women's Day, these diverse artists will explore what it means to be free as queer and trans people of colour. If there's one event you check out for IWD, make it this one!

Featuring:
Feature performance by L.A.-based queer Sri Lankan hiphop/spoken word artist D'Lo!
Spoken word by brilliant rising star Annanda deSilva!
Rebel burlesque by the incandescent CoCo La Crème (Skin Tight Outta Sight!)
Rebel drag by the infamous Milo de Milo
Afterparty DJd by the one and only DJ Jola (Savour)

Friday, March 9, 2007
Goodhandy's
120 Church St (corner of Richmond), Toronto
Doors at 8:00 PM, show at 8:30 PM

$8-$12 sliding scale. No one turned away for lack of funds
Advance tickets available at Toronto Women's Bookstore:
(416) 922-8744, www.womensbookstore.com

Produced by Brownstargirl Productions and the Toronto Women's Bookstore

Cosponsored by Good For Her, Come As You Are, The Centre for Women and Trans People at York, Supporting Our Youth, Toronto Rape Crisis Centre, WCREC and Xtra.

D'Lo is a queer Tamil Sri Lankan-American, political theatre artist/writer and music producer, currently causing the most trouble in Los Angeles. Her work includes comedy, hip hop theatre, dance, poetry, and music. In 2004, D'Lo also had a sold-out NYC run of her first play"Ballin With My Bois" a queer hip hop theater piece. Currently, she touring with her one person show "Ramble-Ations: a One D'Lo Show". A Toronto favorite from her appearances at Desh Pardesh and with Toronto's LAL, she's back in town for the first time since 2003!


For more information, contact Leah Piepzna-Samarasinha at browns...@riseup.net


4.    Prague, CZ, 15 March 2007: Astad Deboo Dance Company at
       the National Theatre


Astad Deboo Dance Company performs at the National Theatre of Prague at 19:00 hrs

5.    Chennai, India, 16-18 March 2007: Stree Sharira: Exploring
       Sites of Women's Sexuality Today


PRAKRITI FOUNDATION- THE THINK TANK -


March 16th, 17th, and 18th

Locations:
Anokhi: Old #47 (New #85), Chamiers Road, R A Puram, Chennai-6000028
Alliance Francaise de Madras: #24, College Road, Nungambakkam, Chennai-600006

As an organization committed to exploring new discourses in the politics of gender, sexuality, and cultural practice, the Prakriti Foundation is proud to announce a three-day conference on women and sexuality in India, dedicated to the late Chandralekha. Titled Stree Sharira: Exploring Sites of Women's Sexuality in India Today, this conference-- based in Chennai--will present the work of academics, artists, and activists in an attempt to initiate a multi-valanced dialogue on the experience, performance, representation and regulation of women's sexuality in India. We invite all interested people to attend!

Our list of confirmed speakers and performers include: Kirtana Kumar, Vani Subramaniyam, Alka Pande, Ruth Vanita, Deepa Vasudevan, Bindu Menon, S. Anandhi, Namita Malhotra, Mangai, Nitya Vasudevan, Padma Govindan, Suneetha Achyutha, Nalini Jameela, Mira Mary, Sushila Ravindranath, Geeta Ramaseshan, members of The Banyan, Sadanand Menon, Kuttirevathi, Kanimozhi, Salma, Malathy, Sukirtharini, Sandra Chatterjee, Sumathi Murthy and members of the queer collective LesBIT, and the Sakthi Kalai Kuzhu all-woman tappattam troupe. All of the panel and lecture sessions, as well as the evening performances on Saturday and Sunday, will take place at Anokhi on Chamiers Road. With regards to Friday evening's performances, Sakthi Kalai Kuzhu and Sandra Chatterjee are scheduled for the Alliance Francaise on College Road.

Please RSVP to Padma Govindan at Padma.P....@gmail.com or 09940025231 if you plan to attend the conference. (Please specify if you will be coming as a delegate of your organization or university, or if you will be attending as a general audience member.) Also, we would really appreciate it if you could forward this invitation to any e-mail lists or anyone you know who would be interested in coming. This is going to be an exciting event--certainly the first of its kind in Chennai--and we would be delighted to have you!



6.    Seattle, USA, 16-18 March 2007: Aaina Film Festival

Tasveer and Chaya co-present the "Aaina Film Festival - March 16 to 18, 2007"

Aaina is an annual film festival that focuses on the works of remarkable South Asian women. Aaina celebrates the outstanding films with themes of unfailing courage, joy, resilience, and creativity that tell South Asian women's life stories on the subcontinent and abroad, of yesterday and today beyond caste, class, and religion. This is Aaina's 2nd year and highlights include the premiere of "Yoni ki Baat" - the South Asian vagina monologues, visiting filmmaker and activist Shonali Bose, and Nepalese dancer and filmmaker Sangita Shresthova. Join us for a weekend of honoring South Asian women during the International Women's Month of March.

