It’s time to watch.
The SAF Newsletter is a weekly broadsheet for engagement with the arts, a platform for us to share, connect and engage with one another through love for art, creativity and dialogue. The newsletter is divided over a period of a month—with a new edition arriving to your inboxes every Monday.
In Vol 1, we revel in the joy of beholding—the open sky, a still moment, a flicker in light, the deft movements of a dancer's feet, unspooling celluloid reels, the frozen portraits of video calls, the ascending grid of our phone albums. Beholding each other, watching the world as it spins.
As you scroll down, you will find stories told in many forms. You may pause, you may wander—you may even fall asleep.
We'll wait for your return. As art does.
Learn
Archive Fever: From Celluloid to Digital Body
Sukanya Deb
The silver screen—from the liquidated remains of the celluloid of cinema’s past—beckons us to consider the archival form through a slew of concerns that inform related fields of art and conservation. Celluloid film was the original vessel for photography and cinema; a living, breathing medium—one that deteriorates with every viewing.
Celluloid is almost organic through its wear, similar to an aging body. This decay is familiar to us, in how it mirrors the human condition of an omnipresent interplay between life and death, use and futility. Paradoxically, it is decay that determines how we assign the organic. Melting celluloid into silver was a common enough practice in India, since the 60s and 70s, which is telling in how we have valued our filmic, and ultimately, artistic and cultural heritage—from industry to institution.
Serendipity Recommends
A list of films lovingly compiled by the SAF family for our universe of friends, supporters, and art-lovers. These are the movies we find ourselves returning to, and we hope you enjoy a few of these!
Projects/Processes
The Projects/Processes series commissions research essays, longform writing, and in-depth criticism that explore the ideas and processes behind select curatorial projects at Serendipity Arts Festival. Get a copy of the 2018 series, published by Harper Design by clicking on the links below.
Reflect
Movement | Stillness
The body says what words cannot.
– Martha Graham
When we run out of words to express ourselves, movement comes to our rescue. We consider this time a moment of stillness in the movement of our daily routine – a time to pause and reflect, a time to connect despite physical isolation.
During this time of social distancing, technology has come to play an extremely important role in our daily lives – to stay united, to stay informed, to stay sane. Many performances have been postponed, and will continue to be in the near future. As we navigate these new, uncharted cultural territory together, we will find new ways to support, encourage and work with artists. We have had the privilege to work with many performing artists over the years. Here are some of the videos of their extended practice. We hope you are inspired.
Connecting Realities - A Symposium on Theatre and its Realities
Curated by Anuja Ghosalkar & Kai Tuchmann
Curated by Kai Tuchmann and Anuja Ghosalkar, Connecting Realities: A Symposium on Theatre and Its Realities was a two and half day symposium on documentary theatre, where performers, scholars of performance, visual artists, lawyers, activists from the human rights field, journalists, and educators engaged with the audience. The symposium aimed to transcend disciplinary boundaries, and examine Indian and Asian performance practices, both traditional and contemporary, that relate to performing reality.
Catch a glimpse below of the performances, presentations, concerts and lectures that were part of Connecting Realities at Serendipity Arts Festival 2019.
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Play | Rewind: Podcasts by Shubha Mudgal
The immense diversity of India’s music is one of its greatest strengths. Drawing from the musical treasure available to us, Shubha Mudgal’s podcasts give listeners a taste of Indian music in all its variety, diversity and richness.
Open Call
Create At Home
Distance is seductive.
As the silence of our streets slowly set in—join us in taking one step towards art-making in exceptional times. A ledger of the everyday in times of resilience. For Vol 1: It Might be Time to Watch, we invite one-second video submissions. Four simple rules: each video is no longer than a second, videos must be shot from your phone, they must be a single take, and in landscape mode. You can send one or more videos.