Tag: Arts

  • Alfian Sa’at: SOTA Students Must Not Treat Arts As After-Hours Hobby

    Alfian Sa’at: SOTA Students Must Not Treat Arts As After-Hours Hobby

    “I know I’m coming across as harsh,” said poet and playwright, Alfian Sa’at. “But I have to register my disappointment at the responses coming from SOTA students regarding why an overwhelming majority of them, despite having an arts-based education, would ultimately choose non-arts careers.”

    Mr Sa’at was referring to recent news that 83 per cent of students from the School of the Arts (SOTA) in 2015 went on to non-arts related degrees in university. This is a jump from 60 per cent in 2012.

    In her speech at the school’s Arts Awards Day on 15 May, the Minister of Culture, Community and Youth, Grace Fu, praised the school for providing “multiple pathways and varied career options.”

    “Over 70 per cent of its graduates have gone on to pursue non-arts related university courses such as Law, Journalism and Engineering and some have taken arts and arts-related courses in prestigious arts institutions and conservatories,” she said.

    Straits Times

    However, the news was greeted with concern by some, who also questioned the purpose of an arts school and its very existence.

    “The staggering number of students from a specialised arts school designed to provide a first-class arts education dropping arts when they enter university is extremely disconcerting,” wrote Jeffrey Say to the Straits Times on 22 May.

    Mr Sa’at – known for his provocative works which are performed here and abroad – says that students need to respect the arts as a career in the first place.

    “[I] also want to tell you that unless you start according an arts career the respect and commitment that it deserves, and that means not treating it like an after-hours hobby, or a post-schooling co-curricular activity, or making statements like ‘well who’s to say that I won’t still dabble in the arts?’, we will never reach a stage where professionalisation is possible, and we will never create a real industry, the kind you might aspire to be part of one day.”

    Mr Sa’at’s reaction was posted on his Facebook page on 25 May.

    We reproduce it in full below.

    A SOTA student says: “I’m allowed to have more than one passion. And you don’t get to tell me that I can’t have it both ways. So, no, I’ve never met a SOTA student who gave up on their ambition. And that’s because SOTA students understand that it’s human nature to have more than one. And we’re never going to play the zero sum game with our dreams.”

    Sure, you’re young, you’re idealistic. You probably don’t believe, at this point, that it’s possible to bite off more than you can chew. But I also want to tell you that unless you start according an arts career the respect and commitment that it deserves, and that means not treating it like an after-hours hobby, or a post-schooling co-curricular activity, or making statements like ‘well who’s to say that I won’t still dabble in the arts?’, we will never reach a stage where professionalisation is possible, and we will never create a real industry, the kind you might aspire to be part of one day.

    When you come in late for rehearsals, because of the overtime from your ‘real’ job, the work suffers. When you don’t get your lines down because you don’t have the head space and bandwidth for the play, the work suffers. When your stage manager has to try working around your schedule and has to even cut rehearsals to accommodate your ‘real’ job, the work suffers. And you expect everyone around you to make compromises and sacrifices so that you can chase your double rainbow?

    I know I’m coming across as harsh. But I have to register my disappointment at the responses coming from SOTA students regarding why an overwhelming majority of them, despite having an arts-based education, would ultimately choose non-arts careers. What I’m hearing are ‘you haven’t been to SOTA so please don’t comment’, ‘I’m still young and have every right to change my mind’, ‘don’t talk about your tax dollars subsidising my expensive arts education, I refuse to be blackmailed by any talk of obligations’, ‘people were so discouraging when I joined SOTA and now that I have internalised that discouragement you want to blame me?’ The kind of defensiveness that comes from avoiding the real issues.

    And for me the fundamental issue here is: in spite of a prolonged exposure to the arts, a career in the arts remains a deeply unattractive option for many of these students. And I really would like to know why. Yes, I know some students found out along the way that they were interested in something else. Some felt that they were more suited for a life as arts patrons and consumers than as artists. I have no doubt that these are honest responses, but I also feel there is something else if you scratch hard enough.

    When I talk about honesty in one’s writing, I tell students that you must be honest in addressing your desires, and you must also be honest in addressing your fears. And I feel that there are fears involved in such decision-making, fears that are not articulated because there is that additional fear of being outed as fearful.

    I feel that there are systemic things to talk about, about how after so many years we’re still talking about rice bowls and backup plans and safety nets, about things to do with conformity, risk, innovation, failure, dreams, thwarted dreams, stillborn dreams, dreams that are skewed and resized, trimmed and pruned, dreams nibbled by fear, dreams folded into paper aeroplanes, tucked into crevices between concrete slabs, dreams that were made art in a student’s hands and then turned into rubbish in the hands of the administration..

  • Penggiat Seni Zai Kuning Dipilih Wakili Singapura Di Venice Biennale

    Penggiat Seni Zai Kuning Dipilih Wakili Singapura Di Venice Biennale

    Penggiat seni pelbagai disiplin, Zai Kuning serta kurator dan sejarawan seni, June Yap dipilih oleh Majlis Seni Kebangsaan (NAC) bagi mewakili Singapura di pameran Venice Biennale, pada tahun depan.