Venue/Ticket Information
All the events and screenings will happen at the beautiful Central Cinema located at 1411 21st Ave, Seattle WA 98122.

There is a suggested donation payable at the door for each event/showing:
Opening night: $5 ($8 for both events)
Daytime shows: $5
Evening(after 6pm) shows: $7

Schedule
March 16, 2007 Friday 7pm
Opening Night: An Evening with Local Artists!
We will open Aaina celebrating the accomplishments and works of local South Asian women. Included on tonight's program:

    * Maliha Masood, a Pakistani writer reading from her new book "Zaatar Days and Henna Nights"
    * Premiere of "Chowraha (Crossroad)"; a film co-produced by Fareena Chanda, a member of Gumnaam Productions (a group of independent filmmakers) references sectarian violence in Karachi, Pakistan.
    * Jaya Ramesh's work-in-progress short film featuring local Indian women speaking about their cross-cultural experiences
    * Chaya's PSA directed by Rita Meher and the "Making of the PSA" by Uma Rao
    * and more!

March 16, 2007 Friday 9pm
Yoni Ki Baat - Seattle Premiere!
Inspired by Eve Ensler's Vagina Monologues, "Yoni Ki Baat" (translated as "Talk of the Vagina") is a transformative play encouraging South Asian women to speak out against violence and the stigma around our bodies and sexualities. South Asian Sisters, a collective of progressive South Asian women, have been organizing an annual "Yoni ki Baat" for the last three years in the Bay Area. They have kindly let us use their scripts for the Seattle premiere of Yoni ki Baat. Several local South Asian women will be performing these scripts. Some have even chosen to write their own.

March 17, 2007 Saturday 2pm
In this program, two short documentaries from Nepal will be shown followed by a panel discussion about the current conditions of women and children in Nepal.

Punam
Lucian Muntean, 2005, Nepal, Nepali and Tamang, 27 minutes
This is the story of the nine-year-old Punam Matang: head of family, caregiver, and homemaker. She cooks, washes, feeds, and launders before setting off for school with her younger siblings. Their mother had died in childbirth and father works long hours to pay for his children's school. And yet they are lucky. Some of Punam's friends work in stone quarries and brick-making factories for survival. This sensitively made film is a powerful tale of despair, misplaced childhood, and hope.
Newsroom Bahira
Dil Bhusan Pathak, 2005, Nepal, Nepali and English, 23 minutes
This disturbing film investigates the bane of clandestine abortions in rural Nepal. Although abortion is legal in the country, ignorance, social conventions, scarcity, and lack of medical facilities impel many women to go to traditional midwives who use unsafe, unhygienic and often brutal methods to terminate unwanted pregnancies. These cause hemorrhage, infection, excessive bleeding, and frequently painful and horrific death. The film provides an arresting account of the vicious hold of poverty, patriarchal oppression, and gender discrimination.
Sponsored by Bo M Karlsson Scholarship Fund and Ama Foundation. There will be a post-film panel discussion regarding current conditions of women and children in Nepal.


March 17, 2007 Saturday 4pm
Red Roses
Madhuri Mohindar &Vaishali Sinha; 2006;
USA; Bengali, English, Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu; 17 minutes
Set in a South Asian beauty parlor in New York, this documentary foregrounds a multiplicity of perspectives on immigration, marriage, love, career aspirations, gender-roles, identity, and dreams from women's point of view. The shared space of the salon forges solidarity amongst women transcending all boundaries back home. The juxtaposing voices – that cut across age, class, profession, faith, and nationality - present women's predicament faced with the challenges of dealing with deracination, nostalgia, and integration in the 'land of opportunity'.

The Beauty Academy of Kabul
Liz Mermin, 2004, USA, English/Persian, 74 minutes
This documentary follows a group of American women (some of whom had emigrated from Afghanistan in the early 1980s) travel to Kabul to open the nation's first American-styled school of cosmetology after the collapse of the Taliban. Eager to offer Afghan women a different way of looking at themselves and others, the tutors occasionally find themselves at odds with their students, who still possess deeply ingrained notions of modesty and gender inequality and some of whom had maintained "underground" beauty salons under the Taliban rule.

March 17, 2007 Saturday 7pm
Choices
Namit Kumar, 2000, India, Silent with music and English subtitles, 5 minutes
This brief film deals with the age old tradition of son-preference in India. It portrays the dilemma suffered by a young mother-to-be who is torn between the need to nurture the baby girl that she is carrying in her womb and the fear of not meeting societal expectations. It brings out the personal horror of such women in a country that shows callous disregard for female fetuses that are regularly aborted.

