Follow the curator and TAEC research team on their journey to remote parts of Laos to bring this new exhibition to life.
This is TAEC’s first major venture into ethnomusicology, and features an immersive approach to exhibition design, including re-creations of a Hmong khaen maker’s workshop and a Tai Dam sen (healing) ceremony. It also includes over 200 videos and photographs on interactive kiosks.In Laos, music and musical instruments are a part of everyday life. For entertainment, courtship, or rituals, to banish loneliness, teach children, or communicate with the spirits, musical practices touch every member of a community during every part of the year. However, while singing is still vivid in many parts of Laos, traditional musical instruments have become scarce, often replaced by new media such as CDs.
Downloads: Press Release | Exhibition PosterTai Dam | Dzat
Follow the curator and TAEC research team on their journey to remote parts of Laos to bring this new exhibition to life.
SPECIAL EXHIBITION | LAST DAY TO VIEW, THURSDAY 31 AUGUST This is TAEC’s first major venture into ethnomusicology, and features an immersive approach to exhibition design, including re-creations of a Hmong khaen maker’s workshop and a Tai Dam sen (healing) ceremony. It also includes over 200 videos and photographs on interactive kiosks.In Laos, music and musical instruments […]