Abstract
"Orizuro" is a voyage to the world of birds. Of all the birds, the real and the imaginary, those of stories, poetry, music, those who invite us to fly, those who sing with us. Three interpreters take infants and children (and with them adults) to nests where music is born with the movement and trace unexpected paths populated by sounds and images.
In traditional Japanese culture the orizuru is a symbol of happiness. In the second half of the twentieth century, after the Hiroshima bomb, it became an icon of the desire for peace. The idea of "tuning" has been present in a large part of CMT's work, and the expression "tuning people, birds and flowers” has been used to refer to the search, through artistic experience, of tuning people to their surroundings. These are the "birds" Orizuro seek to reveal. Or make. We live in a time that needs our urgent attention to the need to preserve the world in which we live. There are many ways to do this. Teaching to look and listen poetically is certainly one that is needed and must be promoted from the moment we are born.
In traditional Japanese culture the orizuru is a symbol of happiness. In the second half of the twentieth century, after the Hiroshima bomb, it became an icon of the desire for peace. The idea of "tuning" has been present in a large part of CMT's work, and the expression "tuning people, birds and flowers” has been used to refer to the search, through artistic experience, of tuning people to their surroundings. These are the "birds" Orizuro seek to reveal. Or make. We live in a time that needs our urgent attention to the need to preserve the world in which we live. There are many ways to do this. Teaching to look and listen poetically is certainly one that is needed and must be promoted from the moment we are born.
Original language | Portuguese |
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Publication status | Published - 2018 |