Showing posts with label Tiatre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiatre. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Experiencing the Archetype (The psychologist perspective)

Selected thoughts on archetypal imagery from a psycology perspective, taken from the essay 'The Collective Unconcious' (Steve Beyer's blog).
  The Jungian perspective and psychologist James Hillman's views on archetypal imagery seem to confirm my view of the 'Tiatriste' portraits as archetypal images. Also see Tiatriste and Jungian Archetypes
 For Freud, there is no such thing as nonverbal thinking; the unconscious is accessed through words. For Jung, on the other hand, the unconscious is accessed through images. These images appear to us in dreams, fantasy, visions, imagination, and hallucinations. These images are how the unconscious communicates with us.
Again contrary to Freudian psychoanalysis, Jung maintained that, underneath this unconscious, there lay another unconscious, which he called first the phylogenetic and then the collective unconscious.
For Jung, this collective unconscious is not filled with images. It is filled with archetypes. Jung likened these archetypes to Kantian categories — that is, to a priori conditions for possible experiences. Jung proposed extending the Kantian idea of the logical categories of reason to the production of fantasy; the archetypes, Jung says, are “categories of the imagination.”
Archetypes thus are form without content; they are possibilities of images. Although they are themselves without content, they are often, on the basis of the images whose form they provide, named after mythological figures — the Hera archetype, for example, or the Wise Old Man archetype; or they may be named for some abstract theme, such as the archetype of engulfment or the archetype of rebirth.
We can distinguish archetypal images from ordinary images because archetypal images appear to us on a wave of emotion; they possess salience and depth; they are numinous and mysterious. It is these same archetypal images that appear as motifs in myths, legends, fairy tales, literature, and art around the world, arising out of the same set of archetypes in the shared collective unconscious. As Joseph Campbell famously put it, dreams are private myths, and myths are public dreams.
There is thus a distinction between an archetype and an archetypal image, a distinction that Jungians — and even Jung himself — have often failed to maintain consistently. There is no access to the archetypes of the collective unconscious; they are transcendental and unrepresentable. All we have are archetypal images, which conform to the a priori conditions imposed by their archetypes. The collective unconscious is a negative borderline concept, just as unknowable as the Kantian thing in itself. We know of the archetypes only through a form of transcendental deduction from numinous images.
Moreover, there is clearly no one-to-one relationship between archetype and image. A single archetype can give rise to any number of archetypal images; and a single archetypal image may — or perhaps may not — be of two different archetypes at the same time. If the relationship between archetype and image is many-to-many, then the relationship between an image and any particular archetype becomes indeterminate.
Just how many archetypes are there? There appears to be no constraint on their number or nature. Steven Walker, a scholar of comparative literature sympathetic to Jung, says that “the list of archetypes is nearly endless.” There can be an archetype for just about any possible human situation, it seems; and conversely each archetype can produce an indefinite number of archetypal images. And apparently we can make up archetypes at will.
And if the person who has produced the numinous image gets to decide with which mythic motif or fairy tale situation it most clearly resonates, then it is not clear why we need to postulate transcendental archetypes of the collective unconscious at all.
Psychologist James Hillman faced this issue squarely, and he chose to eliminate the noun archetype altogether, while preserving the adjective archetypal. The problem, he says, is that Jung moved “from a valuation adjective to a thing and invented substantialities called archetypes… Then we are forced to gather literal evidence from cultures the world over and make empirical claims about what is defined to be unspeakable and irrepresentable.”
But we do not need to take the idea of the archetypal in this reified sense. Any image can be archetypal, Hillman says; it need only be given value — archetypalized or capitalized — by the person experiencing it. “By attaching archetypal to an image,” he says, “we ennoble or empower the image with the widest, richest, and deepest possible significance.”
Still, if what we are looking for is the meaning of images — in dreams, visions, imagination, fantasy — then it is worthwhile, I think, to pursue that meaning wherever we can. We do not need to postulate a collective unconscious or the existence of archetypes to pursue that meaning across cultures and through history, or to place our own images in the vast context of human suffering and transformation. The purpose is to give our dreams and visions life-giving depth, overflowing with meaning and power — what Hillman calls “unfathomable analogical richness.” 
With regards to photography and the archetypal image..
Vince Aletti spoke on photography at the symposium on the current state of the field (of photography), held at SFMOMA in April 2010, was the first in a series of public programs on photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art-
"If absolute truth were the only thing photography had to offer, it would have disappeared a century ago. Photography isn't merely a window on the world, it's a portal into the unconscious, wide open to fantasies, nightmares, obsessions, and the purest abstraction, as envisioned by Julia Margaret Cameron, Hans Bellmer, Man Ray, Joel-Peter Witkin, Laurie Simmons, and Adam Fuss."