Amu
Shonali Bose, 2005, India/USA, Bengali / Hindi / English / Punjabi, 102 minutes
Filmmaker, Shonali Bose will be present for after film discussion.
Amu is the story of Kajori Roy, a twenty-one-year-old Indian American woman who returns to India to visit her family and discover the place where she was born. The film takes a dark turn as Kaju stumbles against secrets and lies from her past. A horrifying genocide that took place twenty years ago turns out to hold the key to her mysterious origins. What starts out seeming like a standard "back to the roots" story, becomes a mystery of both personal and political implications.


March 18, 2007 Sunday 2pm
Bangla East Side
Fariba Alam and Sarita Khurana, USA, 2004, 45 minutes
This gripping narrative tracks four teenage Bangladeshi-American high school students juggling two cultures and building a life for themselves in post-9-11 America. Mahfuja, Maroofa, Jemi and Saleh are students of Marta Valle Model School in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. They dance the latest Bollywood dance, discuss the Bill of Rights, and compare their immigrant identity in NYC with growing up as Muslims in Bangladesh. The film takes us into their personal lives and gives us a glimpse of their everyday struggles and accomplishments.
Tasveer Youth Initiative will lead post-film discussion. Youth are encouraged to come to this screening.


March 18, 2007 Sunday 4pm
Manjuben Truckdriver
Sherna Dastur, India, Gujarati/Hindi and English subtitles, 2003, 52 minutes
This is the story of the only female truck driver in India who wants to travel and be free. Dastur's film takes us on the road with Manjuben as she drives her truck, just like her male counterparts, from Gujarat to Delhi. The monotony of the road and the incessant roar of the diesel engine depict the harsh reality of the trucker's life. We also see Manju-ben off the road, having her picture taken, hanging an oleograph of Shiv-Shakti on her wall, running her office, and gossiping with friends.
Sponsored by Trikone Northwest. Post-film discussion led by members of Trikone.


March 18, 2007 Sunday 6pm
Mukhtar Mai - The Struggle for freedom
Beena Sarwar, Pakistan, Urdu with English subtitles, 2006, 10 minutes
Women's legal and social status in Pakistan has had a turbulent history. From honor killings to acid throwing to gang rapes, they pay with their lives and bodies for alleged crimes violating their family or tribe's so-called honor. This film documents the struggle for women's rights waged by Mukhtar Mai who was gang-raped in 2002 by four men in the village of Meerwala on the orders of the Panchayat. This powerful tale exposes the ingrained cultural and social bias against women's rights in Pakistan.

Of Such Times
Vandana Kohli, India, English, 2006, 32 minutes
This film explores the definition of the 'Modern Indian Woman'. It speaks, breezily, with women who have all graduated form one of the foremost colleges for women, though in different decades, from the 1950s till 2001. Converging here from different parts of the country, they reflect on life, work, marriage, collective aspirations, fun, and the times they graduated in. Interspersed within the narrative are visuals of popular culture, music trends, and significant socio-economic-political events relevant to the times of each woman's life.

Dancing Kathmandu
Sangita Shresthova, Czech Republic/Nepal, Czech, Nepali, Hindi, and English with English sibtitles
43 minutes
Filmmaker, Sangita Shresthova will be present for the post-film discussion.
Sangita, a dancer of Czech-Nepali origin, journeys to Kathmandu to explore how practitioners in the Himalayan Kingdom negotiate Nepal's dance traditions in a period of rapid cultural change. In her attempts to map the current situation of dance in Kathmandu valley, she encounters her own teachers as well as younger dancers currently finding their way. Dancing Kathmandu tells stories of nostalgia, passion, and survival through dance and dancers in the age of globalization.

This event is co-presented by Chaya. Chaya is a non-profit organization that supports South Asian survivors and families impacted by domestic violence and abuse and engages communities to change societal conditions that enable oppression, especially violence against women.

If you have any questions, email in...@tasveer.org.

7.     Bangalore, India, 17 March 2007: SANCHARI, an evening of
       Contemporary Dance, by Attakkalari Centre for Movement
       Arts


Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts will present SANCHARI, an evening of Contemporary Dance, at Chowdiah Memorial Hall, Bangalore. Highlights include a spectacular multi-media dance production where the brilliant use of light, sound and digital arts transforms the performance arena and provides the viewer with a unique sensorial experience. After which there will be a choreographed piece of 'Kalaripayyattu' set to live music and performed by some of the leading young exponents of this ancient martial art form from Kerala. All proceeds from this performance will go towards Attakkalari's Education Outreach Program to enable more children from underprivileged sectors to experience the movement arts.
All contributions to Attakkalari are eligible for exemption under Section 80G of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Venue: Chowdiah Memorial Hall, 7pm
Ticket prices: Rs.100/-
Tickets available at:
Crosswords: ACR Towers, 32 Residency Road, Ph: (080) - 25582411-16
Alliance Française: P.B. 108, Thimmaiah Road, Vasanthanagar, Ph: (080) -  41231340 / 44/45
K C Das: St. Mark's Road, Ph:  9343767470/ 73
159, 1st Main, 7th Block, Koramangla, Ph: (080) - 41304427 
Attakkalari Centre for Movement Arts: 24-04 BTS Bus Depot Road, Wilson Garden 
Ph: (080) - 22123684. 
E-mail: attak...@gmail.com 
Website: www.attakkalari.org

8.    Gauhati, India: 19 March 2007: Astad Deboo at the
       Festival of Choreography


Astad Deboo performs at the closing of the Festival of Choreography organized by Sangeet Natak Academi

Monday, 19 March 2007, 19 hrs.

