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Umbul
Umbul Festival Bali
– Uniting the Colors of the World
August
27-30, 2004
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Picturegallery of the festival here.
A
DVD about the Umbul Umbul Festival is available.
A small sequence of the film can be downloaded from here .
Please note: The movie will be opened as a Quicktime file in a separate
window, as download takes from five to ten minutes, depending on the connection.
Quicktime Player is available free of charge from the Apple server: Quicktime
If
you would like to order the DVD, please click here.
Four postcards with motives of the festival are available.
Children and artists from over 50 countries paint
a flag for the first Umbul Umbul Festival in Bali.
After the Bali bombing 2002, elders and artists gathered and reflected "what
we can do to prevent such incidents". As a result, the Umbul Umbul Festival
came to life.
For all the participants the festival was a successful and rich experience: Four
days with exhibition, procession, performance and inspiring encounters.
Umbul Umbuls – traditional Balinese flags for festive
events - have an important meaning for the people of Bali,
but they also hold the potential to become a medium for the
many peoples of the world.
In 1989, at the instigation by the Rainbow Project, the Umbul
Umbuls began to leave their cultural home. Since then they
have developed into a creative medium with which people and
projects can send their colorful messages out into the world.
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In 2004, all the colors did return to Bali to the
Umbul Umbul Festival and "will help to generate an energy that
will nourish our hearts", as the Balinese organizer and partner
wrote.
The three-day festival was initiated and organized by the Arti
Foundation, an arts and cultural foundation in Denpasar, Bali,
in cooperation with Thomas Bertschi, Rainbow Project. Grounds for
the celebrations was the variety of life in Bali, the island world
of Indonesia, and of the planet Earth. The festival did provide
a forum for people from different cultures, people who consider
the future of the world and who came together to exchange information
and inspire one another.
The high points of the festival were the Umbul Umbul exhibition, the
Umbul Umbul competition, the Umbul Umbul procession, concerts given
by musicians from different cultures, performances and discussions
that did draw in all the participants and did cover themes relating
to the human community, nature and spirituality.
Children and artists from the following countries did participate
with a painted Umbul Umbul Rainbow Flag: Greece, Afganistan,
Israel, Nepal, USA, Niger, Bosnia, Mazedonia, Slowakia, Hungary, Bolivia,
Peru, Brasilia, Spain, Namibia, Germany, Zimbabwe, Switzerland, Kosovo,
Egypt, China, Kroatia, Cambodia, Lebanon, Denmark, India, Sri Lanka,
New Zealand, Austria, Sweden, Australia, England, Japan, Vietnam,
Lichtenstein, Slowenia, Lithuania, Indonesia.
Further information is contained in the flyer to
the festival. This is available, in English only, as a pdf file with
illustrations in two versions, for which you will need Adobe Acrobat
Reader. If this software is not installed, it can be downloaded free
of charge from the Adobe website:download
Flyer in monitor
quality
72dpi, the document will open as a new window.
Flyer in
print quality
300dpi, beware, the file is 3.2MB in size. It will
open as a new window, , so please be patient.
The document is double-sided. It can be printed, mounted, cropped
and folded in three. For a printout in A3 landscape format with layout
markings, it should be printed at 91% and centered.
Messages from the Children of the World
For the Umbul Umbul exhibition, school classes from various countries
of the world were invited to paint an Umbul Umbul. In the spirit of
the Balinese Tri Hita Karana, the description of the harmonious
relationship between man and environment, man and man and man and
deity, the festival did offer schools plenty of freedom in the preparation
of a colorful message for the world. The adopted themes were: human
society, art, nature and spirituality - Messages from the Children
of the World.
The cost of these flags were financed through sponsorship. Sponsors
could enable a school class to take part in the Umbul Umbul Festival
in Bali with its own self-painted flag. The sponsors did decide what
should happen to their flag after the festival.
A patronage comitee with personalities from the cultural
life of Switzerland was backing the festival: Dimitri (Clown), Gardi
Hutter (female Clown), Claude Sandoz (painter), Balts
Nill (musician Stiller Haas), Elsbeth Müller (head of Unicef
CH), Andreas Vollenweider (musician), Harald Szeemann (exhibition
designer), Ted Scapa (artist, former publisher of Benteli publishing
house), Linard Bardill (musician and author), Gottfried Honegger (painter).
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Supported by Switzerland.
Partner of the festival was "Presence
Switzerland". The festival was also supported by the gouverneur of
Bali, the Swiss consul in Bali and the Swiss embassy in Jakarta.
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