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Hong Kong's Festival of Asian Arts: A Unique Festival Seeks Its Identity


Article # : 11483 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 10 / 1986  2,388 Words
Author : John Thompson
When not working as artistic coordinator for the Festival of Asian Arts, John Thompson plays the Chinese Seven-string zither (guqin) and is working on a project to transform and record his performances of the music tableture from a guqin handbook first published in 1425 but said to be a collection of earlier music. He is trying to find out whether in fact this is the world's oldest written instrumental music tradition.

       As the mid-October date of Hong Kong's Festival of Asian Arts approaches, the local press again asks, "What is the theme of this year's festival?" (They want a headline?) "What distinguishes it from previous years?" (Perhaps a brief, snappy article?) Can one in fact tie together, other than simply as Asian, groups participating in this year's festival, such as the Shanghai Ballet, Muslim religious singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan of Pakistan, a folk music group from the Thailand-Laotian border, and the Asiabeat jazz band from Malaysia?
       
        The Festival of Asian Arts has taken place every October since 1976, but only in the past few years has it emerged as a festival of "arts performances" rather than "culture shows." According to this somewhat arbitrary terminology, the former refers to performances which are either purely traditional and unchanged, or are modified to appeal to the more modern instincts of the same peoples who created the traditions; the latter refers to shows in which the arts have been rearranged for persons outside the culture that produced the original. This usually means foreign audiences but may also include urban audiences of the same country, which are often divorced from their rural origins: here the distinctions may become very hazy.
       
        The Festival of Asian Arts originated as, and continues to be, the showpiece of the Hong Kong Urban Council, the British crown colony's version of a municipal authority. Half of the members are elected, the other half are appointed by the governor. When the colonial government granted the Urban Council financial autonomy in 1973, the Council immediately began a major effort to end Hong Kong's reputation as a cultural desert. Today the great majority of overseas performing groups ... (1995 of 14739 Characters)
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