{"id":25,"date":"2018-12-21T10:22:35","date_gmt":"2018-12-21T10:22:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/adishakti.crossroad-solutions.com\/?page_id=25"},"modified":"2024-11-29T12:10:36","modified_gmt":"2024-11-29T12:10:36","slug":"about-us","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"http:\/\/adishaktitheatrearts.com\/about-us\/","title":{"rendered":"About Us"},"content":{"rendered":"\t\t
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About Us<\/h1>

Adishakti Laboratory for Theatre Art Research is a contemporary theatre research and repertory company near Pondicherry, India. We create theatre performances and engage in performance research which enables us to develop our unique theatrical language. We disseminate these research findings through residential workshops to people in varied disciplines. Adishakti reaches out to other performance groups, artists and ideators to evolve their own workshops, residencies, retreats, seminars and performances in our space that encourage hybrid expression.<\/p>\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t<\/section>\n\t\t\t\t

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OUR BACKGROUND<\/h2>\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t
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A BRIEF HISTORY OF ADISHAKTI<\/h2>\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t
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Adishakti was created in 1981 as a theatre company in Mumbai.<\/span><\/h2>

At which point Adishakti was working with existing scripts and translating them into performances. <\/span>\u00a0Some of these performances were Sophocles\u2019 Oedipus (1981), Stoppard\u2019s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (1983), and Euripedes\u2019 Trojan Women (1984).<\/span><\/p>

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In 1983 Adishakti started to include research as a part of its activities. This emerged out of its need to create a new language for contemporary performance, which would reflect a pluralistic aesthetic. The initial areas of such research were certain traditional Indian knowledge systems contained in forms like Koodiyattam, Dhrupad singing, Kalaripayattu, Asanas, Pranayama, Samavedic Chanting married to voice training and other performance techniques from the West; viz; Eugenio Barba\u2019s Odin Theatre in Holstebro Denmark and the Royal Shakespeare Company, UK.<\/p>

From 1990 onwards Adishakti started creating its own texts. Thus A Greater Dawn (1992), Impressions of Bhima (1994), Khandava Prastha (1996), Brhannala (1998), Ganapati (2000), The Hare and The Tortoise (2007), Rhinoceros (2008), Nidrawathwam (2011), The Hanuman Ramayana (2011), The Tenth Head (2013). Each of these were interpretations of given traditional texts and reflected an aesthetic, which sought to build bridges between disparate ways of viewing particular themes.<\/p>

In 1989 Adishakti was registered as Adishakti Laboratory for Theatre Art Research (ALTAR) Public Charitable Trust (Registration No: 50913 Date: 27.12.1989) in Delhi, so that it could function on an all-India basis, belonging to no specific region but able to root itself freely anywhere in the country.<\/p>

In 1993 Adishakti shifted base to Pondicherry. And it was from this point onward that its concerns became larger. It was no longer preoccupied merely with the development of its own theatrical language and of revitalising contemporary theatre but also in offering something to the traditional artist; its partner in dialogue. In fact Adishakti\u2019s relationship with traditional form from this time onwards was a departure from the existing practice of treating such forms as hermetically sealed, or only as the object of preservation and restoration. Adishakti started acting on the premise, that past disciplines need to be deliberately displaced from their own context in order to throw up a range of new elements within them, not formerly known or apprehended. Adishakti regarded such disciplines as constitutively incomplete, and attributed, in part, some of their fading appeal, within their own spectator-communities, not so much to the corruption (through urbanization etc.) of audience taste, but rather, to the historical attrition or paralysis of the forms themselves. Within this understanding, Adishakti\u2019s position was that the contemporary performer was privileged as a critic whose task it was to reinterpret and, as it were, fill in the blanks within specific traditional forms. So, in its encounter with the traditional artist, Adishakti endeavoured, of course, to clarify its own formal and imaginative directions, but also, and equally, to stimulate the traditional artist to discover old forms anew. The encounter, thus, was premised upon a powerful recognition of mutual worth and capability.<\/p>

Below are mentioned some of these programmes with traditional artists, which benefited their practice:<\/p>