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

VOICE OF THE PHOTOGRAPHER Catherine Opie

Artist Catherine Opie discusses identity and how it is perceived and shaped through portraits of close friends in the Los Angeles lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered and transvestite community. Part of the Voice of the Photography series created for the Annenberg Space for Photography inaugural exhibit L8S ANG3LES. (March - July, 2009)

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Stereotyping the Goan: They Never Get It, They Never Will

 Cecil Pinto's interesting observation on stereotyping ourselves as Goans that appeared in the Gomantak Times.
A couple of years ago, NDTV featured an interesting documentary “Where’s Sandra?” (Watch movie here)
This 18 minute film, I quote, ‘takes a playful look at the figure of Sandra from Bandra – part covetous fantasy of the racy Christian girl from Bombay who works as a secretary, wears a dress and likes to dance; part condescending stereotype of a dowdy, religious girl from a minority community.’
One of Mario Miranda’s endearing cartoon characters is the sexy secretary Miss Fonseca.
Mario has also caricatured so many Goan archetypes – the bhatkar (landlord), the gossipy elderly spinster, the priest, the fisherwoman, the Hindu gentleman, the drunk etc etc.
Alex Fernandes, Goa’s specialist portrait photographer, has taken a superb series of photographs of Tiatristes. Many tiatristes have taken archetypical characters and fleshed them out. Some of these existed, some are creations – all are caricatures.
Succorine’s colourfully clothed buxom fisherwoman, with flowers in her hair and a lot of gold chains and bangles, is very real.
But how real is Cyriaco Dias’ bhatkar? When did you last see a Goan landlord smoking a pipe, wearing suspenders, and wearing a silk house coat at home?
The comedian cook (cuzinher), the evil step-mother, the witty village belle… Do such people exist or are they creations of the tiatr genre?
When this writer (always wanted to say that – ‘this writer’ has such a formal pompous feel to it!) pokes fun at the Gulfee wife, the Moidekar, the Toronto Goan on holiday, or the belligerent and greedy South Goan taxi driver, we don’t take it to heart but accept it in the spirit of entertainment.
We are even willing to suspend disbelief despite gross exaggeration. Similarly we are ever forgiving of Mario Miranda and the tiatristes. Caricatures are never taken at face value – when the caricaturist is one of us.
But if, God forbid, an ‘outsider’ pokes fun at our foibles we are immediately up in arms.
In a Bollywood movie should a Goan character be portrayed as a drunk, or a Catholic girl be shown as being promiscuous, the entire moral brigade is up in arms. Mona, Robert, Julie, Lily, Anthony, Rosy, Peter, Maria, Michael… the daru drinkers, vamps, barmaids, cabaret dancers, bandleaders, henchmen are the characters that get attention and cause offense.
Nobody mentions the hundreds of times Goans and Christians are portrayed in a non-stereotypical manner. Go watch ‘Kal Ho Na Ho’ or ‘Black’ for example.
Mario Cabral e Sa often writes about the shenanigans of the Goan mistresses during the Portuguese era. Historian Fatima Gracias’s book on ‘Women in Goa’ has reams of interesting stuff.
For example at the end of the sixteenth century, (Page 4) “Life in the city of Goa was ceaseless rounds of amorous assignments and sexual delights…”. “Albuquerque also complained that Portuguese men carried women along with them out of Goa or to the ships for casual sex…”
As recent as 1931 the break up of registered prostitutes in Goa was about 1000 (with Ponda topping the list at 277, Bardez-186, Salcete-172, Ilhas-119). In 1936 the figures rose considerably (Hindu-1784, Christian-141, Muslims-9).
Fatima’s fascinating book goes on to examine the different categories of dancing girls (kalavantam / bailaderias) from pre-pubescent girls to widows, but I am getting distracted.
We can accept all this from Fatima or Mario because they are our fellow Goans. As also the statistic from me that there are more bars per capita in Goa than in any state/country in the whole of Asia, Africa or South America.
But when the 16th century Dutch traveller John Huyghen Van Linschoten writes that “married ladies drugged their husband with datura so they could have freedom with their lovers”, we find this unbelievable.
Or take the 19th century explorer and adventurer Richard Burton who claims that there were 20 establishments in Shiroda each having 50-60 dancing girls. We can’t take this from an outsider.
It is documented also how Goan dancing girls migrated to Bombay and were highly desired there as prostitutes and mistresses. Depending on who is doing the documentation, and the narration, we will either believe or rubbish this.
This acceptance of stereotyping or observations by insiders is true of every community.
On once social occasion I happened to be in the company of gay friends who were relating the most disgustingly delicious gay jokes. In a spirited fashion I cracked a vulgar gay joke myself. Conversation stopped and I was quite the social outcast till
lots more alcohol had been imbibed.
The point being it is ok for us to make fun of ourselves, but if you are an outsider you don’t have that privilege.
The token Muslim in many Hindi movies always wears a sherwani, sports a long beard and is a poet of sorts – or in recent times is a Pakistan trained militant. The Tamilian keeps repeating a thickly accented “ayyo amma”, and the Parsi gentleman is eccentric with an old world charm. Not vastly different from our tiatr stereotypes.
We Goans forward Sardaji jokes by the dozen. We stereotype them as dim witted and loud mouthed. Does that make our Prime Minister Manmohan Singh any less respected an economist and statesman? Do you think Sardajis care a whit? They know who they are. Why then do we get our collective imported panties in a knot when a Goan is stereotyped?
Bollywood is about formulae and what works is repeated endlessly. Brothers separated at birth, romance between people of incompatible religion/society, revenge for honour, unrealistic song and dance routines and yes, stereotyped communities. Tiatrs too have their formulae. Reality is suspended in both.
Let’s not shout “Objection mi Lord!” every time a Goan stereotype is caricatured by outsiders.
Let’s revel in the thought that we as a people live life abundantly and that’s something the outsiders can never fathom.
Our men are not drunks, our women are not easy. It’s just that we Goans, wherever we live, cultivate a certain lifestyle that others aspire for but can never quite acquire. Let them call us ‘sussegad’ without quite understanding the nuances of the word.
We will just wink at each other in our laidback way and understand why they are envious – of something they can never quite comprehend, imbibe or achieve.
This article first appeared in Gomantak Times. 
also see  
http://www.tambdimati.com/stereotyping-the-goan-they-never-get-it-they-never-will/