9.    Heidelberg, Germany, 22 March 2007: Anita Ratnam and
       Alexandra Romanova: WOMAN IN SKETCHES – SACRED AND
       PROFANE


WOMAN IN SKETCHES – SACRED AND PROFANE ('Frau in Skizzen - sacrum et profanum') - Indian myths, European lyrics and life itself: this is the source of inspiration for Anita Ratnam and Alexandra Romanova, who created a dance project - a succession of different composition that relate to woman and goddess.   
Anita Ratnam will perform SEVEN GRACES. The program has been orgnanised by Alexandra Romanova.  
At: TiKK Karlstorbahnhof Heidelberg, 8pm
Tickets: 06221-9789 24 / http://www.karlstorbahnhof.de/e13/e6412/index_ger.html 
For details, e-mail: alex...@atirupa.de / www.alexromanova.com
e-mail: aran...@gmail.com / www.arangham.com

10.    Los Angeles, USA, 22-23 March 2007: Parijat Desai
         Dance Company

PARIJAT DESAI DANCE COMPANY
Quiet/Fire, Gotta Go There, and The Wall
Thursday, March 22, 8:00 p.m.
Friday, March 23, 8:00 p.m.
$18 General, $15 Skirball and Dance Resource Center Members, $10 Full-Time Students
Advance tickets: (866) 468-3399 or TicketWeb Logo or on site at the Skirball Admissions Desk

 
The company's performance at the Skirball will consist of three consecutive dances: Quiet/Fire, Still Rewiring, and The Wall. Yoga and martial arts infuse Quiet/Fire, in which warriors-in-training battle doubt, distraction, and aggression. Making its world premiere, Desai's newest work, Still Rewiring, explores issues of identity as the dancers undulate to an electronic score. Finally, The Wall draws on the folk rhythms and melodies of Gujarati music to bring life to a sad tale passed down over the centuries from mother to daughter.
 
This program represents the Skirball's first National Performance Network residency. Residency activities include lectures and demonstrations for high school students in addition to the public performances.
 

11.  Los Angeles, USA, 24 March 2007: ArtWallah Event: Preview to
       Indian Splendor


Artwallah artists will be featured along with a new South Asian  film
    
Billy Wilder Theater
Armand Hammer Museum
10899 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90024
310.443.7000
www.hammer.ucla.edu




Opportunities


1.   REMINDER- Wales, UK: Call for papers – Second
       International Conference on Consciousness,Theatre,
       Literature, and the Arts, deadline: March 1, 2007

Conference Dates: May 5 – 7, 2007

Peer reviewed journal "Consciousness, Literature and the Arts" provides a forum for new work relating the arts and literature to the exploration of consciousness currently flourishing in many disciplines such as philosophy, cognitive science, psychology, neuroscience, computer science, and physics. Submissions are welcome from the fields of fine arts, performing arts (performance, theatre, dance, music), and media arts (film, television, multimedia, hypermedia), literature and any sub-categories of those areas.

Conference Announcement and Call for Papers

The Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK, is pleased to host the Second International Conference on Consciousness, Theatre, Literature, and the Arts. The conference will be held in Aberystwyth, Wales, UK, from Saturday 5 to Monday 7 May 2007. Abstracts (up to 1 page) are invited for papers relating any aspect of consciousness (as defined in a range of disciplines involved with consciousness studies) to any aspect of theatre,  performance, literature, music, fine arts, media arts and any sub-genre of those.

Please send the abstract to
Dr Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe: d...@aber.ac.uk

Deadline for receipt of abstracts is 1 March 2007

See conference website: www.aber.ac.uk/cla/conference/conference.html

Dr Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe
Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies
University of Wales Aberystwyth
Parry Williams Building
Penglais Campus
Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 2AU
Wales, UK
Ph: 01970 622835; Fax 01970 622831
e-mail d...@aber.ac.uk
Consciousness, Literature and the Arts
http://www.aber.ac.uk/cla


2.    REMINDER- Brooklyn, USA: MULTIMEDIA ARTIST RESIDENCY,
       deadline: Thursday, March 1, 2007


APPLICATION: http://www.rotundagallery.org/rotunda/residency.asp
BCAT/Brooklyn Community Access Television and Rotunda Gallery, a not-for-profit exhibition space for contemporary art invite artists to submit applications for the 2007 multimedia artist residency program. Each year BCAT makes its audio/video equipment, production studio, and editing facilities available to Brooklyn-based artists along with free training programs to learn how to use cameras and editing software. The goal is to assist artists interested in exploring video and/or multimedia as an artistic medium at no cost, and to provide training and technical assistance in video and digital production and post-production technologies.

