Weddings

Weddings

wedding fun

The fortunetellers must be on the same wavelength for choosing auspicious days. I’m going to not one but TWO weddings this week. The second was a surprise, but young people play their cards close to the vest – not until the date is set do they ‘fess up that they’ve got a sweetheart, or that their family set them up. Going to be interesting. A wedding ceremony, depending on the family’s wealth and interest in tradition, can be three days – or more. The bride and groom change clothes so many times on the final day that it’s a wonder they get time to eat!

Article on Khmer weddings: Cambodian Scene
http://www.cambodianscene.com/index.php?target=article&title=mariage

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Cambofest

Cambofest

A local film festival Jason Rosette is putting together.
Get in touch at: www.cambofest.com

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Gratuitous Jinja Photo

Gratuitous Jinja Photo
Jinja Photo from Nat

Courtesy Nathan Dexter. (Cheers Nat!)
The blue color is due to his adjusting camera settings for more contrast.

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Meta House: Inter-City

Yet more arts doin’s

Tonight: Creative Cambodia at Reyum: Recycled Culture.
http://www.sangsalapak.org.kh/whatson/2007/01/reyum-creative-cambodia.html

Tomorrow:


“Inter-city” at Meta House
INTERCITY @ META HOUSE
FROM 26TH OF JANUARY OPEN EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,
6PM UNTIL MIDNITE,
FREE ENTRANCE

From: http://www.meta-house.com

COM.PASSION is happy to announce the scheduled opening of Cambodia’s first Art & Communication Center META HOUSE on the 12th of January 2007 – in cooperation with the International Academy (INA) at the Free University of Berlin. From January to April 2007 META HOUSE („meta“ in khmer: „compassion“) hosts the first phase of the multi/media/art exhibition and event series INTERCITY: URBAN ARTS FOR ASIA – under patronage of the German Ambassador to Cambodia, H. E. Pius Fischer.
Within the second phase (2008) several SE Asian cities and artists are linked throughout an exchange program and workshops. The third phase (2009) will result in a catalogue, an interactive DVD and an exhibition in Berlin/Germany.
On three floors and a roof top terrace overlooking Phnom Penh META HOUSE will welcome participants, friends and guests from all around the globe.

INTERCITY artists are (more to be confirmed…)
PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA: Chhim Sothy, Chhoeun Rithy, Chan Pisey,
Nico Mesterharm, Stephane Janin, Vandy Rattana
HO-CHI-MINH-CITY, VIETNAM: Bertrand Peret, Julie Tseselsky,
Bui Cong Khahn, Ly Hoang Ly, HMC CREW, Motoko Uda, Rich Streitmatter-Tran, Sandrine Llouquet
CHIANG MAI, THAILAND: Sutthirat Supaparinya
SINGAPORE: Kerstin Duell
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA: Melita Koulmandas
PARIS, FRANCE: Nicolas Lainez
BERLIN, GERMANY: Chris Zippel, Dieter Stadler, Hildegard Knef, Igor Paasch, Jana Teuchert, Lila Space Creations, Lothar Winkler, Lutz Mattstaett, Ollie Peters & Sven Zuege, Walter Dietmann, Wolfgang Brueckner
AURICH, GERMANY: Herbert Mueller
BEOGRAD, SERBIA: Nikolai Todorovic
CHICAGO, USA: Maurice Oliver and Diana Krause-Oliver
INTERCITY @ META HOUSE
The three-years-project INTERCITY is dedicated to city cultures from Phnom Penh to Berlin – from “New Asia“ to „Old Europe“, from the glitzy boulevards to the backyards of societies, to the basements and undergrounds and back to the future of our neighbourhoods. How do citizens envision their living environments and how can they shape them? What skills are needed to survive in a hostile environment? Whose ideas prevail if they are not documented? Can art be a vehicle for social change, or should art be a self-critical discipline that pursues primarily aesthetic ends? What is the relationship between art and mass culture?

Everybody is invited to join the INTERCITY exhibitions, parties, film screenings, performances, panels, discusssions and meetings. The entrance is free. A share of the revenues will be donated to the, ”Children’s Help Cambodia” Foundation, which is building a children’s village for 96 orphans and vulnerable children on the outskirts of Phnom Penh.

Please hook up with us! We are not only encouraging artists, painters, sculpturers, filmmakers, photographers, poets, performers or musicians, but also forethinkers, urban planners, architects, scientists and journalists to contribute something special and unique to the INTERCITY project. Anybody who would like to participate should write to: Nico Mesterharm, mesterharm [at] gmx [dot] net.

[from What's On]

booby trapAnother reason to stop smoking

From Aki Ra‘s landmine museum in Siem Reap: a nasty little guerilla warfare tactic.

Basically, a cigarette with a ball bearing and a small explosive charge.

Leave the remmants of a campfire with some supplies and the soldiers who arrive grab the goodies. One of them lights up and…

Cigarettes. You try to kill them, they try to kill you. Usually not this immediately, though. (Click for larger photo.)

The Landmine Museum is deserving of its own writeup and I hope to get a look at its latest incarnation in February.

While its founder has on occasion gotten criticism for his outspoken advocacy efforts regarding mine clearance, no one can deny he’s pulled many out of the ground, and brought a lot of attention to the topic.

Landmines are dragon’s teeth; patient, violent time capsules seeded into the ground lasting years if not centuries. European countries are still reaping ‘the iron harvest‘ from World War I and II. When the conflicts of the last few decades are beyond living memory, their physical legacy will still be with our grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

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