
Chetana Nagavajara
Fellow
Professor emeritus of German at Silpakorn University, Thailand. A scholar of Comparative Literature, trained in Cambridge and Tübingen, he has had extensive experience in teaching, research, and university administration.
His scholarly works address such areas as Western, Thai, and Comparative Literature and Interart Studies. With a grant from the Humboldt Foundation, he has been studying the rebirth of the discipline of Comparative Literature in Germany after WWII. He is a frequent visitor to Berlin, having been associated with the Institute for Comparative Literature of the Freie Universität Berlin and the Centre for Cultural and Literary Research.
Interweaving Performance Cultures are encounters of various kinds in which performance practices, conventions, traditions, innovations and theories enter into an integrative, cross-cultural dialogue and/or interaction out of which emerges a seamless unity that enriches mutual understanding and appreciation of contemporary global cohesion.
At the time of writing this essay (March 2009), an exhibition entitled “Bangkok 226” had just come to a close at the newly created Bangkok Art and Culture Centre. My expectation was to see an exhibition of works in the visual arts that could tell the story of how Bangkok evolved over the past 200 years. In other words, I had expected those works to speak to me on their own terms and be brought together in this specific exhibition in such a way as to engage in a seamless narrative. What I saw confused me. The choice of artworks which had been borrowed from various museums and collections as well as those specifically commissioned for this exhibition could not, on the whole, be justified on the grounds of their aesthetic value. Walking through the exhibition I soon realized that the organizers had had in mind a documentary on the history of Bangkok. Large panels with detailed accounts of the city’s historical development and descriptions of the individual exhibits had been put up. In the spirit of a documentary, the word seemed to have been granted supremacy over visual expression. I was not sure whether this was intentional.