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Dr Jose Pereira speaks to Gerard D,Souza ( Gomantak Times)

'THE FORCES DESTROYING GOA ARE MUCH STRONGER THAN I AM'

One of Goa's foremost intellectuals, Dr Jose Pereira, also known as Goa's Da Vinci, inaugurated
his painting exhibition at Porvorim last week. In an exclusive interview, this polymath (who has published 24 books on theology, history of art, architecture, Goan culture, language, literature and music) speaks to GERARD D'SOUZA about his varied interests.

Q: Your interests span a wide range of issues from Islamic
architecture in India to teaching Theology of World Religions
at the Fordham University, to the Goan mando. How did you
come to span such a wide range of interests and
specialisations?

I see myself as a product of two traditions: one is the
Latin-Christian tradition and the other is the Indian Hindu
tradition. So, in order to bring to expression these
traditions, I had to do extensive research.

Q: You spent a majority of your life outside Goa. How did it
feel to be separated from your motherland?

Like a rat, I have run away from the sinking ship, which is
Goa.

Q: How did you manage to keep in touch with Goa despite
being based in far off places, even before the internet came
into the picture?

When I was in London, I used to travel by land to Goa. That
meant travelling across Europe and then to the border of
Iran. From there, I would hitchhike by truck on the border of
Pakistan and then make my way into India. Nobody does that
anymore.

Q: You have done extensive work on the mando. How do you look
at the mando today?

As I said, I am a product of two cultures. In the
mando, I find a concrete symbol of the synthesis of
two cultures. I needed a concrete argument to bring
out the synthesis of the Latin Christian and the
Indian Hindu and I find this in the mando.

The mando is beloved but betrayed. It was the work of the
aristocratic minority to create a fragment of Europe
surrounded by the waters of the Arabian sea and the hills of
the Sahyadris... an attempt to create a little Vienna with
a fantastic spirit and dance.