ELIGIBILITY: Open to artists who live or work in the borough of Brooklyn. Artists need not have any previous experience in video or multimedia to apply. Artists who have a strong desire to explore multimedia as a distinct medium or as part of an interdisciplinary approach to art making are encouraged to apply. Note that the purpose of the residency is to support artistic production as opposed to marketing or promotional projects. Artists currently enrolled in undergraduate or graduate degree programs OR who completed BCAT residencies in 2005-2006 are not eligible to apply.

MORE INFO: Patrick Grenier, Associate Director <pgre...@briconline.org>
BCAT/Brooklyn Community Access Television and Rotunda Gallery are programs of BRIC/Brooklyn Information & Culture. This program has been supported by a generous grant from the Electronic Media and Film Program of the New York State Council on the Arts.

3.    New York, USA: Film/Video/Visual Arts Grants: Creative    
        Capital, deadline: 5 March 2007


Creative Capital Announces 2007 Grant Cycle in Visual Arts and Film/Video

Deadline: March 5, 2007 (Inquiry Form)

Artists across the United States will have a chance to promote their works-in-progress and works-to-be when the nonprofit arts organization Creative Capital ( http://www.creative-capital.org/) accepts proposals for its 2007 grant cycle supporting projects in the visual arts and film/video.

For the first time, Creative Capital has appointed two outside teams of arts professionals to assist in the selection process, which could lead to as many as forty grants.

In keeping with the organization's multi-level commitment to its grantees, a total of at least $1 million is allocated for selected projects in the first year. In addition, over the term of the grant these projects receive follow-up support and can garner as much as $80,000 each in direct monies and services. Moreover, the grantees gain access to an extensive network of peers and arts professionals who can assist in fundraising,
promotional, and presenting opportunities. This comprehensive approach to funding has become the hallmark of Creative Capital's work with artists.

To be eligible to apply, an artist must be a U.S. citizen or a permanent legal resident; at least 25 years old; and a working artist with at least five years of professional experience.

To apply, artists must first submit an inquiry form, which will be available February 5, 2007, on the foundation's Web site. The deadline for completed forms is March 5, 2007; those invited to submit an application with work samples will be notified in June 2007.

A complete list of grantees, profiles of funded projects, and up-to-date grant cycle information can be found online at the foundation's Web site: http://www.creative-capital.org/

4.    Los Angeles, USA: Call for submissions of art, any genre,
       AMPS Echo Chamber, deadline 6 March 2007


AMP is calling for submissions of work - by artists of any kind – that is a response to another art form. You do need to be a member of AMP to participate, but it's easy to join - just go to http://pluginamp.com and sign up. It takes about 5 minutes. AMP, the Artists' Meeting Place and Resource Collective, is a worldwide collective of artists networking together to build and support local and international artists, create new art communities, and enhance those that already exist. A uniquely democratic approach to networking, AMP's members include practitioners of all kinds of arts, at every level from hobbyists to career professionals. AMP welcomes all artists, and those who work in any kind of art field - at any level, in every corner of the world. The idea is that everyone has
something to offer, with a diverse international community of creatives making a powerful blend of resources. AMP now has well over 2000 members in over 60 countries worldwide (the latest is Zimbabwe).

AMP's Echo Chamber: Call for Submissions

AMP Members are invited to submit their work - visual, audio, performance, conceptual, and more - for inclusion in AMP's Echo Chamber, a performance/art event to take place on Saturday night, March 24th, in Downtown Los Angeles, California, USA, at Art Share Los Angeles.

We are seeking work created in reference to, or inspired by, art in another genre. Work from anywhere in the world is eligible, as long as you can arrange for shipment and return shipment of the piece to and from Los Angeles. Examples could include a dance piece about a painting, a song about a poet, a painting inspired by a piece of music, and so on.

We are also seeking AMP members available to create collaborative performance pieces. While any AMP member is eligible to perform at the event you must be personally available and interested in collaborating with another AMP artist to produce a performance piece for the event. If you can either collaborate with someone else via email or telephone and then be in Los Angeles a few days before March 24, or you live in Los Angeles, you're eligible. A collaboration could be live painting in response to a band's set, an experimental lighting design creating context integral to a performance, a
sonic-percussive-dance collaboration, and more.

Why an "Echo Chamber?"

A vibrant artistic community's greatest asset is not only its collective talent, but its diversity. Any AMP event would feature diverse works of art, but we decided to take it one step further by asking our members to collaborate by "echoing" one another's individual pursuits. As any wall might provide an echo, any art form can serve to inspire another. By collaborating with fellow artists the possibilities for new and interesting revelations are endless.
And since this event is taking place in Los Angeles, it might serve to  inspire you to think of the "original" echo chamber located at now-defunct Gold Star Studios at Santa Monica and Vine. This subterranean tunnel is where Phil Spector created his "wall of sound,"
and where countless pop records were infused with a majestic atmosphere. AMP's Echo Chamber allows artists to create their own unique noise.

