Multitude of Peer Gynts
In 2019, Yudi Ahmad Tajudin and Ugoran Prasad from Teater Garasi, Indonesia was awarded an Ibsen Scholarship for the project Multitude of Peer Gynts: Unmapping the Verge of Asia.
In 2019, Yudi Ahmad Tajudin and Ugoran Prasad from Teater Garasi, Indonesia was awarded an Ibsen Scholarship for the project Multitude of Peer Gynts: Unmapping the Verge of Asia.
“Multitude of Peer Gynts” is an inter-Asian (Indonesia, Japan, Vietnam and Sri Lanka) contemporary theater collaboration project. Decrypting Henrik Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt”, the project explores the machination of fear and anxiety in the context (and frictions) of new Empires as experienced in contemporary Asian spaces.
The project looks at Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt” as a courageous tactical manual of global mobility, border crossing, drifting, and intentionally getting lost in the fear-mongering, anxiety-inducing world from the perspective of precariat subjects. That is – getting lost in the search for a new sense and a different kind of home.
“Peer Gynt” gestures toward the possibility of Peer Gynt’s imaginary that consists of a multitude of subjects alike that were forced to travel the world for various political, social, philosophical, and/or personal causes. With this possibility, the project is aimed to begin uncovering the larger picture of the overlooked, tactical world-map, where all these Peer Gynts came from. Looking at the shrinking but perpetually reterritorialized world from viewpoints of the diverse Asian corners, the project seeks to discover new intersections along the pathways of Asian precariat’s, those who navigate through fear and anxiety as engineered by the invisible and ubiquitous new Empires of our contemporaneity.
Initiated by Yudi Ahmad Tajudin (director) and Ugoran Prasad (dramaturg) of Teater Garasi, Indonesia, the project is structured by applying the collective’s devising approach in producing experimental theatre works for the past twenty-five years. Built through a series of collaborative workshops, the project is joined by a few of the most daring Asian contemporary artists today, in the likes of Takao Kawaguchi (performance artist-dancer-choreographer), Yasuhiro Morinaga (sound artist-music composer), Micari (actor-performer), all from Japan, Venuri Perera (choreographer-dancer) from Sri Lanka, and Nguyen Manh Hung (visual artist) from Vietnam. Besides working with the key artist-collaborators above, the project will also invite and collaborate with local artists of the respective city/country wherever the project eventually arrives, to rework and devise a new understanding of the multitude of Peer Gynts in a more socially grounded and culturally contextual approach.