    Hasil kerja seni dipanggil “Dapunta Hyang”, nama Maharaja pertama kerajaan Srivijaya yang berkuasa di Asia Tenggara pada kurun ketujuh.

    Struktur itu diperbuat daripada rotan dan benang disaluti lilin.

    Ia merupakan sebahagian hasil kerja awal Zai dan memberi sedikit gambaran mengenai kerja seni yang bakal dipamerkan di Venice Biennale.

    Ruang itulah di mana Zai dan June akan menghabiskan masa enam bulan selanjutnya bagi mempersiapkan kerja seni itu sebelum ia dipindahkan ke Venice.

    Berbekalkan lebih 20 tahun penyelidikan tentang budaya, sejarah dan bahasa Melayu di Asia Tenggara, Zai berharap para pengunjung asing akan melihat Singapura dan rantau ini dengan perspektif berbeza.

    “Kalau kita cakap Melayu, mereka cakap Malaysia. Tetapi, Melayu lebih lebar, lebih besar daripada itu. Melayu daripada Sumatera, Melayu daripada Filipina, Melayu daripada Thailand, Melayu itu lebih luas daripada apa yang orang tahu tentang dunia Melayu,” kata Zai.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Google Pays Tribute to Singapore Music Icon, Pak Zubir Said

    Google Pays Tribute to Singapore Music Icon, Pak Zubir Said

     

     

    Credit: Google
    Credit: Google

    zubir said

    Today’s Google doodle celebrates a Singaporean musical icon – composer Zubir Said. The musician best known for composing Singapore’s national anthem was born on July 22, 1907, 107 years ago, in the town of Bukit Tinggi in Minangkabau, Central Sumatra.

    Clicking on the doodle will take browsers to a page with search results relating to the famed musician.

    The Google doodle does not appear for country specific sites such as for Russia and Denmark, but it appears on the global Google.com site. This is not the first time Google has had Singapore-themed doodles. There have been doodles dedicated to Singapore’s National Day and the Singapore Arts Festival. You can see more such doodles here.

    Zubir was asked to compose a song by Mr Ong Eng Guan, Singapore’s mayor, for the re-opening of Victoria Theatre in 1958. Singapore achieved self-government in 1959 and the tune Zubir had composed, Majulah Singapura, was chosen as the national anthem.

    Writer Muhammad Ariff recalled in an interview with the Straits Times that he helped Zubir tweak the lyrics of the song to reflect the way in which Singapore achieved independence, through peaceful negotiations rather than a bloody battle.

    He added: “The original lyrics written by Pak Zubir (who was born in Sumatra) were patriotic, sounding as if we had won independence after a great war, like in Indonesia. We didn’t have that. We achieved self-government through roundtable talks.

    “I had written two how-to books at the time, Let Us Hold A Meeting and Let Us Make Poems. So for the lyrics, I suggested, ‘Let us the people of Singapore progress towards happiness together’.

    “You’ll notice the lyrics use simple Malay words that many non-Malays then can understand as well. The lyrics are in what I’d call a national language, with words and tone that let us communicate with all Singaporeans. It is not Malay just for Malays.

    “For instance, the opening line: Mari kita rakyat Singapura. It is four simple words that most can understand as many Singaporeans were then learning Malay.”

    Born the eldest in a family of three boys and five girls, Zubir was a self-taught musician who played the flute and the guitar. His conservative father, who was also the village headman, objected to his musical ambitions. So Zubir left home at 21 and headed to Singapore to pursue a musical career.

    He started by playing in bangsawan (Malay opera) troupes and job hopped, with a stint as a recording supervisor for British recording company His Master’s Voice, and then worked as a band conductor during the Japanese Occupation. He married keroncong singer Tarminah Kario Wikromo in Java in 1938 and returned to his hometown of Bukit Tinggi for a few years.

    But Singapore drew him back in 1947, and he landed a gig with Shaw Brothers as a freelance composer in 1948. He became part of the Malay intelligentsia who powered the then-thriving Malay movie industry in Singapore, using popular culture to address political and socio-economic issues relevant to the Malay community at a time of modernisation and cultural change.

    In his lengthy career, Zubir wrote soundtracks for film classics such as Bawang Putih Bawang Merah (Shallots And Garlic, 1959) and Jula Juli Bintang Tujoh (Jula Juli Of The Seven Stars, 1962). He also composed about 1,500 songs.

    He died on Nov 16. 1987, aged 80. He is survived by four daughters and a son.

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/news/singapore/more-singapore-stories/story/google-doodle-pays-tribute-singapore-music-icon-composer#sthash.cgE7tonX.dpuf

    letters R1C

    YOUTUBE: youtube.com/user/rilek1corner

    FACEBOOK: facebook.com/rilek1corner

    TWITTER: twitter.com/Rilek1Corner

    WEBSITE: rilek1corner.com

    EMAIL: [email protected]

    FEEDBACK: rilek1corner.com/hubungir1c