It is amazing to see a file of men dressed in purely Western
outfits and a file of women in Indian costumes holding
ostrich fans gently swaying back and forth to a melancholic
tune. It was a fantasy world. It couldn't have lasted very
long. It lasted about a hundred and fifty years. I like the
fantasy world of the mando.

Q: What about the tiatrs?

In my time, there were folk plays, beautiful plays. But they
published nothing. It was only when Joao Agostinho arrived on
the scene that he began publishing. They were lucky I arrived
on the scene and took notes of what was happening.

These folk playwrights were ahead of their time. They were
already attacking social evils like landlords sexually
exploiting their tenants and drunken behaviour and all this
pushed them much ahead of their contemporaries.

Q: Even today, the tiatr is a very vibrant industry, don't
you think?

Yes, that is because the Catholics are afraid that their
entity is being dissolved and this is their way of asserting
their identity.

Q: What do you feel about the future of Konkani?

I'm no longer optimistic about the future of Konkani. It
has to fight too many forces that are too great for it to
take on. What will we do?

Look at Marathi. It is spoken over such a wide territory,
almost 80 times the size of Goa, and they all have one
standard that they can look up to.

How can Konkani survive? They claim there is a standard: the
Devanagari Konkani, but does it inspire loyalty among a
Bardezkar or Saxttikar? Take for example the mando 'Adeu
Korcho Vellu Paulo'. Tem Ponddekar-ak poddlam? Amchem nu
mhonntelem te.

If we have the zeal of the Jews, then maybe. They have
revived the buried Hebrew language. It's plastered
everywhere, on their walls, they speak it to their children
and they speak it on the radio. Do you think we are capable
of this?

Q: You are primarily known as a scholar and intellectual.
Where does painting come into the picture?

I look at myself as a painter. It's just that my primary
source of income was not from paintings. Besides, nobody
noticed my work so I went into scholarly studies. People were
perhaps... equally confused as I was about myself. My
painting was otherwise sporadic.

Q: You were based in Benares for awhile. Tell us what you did
there?

I was centered in Benares as I had a project to research the
history of Indian art with the American Academy of Benares. I
was working on producing photographs of Indian monuments
across India.

We were supposed to take pictures and store them there and
then study them. That was our plan. I was doing Indian
Baroque art. I travelled a lot in India then, especially
visiting Daman and Diu, Bombay and Kerala, not to mention Goa
where Baroque art is popular.

Q: Tell us about your encounters with D.D. Kosambi?

My encounters with him were very brief. He was being driven
somewhere and he allowed us to enter his car. But I was
friends with Manoharrai Sardessai and still remember his
poems.

Q: How did you end up lecturing Theology?

I'm a self-taught theologian. It is one of my greatest
fascinations, especially Latin scholastic theologies. I've
written articles on theology. But then, how does one expect
people who are into theology to be interested in a painter?

Q: If you were to get a chance to live again, what would you
like to come back as?

I supposed I could be a computer graphics expert. But then, a
meditative existence would not be possible. I would not be
able to have the vivid experiences that I have had. I am
happy to have lived in the time I have lived and have been
living.

Q: What are your views on today's young generation?

I know nothing of the young of today. I am nearly eighty
years old. The world that I knew is very different from the
world of today.

We used to read books and classics. I read all of
Shakespeare, Dickens... but today's youth know computers. We
had an opening to Portuguese culture which today's youth
don't have. The Portuguese have died out and with that the
Goa I knew has also died out. We no longer create new songs.
In our time, the songs were being composed by the dozen.

Q: Do you think Goa is a good place to nurture scholars of
your caliber?

We don't have the institutions. It will take time. Where can
one do meditative research? Definitely not at Goa University!
In any case I don't live here so I don't know the scene.

Q: Do you ever regret leaving your home behind?

What they cannot control, the wise do not grieve. The forces
that are destroying Goa are much stronger than I am, why
should I grieve?

SOURCE: Gomantak Times.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

INCOGNITO (Wigs and costumes in Tiatre)

I was looking at the Tiatre portraits for the well known fashion designer Wendell Rodricks who is working on his book on Goan costumes. I came up with an interesting set of character transformations the Tiatre actors underwent using wigs and costumes.



Though some of these transformations are subtle, others could be at the extreme ends of the spectrum, even going as far as cross dressing.



Click Here for Slide show