Showing posts with label PETER MINSHALL.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PETER MINSHALL.. Show all posts

Sunday, February 23, 2014

MISS MILES, A Band On Corruption








MISS MILES, A Band On Corruption, conceived by Tony Hall, designed byPeter Minshall, features Cecilia Salazar with general consultancy and 'Corruption' theme song by Wendell ManwarrenRoger Roberts and Stanton Kewley (3canal), general consultancy and production supervision by Meiling, general consultancy Trevor Jadunath. 


Registration: 33 Murray St, Woodbrook. 5pm to 9pm daily.
Tel: 1-868-681-7475 Email: info@lordstreet.net

MISS MILES, Mas Corruption, in the manner of Traditional Mas, is based on the new character in the pantheon of traditional mas characters, the elegant, defiant MISS MILES the Woman of the World. This mas, called 'The Woman of the World' was first played, by that ‘whistle blower for all seasons' Gene Miles herself, in the Trinidad Carnival of the early nineteen seventies. In 2014 Man, Woman and Child will play MISS MILES. They will discover and celebrate MISS MILES 'the fashionista' to be found within themselves. They will perform their own 'political resistance' to corruption through playing their own MISS MILES.
A short drama, presented in the Gayelle (The Sacred Circle), will feature a few key characters based on the struggle Ms. Gene Miles waged against corruption throughout her life (1930-1972). This piece of street theatre will be presented in the circle from time to time as the band proceeds along its merry way. MISS MILES, A Band On Corruption, continues the A Band On . . . series with which Lordstreet Theatre Companystarted in 1990. MISS MILES, Mas Corruption, a LORDSTREET LiME for street, is produced by Lordstreet and Break-a-Leg Productions. 

MISS MILES - The Face of Carnival 2014 http://jouvayinstitute.blogspot.com/2014/01/miss-miles.html

Thursday, November 22, 2012

INSIGHT: The Brian Wong Won Interview.


I first met Brian Wong Won on line  in 2007 just before the  Mas Jumbies début of 'Diable'. When the photos of the band were released on line  the costumes spoke volumes, Wong Won managed to harness the ancestral spirit of mas and convert it into a modern if not futuristic medium for Jouvert.

Brian Wong Won.
 Since then Wong Won's Mas Jumbies have produced Jouvert presentations that all draw from periods and characters of carnival's early past, giving the band a most unique look on the road for carnival Monday mornings. Come Carnival 2013 Mas Jumbies  present 'The Posey and Bedsheet Brigade', drawing influence from probably the most volatile period period in carnival history.

 But what influenced the artist to choose Jouvert as his canvas for expression in carnival?

Will Mas Jumbies  ever become a pretty mas band?


Lets find out as INSIGHT interviews Artist, Designer, and  Jouvert Band leader, Brian Wong Won.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Minshall Looks In The Carnival Mirror


INTROSPECTIVE: Peter Minshall

Minshall the Younger, from ever since the time of River and Callaloo, and The Golden Calabash, has got word of Minshall the Elder's withdrawal from the Mas. Deeply troubled by the news, the younger Minshall travels through time and space to seek out the older Minshall, to find out what is the matter. They spend the entire Ash Wednesday afternoon of 2009 reminiscing, talking about the good times, the bad times, backwards and forwards, over the years. The young Minshall tells the story about his older self, himself talking to himself.

It had been a long afternoon and we were both weary. My penultimate question would cause pain and discomfort. I felt like an Inquisitor.
"You have been sitting in the wings for three years." I said. "You have not said a word. You have been looking on in silence. Tell us. What do you see in the Carnival of today?"
He seemed suddenly apprehensive, fearful, like a man standing at the edge of a high cliff. There was a long moment of silence. Then he leapt.
"The Carnival is an extraordinary mirror," he said.
"It reflects with gleaming precision exactly where the head of the country is, and its heart, and its body politic, from the Prime Minister right through to whoever washes his underwear. Look at the passing parade. See the greed and the power, and the utterly shallow, adolescent, vainglorious pomposity, nakedly exposed, with its phalanx of security guards, right there alongside the array of poverty, all in full view.
Both the Carnival and the Cabinet broadcast the grandest visions and themes. Both are invariably pretentiously empty. Feathers and beads. They constantly look copycat outwards, elsewhere, to find themselves. They look in vain and brag about being visionary, about being a first world country by 2020. What is it, this first world country? What is the recipe? Are its rivers and streams clear and unpolluted? Are its winds harvested for energy? Are its galvanised rooftops fitted with solar panels? Are its people content? Are they healthy, well fed and well mannered?
Who has the map, the plan, the chart? Who defines it? Who defines us? We are an island people. We are unique in the world. This is not a country to be like any and every other. This is a country to be like no other. Two islands, one love, one country, one people.
Our vision should be to show them, to lead them by example, not to follow them. If you really want to know where to go to find your self, begin by looking within your self. Your own best idea is you. You are a Fancy Sailor. You are a Pan Player. You are a Trinity. You are Africa, India and Europe, all together on an island. You are a remarkable vibrant hybrid creature of the Caribbean.
But look now at the cracked Carnival mirror. Beware. Wake up to your nightmare. You are not yourself anymore. You are collectively stuck in a rut, and sinking fast and furious, either as the tawdry repetitive imitation of a feathers and beads Las Vegas showgirl, or as a vacantly immature, emasculated, overly saccharine, Sweet Trinidadian, or as a participant in a bland museum diorama of Africa, as lifeless and bloodless as a pictorial National Geographic tour, passing by without the rousing heartbeat of a single drum, or the earth ever once being thunderously stamped into submission.
The King of the Carnival is the disembodied head of a lion, a discomforting tea cozy of a thing carried along blindly, with difficulty and insignificance, by two little black-clad feet that never rise up with joy to the raw beat of the music. The lion has no roar. The lion king has no integrity, no class, no real royal pedigree. Much like the king of the country.
I'd say we're in serious trouble. We've lost our soul. Or sold it."
He seemed broken, a crumpled figure at the bottom of a cliff, sitting there at the end of his white table among the anthuriums. But I challenged him nonetheless.
"Are you just going to sit there?" I asked. "What are you going to do about it?"
That old fire gleamed in his eyes for a second.
"Tribal politics has us nailed to the cross," he said.
"The country, the culture, the people, the music, the mas, has been crucified.
It is time to resurrect. Or to bury for good. We will see.
A grand finale perhaps."
He paused, held my gaze long and straight in the eye. Suddenly the warrior masman rose and loudly, exultantly proclaimed: "REZZAREK."
He fell back to his chair. He looked wistfully out towards the yard. He shouted to Humphrey Bogart to stop barking.
"Yes" he said, "We will see."
Epilogue: He had hoped that the People's Partnership would be the resurrection. He had wanted to raise a band of prayer flags in the Carnival to invoke the blessings of the Universe, to wish the Partnership well. It was to be called JHANDI. The band was scuttled. It was not to be. The Empress now lives in the Emperor's Palace. Prayers are now more needed than ever.



Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Artist expresses Joy of Purpose

Internationally-renowned artist Peter Minshall,
left, and Carnival artist Junya Craigwell
 talk about Carnival and Art.
Artist Junya Craigwell and the Caribbean Prestige Foundation (CPF) launched an exhibition—The Joy of Purpose—at De Gallery, Woodford Street, Newtown, on June 15. The launch was attended by artists, officials of the CPF, Minister of Arts and Multiculturalism Winston “Gypsy” Peters, Education Minister Dr Tim Gopeesingh and Parliamentary Secretary in the Ministry of Sport and Youth Affairs Stacy Roopnarine.
Craigwell’s painting career started when he was apprenticed to a local vehicle assembly plant to learn metal finishing and painting skills. Years later, Craigwell was hired by the organisation now known as CPF to design stage backdrops for the annual International Soca Monarch finals, starting his long and continuing relationship with CPF. He also worked closely with the musical artistes competing in the CPF’s Soca Monarch competition, and his work became part of each artiste’s stage presentation. The self-taught artist’s work is familiar to most travellers using City Gate: He is the artist who painted The Last Train, an event immortalised in the calypso Last Train to San Fernando. This painting of the Trinidad Government Railway’s last trip was done in 1998, and is on display at the western entrance of the old train station, now known as City Gate.
Veteran artist and calypsonian Bill Trotman, left,
chats with children’s Carnival bandleader Rosalind Gabriel.
Within art circles, Craigwell is better known as the artist who painted portraits of some of the biggest names in the soca world. His work with the Soca Monarch artistes started a process that led to the commissioning of the Royal Collection by CPF chairman William Munro. This collection consists of Soca Monarch winners from 1993 to 2008 as they performed their winning songs on stage. The exhibition—The Joy of Purpose—comprises more than 40 pieces in oil, acrylic, chalk-and-pastel, and mixed medium. The majority of pieces are on sale either as single pieces or collections, with prints available on order. The exhibition continues until July 15.
For further information, Craigwell can be contacted at 750-5097.
source


Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, April 08, 2010

He Came He Saw, He Gave the Nod!

Internationally renowned Carnival Legend Peter Minshall paid a visit to the SKULLDUGGERY HQ last night to see just what Peter Samuel and his creative team have been have been up to with their highly anticipated Carnival 2011 presentation, ‘SKULLDUGGERY’ .

According to reports and the Skullduggery Facebook page Minshall approved of what he saw and gave them his blessings and a token of his support a rarely seen photo of him and one of his early designs, from the days Minshall’s Mas performed on the streets of Notting Hill in the 1970’s, before he was a house hold name in Trinidad and Tobago.
On the Fb page Peter Samuel had this to say, “Folks believe me ...that is not me in the photo with minsh, and it is NOT a photo shop either. This is an actual picture that Mr Minshall has passed on to us this evening with all his blessings. As it says, early 70's Notting Hill Gate... this is before the Humming Bird....”

So that’s one tick on Peter Samuel’s wish list for Carnival 2011, let’s see if the great spirit of Carnival grants him about 4 more?
here is that photo.
In the spirit of this Skull Pierrot, Harry the Midnight Robber and the Merry Monarch (He Who Laughs Last), Minshall comes out of the closet to wish Skullduggery the best.

Photographer: Horace Ove
Band: Play Mas Pierrot
Costume: Pierrot of Death
Early 70's Notting Hill Gate

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

A MINSHALL INTERVIEW

Found this on You Tube the lady in the back 'stormin' the man interview, ahhh YES Carnival!

Yes lady Hallehujah is joy! lol



Share it.

Translate

Instagram

Instagram

ShareThis

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

Facebook Badge

MAS REPUBLIC Headlines


This is MassassinnatioN

Global

QR

QR

Subscribe via email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner