KCC concludes its performances with a silent play aimed at spreading environmental awareness
Ashraf AboArafe
The Korean Cultural Center (KCC) concluded its series of artistic and musical performances, with a silent play entitled “Clown and Waste”, in the presence of a group of center’s pioneers and lovers of Korean culture.
Using the art of the “Bantu Mime” suggestive movements, the play calls for the necessity of spreading environmental awareness in light of the tendency of excessive consumption around the world, as well as spreading awareness of the culture of recycling and its importance for sustainable development.
The four-act play was filmed at the Seoul Arts Center and performed dozens of times in Korea and abroad. The play carries a global message about naturalness and the need to achieve ecological balance, and to show the power of positive thinking and optimism as a magic cure, especially during crises.
The center had started a series of artistic performances in cooperation with the Seoul Arts Center last June, on a monthly basis, with the aim of giving its patrons the opportunity to enjoy watching mass performances, in conjunction with the slowdown in the spread of the Corona virus in Egypt.
The Seoul Arts Center was established in 1988, and it is the beating heart of the arts in the Korean capital, Seoul, and includes many art facilities, including the opera house and a number of museums and art halls. and cultural exchange.