The annual Mountain Echoes Literary Festival to be held in the Bhutanese capital of Thimpu, in its seventh year will focus on climate change and other concerns challenging the environment.
The festival, an undertaking of the India-Bhutan Foundation in association with Siyahi, is scheduled to be held from August 26 to August 28 and promises to be a wrap of all forms of art including literature, music and poetry.
Announcing the programme itinerary, the organisers said that the festival this year will go beyond the customary "spirited discussions and intellectual debates."
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Eminent Indian author Amitav Ghosh, essayist Pico Iyer, Bollywood actor Tabu, environment conservationist Nawang Norbu and Australian writer and playwright Graeme Simsion will be among the speakers at the festival.
"Mountain Echoes in its seventh iteration brings back an acute focus on issues relating to the environment and climate change whilst widening its ambit to include the visual arts and new media; subjects at the forefront of youth interests that are redefining our cultural experiences and fostering new dialogues," says Pramod Kumar KG, one of the festival directors.
Other directors include Namita Gokhale, Siok Sian Dorji and Tshering Tashi.
Exhibitions will include an insightful display of artworks by the nomadic Jogi tribe.
The art form was developed by Ganesh and Teju Jogi along with their six children over the last four decades to support themselves, prior to which they were believed to have earned their livelihoods singing devotional songs and ballads.
The show will have on dislay a selection of artworks from the book "Contemporary Expressions - Art of the Jogi Family" by Tulika Kedia.
The exotic beauty of Bhutan's Gasa Dzongkhag or Gasa district will be brought to life in photographs taken by Dorji Dhradhul, a Bhutanese agricultural extensionist turned photographer who works towards the development of the district.
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