The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Artists to revel in botanic gardens

- CHRIS MUGAN

This Saturday, University of Dundee’s Cooper Gallery revives the art school tradition of endof-term revels by taking over the city’s botanic gardens for a day-long festival of performanc­e, film, talks and more.

In a much greener setting than its regular Perth Road spaces, the gallery’s 12 Hour Sit-in Revel explores themes raised during its ongoing Ignorant Art School programme, which has been examining the power of creative learning.

Organisers have taken inspiratio­n from the annual celebratio­ns once put on by students at institutio­ns such as Duncan of Jordanston­e, featuring their own contributi­ons and special guests – in 1968, Dundee’s art school booked a young Pink Floyd.

This weekend’s music includes a performanc­e from ground-breaking Scottish-Indian fusionist and protest singer Kapil

Seshasayee, while the evening closes with a global beats DJ set from Harun Morrison.

With a focus on ideas emerging from the southern hemisphere, Cooper Gallery director Sophia Hao has also invited members of the Indonesian collective­s behind alternativ­e art school Gudskul, whose “nongkrong”, or “hangout”, style of teaching is a key influence on the revel.

Events take place across the gardens, including in a marquee and the site’s glasshouse­s, while its warehouse is being used as a cinema space.

Although performanc­es and conversati­ons are to be protected from the elements, Sophia explains it is important to hold the revel among greenery and foliage in honour of another educationa­l pioneer: Rabindrana­th Tagore.

During the late 19th Century, this Nobel

Prize-winning Indian poet founded a place of learning in West Bengal that combined education with ecological awareness.

His story is the theme of “O Horizon”, a sensual film by Turner Prize-nominated The Otolith Group, the duo comprising Kodwo Eshun and Anjalika Sagar, due to be screened on Saturday.

Sophia invites people to come along and experience different ways of learning that she hopes will be enjoyable, but also empowering, quoting the manifesto of US author and activist bell hooks.

“The Sit-in Revel will be a test ground for (her) vision of a classroom: a community as a location of possibilit­y,” she says. “A place where ‘we have the opportunit­y to labour for freedom... to transgress’.”

Sophia has also commission­ed two performanc­e works by Scottish creatives responding to the garden setting. Indian-born artist and writer Ranjana Thapalyal opens the revel with her piece Sound-Seed, a collaborat­ion with dancer and artist Hamshya Rajkumar. The curator says this should encourage us to reflect on “the power of speech to inflict violence, as well to express love, induce dialogue or suggest the sublime”.

Later in the day, Glasgowbas­ed artist Ashanti Harris, who originally studied sculpture, though now specialise­s in dance, brings An Archive: The Rehearsal, a work partly inspired by her Caribbean heritage.

The Gudskul team will also help create a special dish with the botanic gardens’ chef, Inda, who comes from Indonesia, featuring ingredient­s grown in the gardens and preceded by a traditiona­l Indonesian ceremony.

12 Hour Sit-in Revel, June 25, Dundee Botanic Garden, 11am-11pm, free tickets from Eventbrite.

 ?? ?? GROUND-BREAKING: Protest singer Kapil Seshasayee will be among those taking his art out into the gardens.
GROUND-BREAKING: Protest singer Kapil Seshasayee will be among those taking his art out into the gardens.

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