The Details

* Submissions are due by 5 pm PST (West Coast USA) time on Tuesday,
March 6.
* Email submissions to amp....@gmail.com
* Attach images, sounds, links to your email.
* Final decisions about submitted works and performance pairings to be made by AMP Executive Director Terri Anderson in consultation with members of AMP's International Advisory Board.
* Exceptional visual art submissions will be selected for a two-month long exhibit to be held in Pasadena through AMP member Liza Simone's Phantom Galleries project.
* A CD/DVD will be made of the event, so AMP members worldwide can share the experience.


5.    Los Angeles, USA: DANCE AUDITIONS: FOR PAHELIYAN: A
       BOLLYWOOD ALICE IN WONDERLAND, Sunday, March 11, 2007


1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Swerve
8250 W. 3rd St.
2nd Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90048

blue13 dance company is holding auditions for female & male dancers
for this stunning new dance theatre show, premiering at the Ford
Amphitheatre on August 23, 24, 2007.
We are casting for dance roles for all of the mad characters in Alice
in Wonderland.  This is a dance show, no dialogue.

We need:
**Dancers of all genres with solid technique: modern, ballet a huge
plus; experience in any Indian forms a plus as well but not required.
Acrobats
Aerial Dancers
Stilt Dancers

BRING TO THE AUDITION: A 1 minute performance, music on CD or iPod.

Perks include:
Performance Pay
Possible permanent position in the company
Free classes with Achinta S. McDaniel
Being a part of a truly unique dance family

IF you are interested in auditioning on the 11th, please send an RSVP
e-mail to in...@blue13dance.com with your bio/resume embedded in the
body of the email, and a link to your website or myspace page.


6.   Richmond, VA:
call for writing, VISIBLE: A FEMMETHOLOGY,  
      deadline 15 March 2007


VISIBLE: A FEMMETHOLOGY: an anthology of writing on queer femme identity, http://www.femmethology.com/call-for-submissions/

Editor: Maria Angeline
Publisher: Merge Press
Submissions Deadline: March 15, 2007
Anticipated Publication Date: Spring 2008

Femmes are still invisible. Society can't see past our heels to hear our stories, so we must continue to build platforms for our voices. Visible: A Femmethology, a forthcoming anthology about the power and complications in presenting femme as a gender and breaking the traditional meaning of feminine, aims to showcase blunt, personal essays exploring what "femme" means to those who claim it as an identity.

Give me your experiences, your inner dialogues, your theories and practices. Please do not send fiction, poetry, erotica, or any material to which you do not fully own the rights. I am seeking prose that is thoughtful, analytical, raw, challenging, exploratory, and uniquely you.

Submissions must be sent as Word files with text in 12 point Times New Roman font. Essays must be previously unpublished, 1500-6000 words in length, and typed double-spaced. You may submit more than one essay.

Author maintains and controls the copyright of their essay and licenses their First North American Rights to Merge Press for publication purposes. Author retains the right to reprint the material in any publication. Contributing writers will share 25% of the net profits of Visible: A Femmethology and receive a free copy of the anthology.

Send SUBMISSIONS ONLY to Maria Angeline at femmethology(at)mergepress dot com. Include your legal name, pseudonym (if any) you wish to use, address, phone number, email, and the bio you would like to appear in the book if your selection is chosen for publication. Put the title of your essay in the subject line of the email. Each essay must be emailed separately.

Visible: A Femmethology is expected to be released in 2008. Do not email to inquire about the status of your submission after you receive a confirmation that it has been received. It is not possible to respond to all email inquires. Once selections have been made, every person who has submitted work will be sent an announcement. Please do not submit material if you do not regularly check your email.

7.    UK: GRANTS/fiction: apprenticeships in fiction 2007, deadline
       20 March 2007


APPRENTICESHIPS IN FICTION 2007
Deadline: 20th March 2007
Reply to: mar...@adventuresinfiction.co.uk
---

A one-year professional development programme for first-time novelists.

Adventures in Fiction is proud to present five subsidized placements for first-time novelists of commercial and literary fiction, including one for young people. The placements, which have an individual value of £2,000 will take the form of an apprenticeship with a professional writer working in a similar genre. The five apprentices will be selected from open competition.

Each apprenticeship comprises a structured year-long programme of interactive workshops, manuscript appraisals and tutorials in
addition to regular, ongoing feedback and peer group support.

The programme includes:

• An introductory intensive workshop on the key elements of
successful fiction.

• A six-stage approach designed to address every aspect of the
writing process.

• A practical step-by-step approach.

