KUCHING,
May 2 — The Royal Albert Hall in London will be used as a point of reference in
the creation of the Sarawak Performance Arts Centre (PAC), Premier Tan Sri
Abang Johari Openg said today.
He
said the Old Sarawak Legislative Assembly building will be converted into the
performing arts centre at a cost of RM240 million and is slated for completion
in 2027.
“The most expensive part of the PAC is the equipment which is state-of-the-art,
and our reference is Royal Albert Hall,” he told reporters after a site
handover ceremony to a contractor.
“When
the conversion work is completed, we can bring in international artistes to
perform here,” he said, adding that this will boost the state tourism and
service industry.
He said Singapore had benefitted hugely from the concerts of international artistes, such as singer-songwriter Taylor Swift in March this year. “The Singapore government gave incentives to Swift to perform there, but the spin-offs are not only in terms of culture, but also in monetary terms.
“We also want to attract singers like her, but if our concert hall is not good, who wants Abang Johari said Sarawak PAC will be of great help to local performers to showcase their talents or stage theatrical work. He said he is confident that the arts centre will be able to elevate the standard of local performers.
Speaking earlier, Sarawak Tourism, Creative Industry and
Performing Arts Minister Datuk Seri Abdul Karim Rahman Hamzah said the focus of
the centre will be to strengthen the development programme and arts activities
in the state.
He said these would include music, dance, vocal and
theatre performances; a venue to exhibit visual arts such as paintings,
sculpture and murals; a place to recite poetry; and virtual arts display such
as animation, videography and social media.
He said the Sarawak Arts Council has attracted 1,261
participants to attend arts guidance classes for the 2024 sessions throughout
the state.
“Apart from that, my ministry is actively organising
town hall sessions in Kuching, Samarahan, Sibu, Bintulu and Miri Divisions,” he
said.
He added the sessions are to share information and
aspirations with the stakeholders on the direction of the creative industry in
Sarawak.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.