Pecha Kucha night in Kathmandu
How did an irish illustrator end up organising a Japanese style slide show night in Kathmandu? …its a loooong story….!
In 2010 I did a workshop for a short illustration workshop in Kathmandu University. Iposted about this on my blog and I then got a few enquiries from other artists/designers who were travelling to Nepal. I forwarded these over to programme director Sujan Chitrakar, but he was busy trying to run the course and couldnt fit in random workshops. One evening we were chatting about this over a beer and we both felt it was a shame that we didnt do the workshops. It would have been a sort of win/win situation with the visiting artists getting to see the cultural side of Kathmandu and the students could benfit from meeting the artists. It was also a shame because so many great artists and photographers travel to the country. Nepal is a very beautiful and photogenic country and it seems like every second visitor to the country is some sort of artist or photographer but very few of them get an opportunity to interact with the Nepali artists or contemporary art.
We discussed different ways of somehow arranging talks outside the structure of the University, maybe in the evenings when i thought of Pecha Kucha night. Pecha Kucha is a slide-show format where 20 slides are shown each for 20 seconds. The format keeps the talks short and to the point and is an interesting way for designers and artists to present their work, in London and Dublin it tends to be a kind of designers only event but in Japan it is kept very open and everyone from comedians, academics, grannies and politians have given presentations. It was started in Tokyo in 2003 and is replicated in 400+ cities. I had recently been living in Japan and spoken at the Tokyo PKN and i was really inspired by the format there, it was quite mixed it made a very interesting evening, its in a bar setting so its pretty casual which i really liked. Their tagline is ‘thinking and drinking’. We thought PKN would be the perfect event for Kathmandu and decided …after quite a few more beers that we should set one up!
Sujan Chitrakar + Chris Haughton What is Pecha Kucha? Why Kathmandu?
Dr Shiva Rijal Theatre Expert
Salil Subedi Performance Artist
NSET (Ganesh JImee) National Society for earthquake technology
Karl Knapp Artist
Samantha Lee Zoological Society London
MIchelle Hall Artist in residence @ KCAC. Artist and teacher at an Aboriginal community Australia
Susmita Maskey Everest Summiter
Chirag Bangdel Artist / Poet / RJ
Anya Vaverko Sattya media collective, Kathmandu
Rashmila Shakya Ex-Kumari and author