7/11/20 San Jose Taiko on Facebook Live |
Many Buddhist communities honor their deceased ancestors during
a summer Obon festival. When I was a kid, I participated by joining the folk
dancing that took place in the closed-off street outside the temple where my
family attended services. And of course, we all enjoyed the shaved ice,
noodles, barbecued chicken on skewers and other treats that were sold in the
food booths. I stopped dancing as an adult, but Greg and I always went to watch
the dancing and especially to enjoy taiko drum performances by Seattle Buddhist
Betsuin’s own taiko group (whom sketcher Cathy McAuliffe and I had fun sketching a few years ago).
This year, of course, Obon has been cancelled everywhere,
but some communities are taking their Obon online. In San Jose, the Buddhist Betsuin festivities included performances by San Jose Taiko, my niece Alix’s group
(whom I sketched live a few years ago when they were in town). The Facebook Live event included real-time video as well as a recording
from a previous Obon.
The multi-camera views of the live performances made for a more
sophisticated viewing experience – but not for sketching! As soon as I started
to sketch a drummer, the video would switch to another camera! All that motion
and energy are hard enough to capture from one view, let alone many. The stick
figure gestures I managed to capture above were done during a pre-recorded segment
that had been made with one video camera, so the angle didn’t change. Whew!
The festivities of the temple that I attended will be online tomorrow. The experience won’t be nearly as fun as strolling through the street, chomping on shaved ice, feeling the rhythm of drumming, smelling chicken barbecuing, seeing the bright kimono colors on children. But I guess it will have to do.
Having it online doesn't treat all the senses. it is hard to sketch when they keep switching cameras.
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