Around this time, Adishakti\u2019s performance praxis, the work on which was initiated in 1983, reached maturity. And there emerged a clear vision of Theatre as a synaesthesis of other arts; or a summative art. And Adishakti\u2019s theatre productions now consciously used the other arts as signifiers of meaning rather than merely as decorative elements. For Adishakti believes that if live performance has to remain valid as an art form, it must reflect the protean nature of the contemporary perception of truth and reality in its form and in its content. It must try to bring out the simultaneity of its multiple-sightedness, its tangled dynamism, through the very form and structure of the expression. It believes this can best be done by employing as many modes of expression as possible to act as texts or as signifiers of content within a totality that would be a formal metaphor.<\/p>

This aesthetic pluralism, which gives sovereignty to all the modes of expression \u2013 the word, the image, the sound, etc., is a reflection of the pluralism of the contemporary world, its multiple sightedness. For the contemporary mind can take in more viewpoints than one \u2013 even contrary ones \u2013 at the same time. It can see the same thing from all angles and distances<\/p>

In\u00a02000\u00a0Adishakti relocated itself to the outskirts of Pondicherry. From this year Adishakti extended its research activity into disciplines such as old construction technologies, traditional medicine, environment protection for a healthy eco system and instrument building. It was the pragmatic needs of the hour, (that of creating the infrastructure on its campus) which compelled the company to undertake these investigations and they merely reinforced Adishakti\u2019s growing awareness that knowledge creation is a crucial exercise for new creativity.<\/p>

In 2003 Adishakti began to curate it\u2019s Winter Workshop. This programme brought together a Koodiyattam performer, a Noh performer, poets, musicians, cultural psychologists, philosophers, film makers, actors \u2013 so as to investigate how each of these, views or uses, \u2018breath\u2019 as a source of expression. And continuing this impulse Adishakti from 2008 onwards has started creating the opportunity at its campus, for new and imaginative exchanges between epic texts and contemporary interpreters like historians, cultural psychologists, sociologists and performance; between film and live performance; between live performance, painting and music.<\/p>

The objective of this three-year programme was to:<\/p>

A) Provide the traditional \/ folk\/ contemporary performer with a new approach to an old text and thereby compel her to recreate her performance language, making it aesthetically accessible to a contemporary world.<\/p>

B) Release new knowledge and rescue an old cultural symbol from being suffocated by \u201cpurism\u201d.<\/p>

Today from out of this programme have emerged three Adishakti Productions: Nidrawathwam, The Hanuman Ramayana, and The Tenth Head. Two others evolved, Sita and Luv & Kush.<\/p>

Participants learn breath and emotion techniques with Vinay Kumar at one of Adishakti\u2019s first Source of Performance Energy workshops, conducted in January 2008.<\/p>

In\u00a02008\u00a0Adishakti launched its training workshops. Over the years the performance craft evolved under the leadership of Veenapani Chawla, had matured into an alternative methodology of performance. The performers at Adishakti started teaching young and mid-career professionals from across the country and around the world through these ten-day sessions. Today Adishakti conducts six such workshops annually.<\/p>

In 2014 much to the shock of the entire theatre community, Adishakti lost their teacher and founder, Veenapani Chawla. Shortly after, Vinay Kumar, the company’s leading researcher and performer took the responsibility to shepherd the way. He became Artistic Director.<\/p>

From 2015 onwards Adishakti began to celebrate the Remembering Veenapani Festival every year. During the festival the company had opened doors to performances varying from music to dance and theatre. Adishakti since has also extended its space to a number of residencies, workshops and performances that are conducted by several artists from across the globe.<\/p>

In 2018 as a result of the rich cultural exchange during the Ramayana Festival and Winter workshop, a new production Bali came to play. The play is written and directed by Nimmy Raphel. Here, the writer has tried to explore the notion of right or wrong through its various characters. Through this play, we explore how one evaluates this notion and, how it can change when each and every character is given an opportunity to voice thoughts and opinions.<\/p>

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A SAFE WORKPLACE AT ADISHAKTI<\/a><\/h2>\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t<\/div>\n\t\t\t\t
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Adishakti consistently strives to create a safe workplace for everyone.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>

In accordance with the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013, a Prevention of Sexual Harassment (POSH) Internal Committee (IC), comprising staff members and an external expert consultant is created.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>

\u00bb more<\/p>

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The current POSH Internal Committee comprises the following members:<\/span><\/p>