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Climate Advocacy through Dance

by Aaditya Singh | 04-12-2017 04:21


"Science, economics and politics will be crucial (to building climate resilience) but so will new thinking and new ways of expressing the challenges and opportunities to both leaders and the public — something arts and culture can do in fresh and fundamental ways," Nick Nuttall, director of communications for the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), said at a seminar earlier this year.


'Ekonama' by Sapphire Dance Creations, is an example of such creative expression towards climate advocacy.


Sapphire Creations, an Indian dance company is promoting awareness about climate change particularly among young people through their production, 'Ekonama'. The dance drama shows a community suffering from the consequences of climate change and finding ways to adapt – all portrayed with amazing choreography, vibrant masks of Hindu gods, and traditional martial arts.

 

"Ekonama: The Beginning in the End", an environmental dance performance in Kolkata is a contemporary dance work that seeks to challenge audiences to climate action by portraying a tribal community's life before climate change threatens their future.

 

The hour long show depicts how damaging the environment can affect the fate of humanity. The creators hope to elicit an emotional response from the audiences through a combination of dramatic choreography, folk dance, vivid costumes and music, to raise awareness and compel viewers to become climate change activists.

 

The performance depicts a tribal community reliant on their masked gods to protect them. A storm exposes them to the throes of extreme weather brought on by climate change. The dance depicts a future where hurricanes, droughts, floods and pollution have turned the last survivors into half-naked creatures scrounging, fighting, scavenging and even killing for food, water and shelter. Even their gods have lost their dignity.

 

Featuring the folk martial art Chhau from the interior of West Bengal, 'Ekonama' seeks to spur the public to fight climate change and protect the planet for future generations. 


All of the costumes for the performers are made from waste or discarded fabrics, collected from suburban garment industries, and hand knitted into chunky cocoons and layers of deconstructed wraps and masks worn by the dancers. This further emphasises the need for reducing and recycling waste.

 

Following Ekonama's international premiere at the Seattle International Dance Festival in June, the UNFCC newsroom also has publicised the piece, noting the contribution of art and culture in raising awareness about climate change. The producers are also looking forward to more performances around the world.

 

The real world backdrop to the art project is serious. Pollution, mounting waste generation and ineffective waste management are serious concerns. Furthermore, India is vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, from unprecedented heat-waves and drought to more intense extreme weather events and rising sea levels. Proximity to the equator makes India vulnerable to dramatic sea level rise, putting millions of people living in its densely populated coastal cities such as Kolkata and Mumbai at risk.

 

Please click on the link below to view the dance on the Youtube link.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hh1HljiOOqY

 

More about the dance from the Event Facebook page.

 

Concept: 
"When there are no trees left to give shade, and no clean air to breathe, no animals to hunt and no lands to till; when all that is left is barren, gray, parched earth what do humans live on or live for. What do they believe in and what do they aspire for! Who are their Gods and what do they offer them! A futuristic but not-impossible vision of the end of days. The end of humanity as we know it not attacked by outerworldly aliens but diseased from within. The end of the world that looms ahead from the continuous and unsustainable and unplanned exhaustion of natural resources is not far away and the question that this production asks is how can we bequeath this world to our children. A world devoid of nature, joy and peace makes our children doomsday inheritors"

History: 
"Ekonama was created as part of the Microsoft Create to Inspire Fellowship in Kolkata in 2015 as a 15 min piece Ekoboom meant to be performed across university campuses of the city. The Fellowship provides a platform to young people to build innovative social innovation campaigns through art initiating fun and surprising conversations on sustainable consumption." 

The Piece:
"Now in progress extending itself into a full length 70 min production with a mélange of sharply contrasting choreographies using contemporary movement by Sapphire dancers and Chhau movement by Bengal's famed Purulia Chhau dancers along the production is a visually penetrating saga of images of barren, grey earth and the dying mother figure. The mother who bears the seed of the last possible life on earth is depicted through a red-clad female figure who in an agonized series of movements tries to gather precarious energy to give birth to new life. When images of gods turn animalistic as they scourge for survival and the magnificent Chhau dancers and their masks are stripped off as they search for hope in the doom of acidic, scalding, endless darkness.

Ekonama is a critique of the rapid depletion of natural resources and the impending loom of a deadly end to our beautiful world as we know it. The piece traces the story of communities uniting to create a movement to bring change with still a hope for the future."

 

Sources and References:


http://gulfnews.com/news/asia/india/dance-aims-to-spur-people-to-become-climate-activists-1.2126233

https://www.timeout.com/kolkata/events/ekonama-the-beginning-at-the-end

http://newsroom.unfccc.int/climate-action/dancing-for-the-climate-in-india/