• A concluding workshop with a literary agent on framing and selling an idea.

• A guaranteed introduction to a leading literary agent for writers
who demonstrate clear publishing potential.

This is a highly competitive and demanding programme that seeks to fast-track aspiring writers of outstanding talent. At the end of the year, apprentices will 'graduate' with an objective overview of their own work and a clear grasp of the requirements of the publishing industry. We are aiming to bring together a dynamic group of highly talented individuals drawn from a range of cultural, ethnic and regional communities.

The five successful apprentices will be announced in April 2007

Apprenticeships 2006 directly resulted in one publication, agency
interest for six writers and Arts Council funding for an individual
mentoring programme for a seventh.

Apprenticeships in Fiction aims to encourage diversity, excellence
and originality.

For further information go to http://www.adventuresinfiction.co.uk

Tel: Marion Urch on 020 7354 2598

Email: mar...@adventuresinfiction.co.uk



8.    San Francisco, USA:  Call for visual art: TEA PARTY MAGAZINE THE TRANS• ISSUE, deadline 2 April 2007


TEA PARTY magazine seeks submissions of fiction, poetry, photography, visual art, comics, and feature essays for its upcoming issue #17, to be published in Summer 2007. As a non-profit arts & culture magazine based in Oakland and San Francisco, we publish work by writers, artists, intellectuals, and activists from diverse cultures, communities, and fields of study. Our core focus is the intersection of creativity and social justice. We are distributed in independent bookstores both nationally and in Canada.

Our theme for Issue #17 is TRANS• in all its many shades of meaning. As a prefix or abbreviation, TRANS• can mean "across, beyond, through, on or to the other side, into another state or place, change, the opposite side of," or can even refer to something farther and allow us to experience new, in-between states. What does TRANS• mean to you? What words or associations does it conjure? Here are just a fewpossibilities:

TRANS• lation
TRANS• formation
TRANS• ition
TRANS• cultural
TRANS• cendence
TRANS• gender
TRANS• fer
TRANS• portation
TRANS• position
TRANS• generational
TRANS• action
TRANS• cription
TRANS• mission
TRANS• ience
TRANS• plant
TRANS• parency
TRANS• fat
TRANS• creation

How does TRANS• speak to our experience as individuals and as
communities, and what meaning does TRANS• have for us as a society at this particular point in history? We welcome other ways you can think of to relate to this theme. Surprise us!

Email work to the appropriate editor & include "TRANS• SUBMISSION" in the heading by the submission deadline listed (received by):

Artwork by April 2nd to Art Editor, Shannon Petrello at
spetrello(at)hotmail.com
(replace (at) with @)

WHAT TEA PARTY MAGAZINE IS LOOKING FOR

Tea Party magazine focuses on the intersection of creativity and
social justice. We especially support voices of artists and writers
who are grappling with issues of social justice and are often
marginalized or underrepresented, such feminists, people of color, the homeless, veterans, migrant workers, youth, the incarcerated, and so on. The common denominator of Tea Party contributors is a creative and progressive approach to their work, whether it's through art, literature, activism, or science. Humor is always welcome! The editors are strongly committed to maintaining diversity of voice within each issue.

WHAT TO SEND US

• FICTION: Send only one story per submission, from one page up to 12 double-spaced pages (or 3,000 words). Submissions should be typed and double-spaced. Make sure your name is on each page. Translations welcome.

• ESSAYS: Send one essay per submission, from one page up to 12
double-spaced pages (or 3,000 words). Essays should relate to the
theme through an arts and/or culture lens. Ideally it has some
well-crafted social/political analysis, while still meeting the
guidelines for strong feature-writing. (i.e. doesn't make the mistake
of being too complex, abstract or losing sight of human stories).

• POETRY: Send 3-5 poems per submission. Do not send more than 4 poems if longer than 3 pages each. Do not fold poems individually or staple poems together. Translations welcome.

• ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, & COMICS: Send 3-5 images of high resolution (at least 300 dpi) and either sent as a TIFF or EPS files only (no JPEGs, PDFs, GIFs, PSDs, or indexed color files). Visual works must also be publishable in black and white or in a sepia color format (not full color) so the higher the contrast the better. Please make sure all images are in grayscale (no RGB, CYMK files, no rich black). Be aware that images created in some programs automatically are color files, even if they LOOK black and white.

• REVIEWS: Send 1-2 reviews up to 12 double-spaced pages (or 3,000 words) of books, visual art, plays, music performances that address the theme. We're also open to other types of reviews.

• INTERVIEWS: This is typically an interview with an artist or writer
who has developed a substantial body of work, and is considered a
major innovator or visionary in their field. (up to 3000 words incl.
excerpt—6 pages). We also accept interviews of a homeless of formerly homeless artist or writer's first-person story of their life (1600 words or 4 pages).

HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR WORK

• We prefer e-mail submissions. Please send as an attachment as well as pasted into the body of an e-mail. Be sure to include your name,  mailing address, e-mail address and phone number on the cover letter, as well as your name on each numbered page. Include a brief bio (50 words or less) with your submission. Please address your submission to the appropriate editor (listed above). Snail mail: If you have no computer access you may send submissions to the following address: Attn: Senior Editor, 4240 24th Street, San Francisco, CA 94114. Enclose a SASE for our response (include additional postage if work is to be returned). We do not return unsolicited work. Reports on submissions within 6 months. Though we prefer previously unpublished works, we do consider previously published work as well as novel excerpts. Simultaneous submissions are fine if you give us 2 months of lead time before submitting the same work somewhere else. Clearly mark
envelope to the appropriate genre editor's attention (e.g. "Fiction
Editor"). Honorarium: Tea Party pays an honorarium of $10 to $50 for all work accepted. Each contributor receives three copies of the
issue, as well as an invitation to the magazine release party. Some
contributors from each issue will have the opportunity to read their
work at this event.

• Theme: Each issue of Tea Party is devoted to a new theme and so the submitted works must address the special theme for the upcoming issue in order to be considered. Feel free to include a brief explanation as to how you see your work addressing the upcoming theme of "TRANS•."

• Sample Issues: If you have never read Tea Party before, we strongly suggest you look at an issue before submitting work. Sample back issues are $5, e-mail or call us and we'll send you one.

For general inquiries, contact Esther Lee, Senior Editor, at below address:

Tea Party Magazine
4240 24th Street
San Francisco, CA 94114
www.tparty.org
415.244.6191


9.     Bangalore, India: Call for Film Entries: VOICES FROM THE
        WATERS 2007 2ND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ON WATER,
        deadline 15 April 2007


Bangalore Film Society in collaboration with Water Journeys and CIEDS collective is organizing the second edition of the International Film Festival on Water titled 'Voices from the Water 2007'. The first edition of the festival was successfully held in April 2004 in Bangalore, India. The festival is a series of film screenings and conferences held over three days that aim to create general awareness and inspire dialogues among the general public on water- a precious, seamless natural resource that is becoming increasingly scarce and deviously comodified.

We invite you to be part of this event by contributing short, documentary and feature films (DVD/VCD formats) with English subtitles on water and related issues. Further, we would appreciate
a preview copy of any films you would wish to send so that we may place them in one of the five categories of the festival, Water Scarcity, The Dams and the Displaced, Water Harvest, Water
Struggles and Water and Life. We would duly acknowledge your participation. While there is no entry fee, 'Voices From the Waters' being a public awareness program, films for the festival will be short-listed by a committee composed of film-makers and social activists.

Should you need more information about us, please do get in touch with us. Deadline for entries is 15th April, 2007.

Looking forward to your participation.

Thanking you,
Yours Sincerely,

BFS team

Contact:-

Siddharth Pillai,
33/1-9, Thyagaraja Layout,
Jai Bharath Nagar,
M.S. Nagar P.O.,
Bangalore- 560 033,
Karnataka,
India.
Tel: 91- 80- 25493705
Email: b...@bgl.vsnl. net.in

Bangalore Film Society:-

Bangalore Film Society is a non profit membership based organization committed to explore the cultural politics and how it impacts and shapes the modern cultural practices, politics and social behaviour. We volunteer to screen feature and documentary films for the film society members, in colleges and institutions. Our aim is to introduce the contemporary socio-political- cultural concerns through cinema among the youth and initiate discussions, as also to inculcate among the youth a deep sense of humanism, pluralism, and an appreciation of diversity. We also attempt to open up pluralist cultural spaces for progressive perspectives on notions of justice, rights, racial equality and so on to enable the participants to visualise images of – a world free from intolerance, violence and injustice.

Water Journeys:-

Water Journeys is to screen films on water issues, water struggles, water conservation and related issues in schools, colleges and communities to start a dialogue on the issue of control and use of water. It aims at networking with agencies involved in the protection and preservation of lakes, rivers and other water bodies.

CIEDS collective:-

CIEDS is a thirty-year- old organization that critiques the contemporary development paradigm which has created pockets of plenty and abysmal poverty across the globe. The homocentric development paradigm treats the earth as a commodity, which will have catastrophic effects on nature and the environment. We are already victims of such an approach. CIEDS in its involvement with present socio-political issues concerning women, tribals, Dalits, environment, culture and so on, attempts a nature-centric vision and sustainable development.

Campaign for the fundamental right to water,
C/o No.33/1-9, Thyagaraj Layout,
Jai Bharath Nagar,
Maruthisevanagar P.O,
Bangalore-560 033.

"If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in water" - Loran Eisley

* Disclaimer: Information is not verified and included in good faith. We are not responsible for any direct of indirect damage incurred because of the information contained in this newsletter. Though we check the information, we are not responsible for the content of external announcements and links.* 



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