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A Carnival of the one, a Carnival for the money - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

BitDepth#1343

MARK LYNDERSAY

THE NCC's A Taste of Carnival is a reflex action, a spastic twitch bereft of conscious action.

In this almost completely state-funded version of the festival, millions have been spent on temporary infrastructure with crumbs left for the creators who provide the fuel for Carnival's conceptual engine.

Every item scheduled since February 10, except for stickfighting, has been experiencing diminished public interest for most of the last two decades.

How many have actually paid to attend these events? Who wanted a pod?

I've come to think of Carnival as being more than a little like the famous photos that the photographer Sebastiao Salgado shot in 1986 of Brazil's Serra Pelada gold mine.

In the photographs, which sell for tens of thousands today, hundreds of mud-covered workers scramble along slick slopes and up rickety ladders to haul sacks weighing as much as a sack of cement up the slippery slope of the vast hole.

What's in the sacks? Nobody knows until they are emptied into pools of water and sifted for gold. Each sack earned its bearer 60 cents with a small bonus if gold was found.

As generations of Carnival's creators die out, forgotten and ignored, the skills of sifting the festival's creative gold disappear and new creators choose to work simpler mines.

Carnival didn't become a festival because it was meant to be mined for profit, it rose to prominence through the drive and enthusiasm of individuals for a big idea.

Three of them in fact: exploring fantasy and mockery through costuming, telling stories that might never otherwise be told through song, and hammering music out of discarded steel drums.

Together, these parallel creative movements became one powerful thing that transcended its components.

Fashion designer Robert Young turned his small Carnival band Vulgar Fraction this year to the idea of returning that process to individuals.

The 2022 band, Mas Mourning - Becoming Wreaths, contemplates loss during the covid19 pandemic.

The project began with a collaboration with UWI's DCFA arts students who are building costumes inspired by the prototypes produced for the band launch.

Players, Young expects, will build their own (full interview: https://bit.ly/3BN7KNn).

"There are parts of the costume we will make," Young said. "We will provide dried fig leaves if they require leaves, and we provide a fabric mask.

"There are backpacks if you want to carry the costume high. Then you, as your own maker, have to engage with the material and see how you can use it.

"Some costumes are just leaves, others are cut leaves stuck on fabric. It's a deep design study in the material; we all know fig trees and how they look like someone standing outside in the dark."

It's all pretty far from receiving a finished costume in a neat box, and players are also expected to make contact with the band to discuss the loss they are commemorating.

Photographers are available to visit players at their homes to record the finished costume being worn.

Young doe

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