What’s new at this year’s Urur Olcott festival

The Urur Olcott Kuppam Vizha is Chennai's most happening and talked-about arts festival. A volunteer organiser hails the uniqueness of the festival and the events this year.

That it is the most happening arts festival in the city of Chennai is like stating the obvious. Even the name is different — it doesn’t have ‘sabha’ as the suffix or ‘Sri’ as the prefix, not to mention the very ordinary multitude of volunteers who have come together for this extraordinary performing arts festival. With myriad art forms, performed in many open and public spaces, the Urur Olcott Kuppam Vizha has come of age.

This year, not only is the Vizha happening in the Urur Olcott Kuppam Beach, it has also travelled to other locations. The open spaces of Thiruvalluvar Nagar in Besant Nagar, the Besant Nagar beach, Raga Sudha Hall in Mylapore, the Chennai Central Railway Station, and a public bus! All these have become stages for different art forms to be performed and soaked in by the Chennaites. Every location has a mix of familiar and the not so familiar art forms, the very meaning of familiar and unfamiliar being rewritten, for different communities of people.

This year has also seen many firsts – the performance of Gaana, Silambattan, Paraiattam and the music of the transgender Jogappas in a well known August stage in Mylapore, the performance by two children’s choir groups in the Chennai Central Railway Station, the performance in relay music Style, by many musicians in a public bus, performance by the corporation band, to name a few. This year also saw the successful completion of three workshops on art, percussion and photography  for children in two schools and an NGO.

The last two days of the Vizha on February 10th and 11th will see performances in Kuchipudi dance, fishermen’s songs, cathartic music, short plays, nadaswaram and panchavaadhyam among others.

The whole Vizha means different things to different people. As a volunteer organiser, I feel a sense of upliftment that art is not being slotted, people are getting to see art forms which they have never seen before, in open non-restrictive spaces, with scant importance given to whether one’s clothes are flashier than the others’, or if the others in the audience are familiar faces. It is an arena where many cultures and communities have come together to watch art.

Many artists across genres have not only registered their support, but they are also keen to perform in unfamiliar spaces, challenge themselves, before mixed audiences. I also enjoy organising the Vizha as much as watching.

The festival is entirely crowd funded and every rupee raised is spent well, meaningfully and with purpose. There’s fragrance in the air, of lovely times, of oneness, of togetherness, of humanity, of art in open spaces…. come & join in the celebrations.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Dog park in south Mumbai vacant for more than a year

A functional dog park remains unopened in Worli, even as pet parents in Mumbai struggle to find open spaces for their furry friends.

Any pet parent will tell you that dogs need a safe space where they can be free and get their requisite daily exercise. Leashed walks can fulfil only a part of their exercise requirement. Especially dogs belonging to larger breeds are more energetic and need to run free to expend their energy and to grow and develop well. This is especially difficult in a city like Mumbai where traffic concerns and the territorial nature of street dogs makes it impossible for pet parents to let their dogs off the leash even for a moment. My German Shepherd herself has developed…

Similar Story

Mumbai’s invisible beaches: A photo-story

Mumbai's shoreline may be famous for iconic beaches like Juhu and Girgaum but there's much more to it, says a city photographer.

Once a year, I inadvertently overhear someone wondering aloud about the sea level while crossing the Mahim or Thane Creek bridges without realising that the sea has tides. Similar conversations are heard at the beaches too. The Bandra Worli Sea Link, which now features in almost every movie about Mumbai, as seen from Mahim. Pic: MS Gopal Not being aware of tides often leads to lovers being stranded on the rocks along the coast, or even people getting washed away by waves during the monsoons. People regularly throng the sea-fronts of Mumbai - sometimes the beaches, sometimes the promenades, but…