The City of Trees

How Neralu, the Bangalore Tree Festival, came to be planned while exploring the historical, cultural and ecological aspects of Bangalore city through art, pedagogy and public engagement.


In September last year (2013), I quite fortuitously ran into a group of excited Bangaloreans who had begun discussing doing something around the trees of the city. This is where we began conversations about a possible tree festival for Bangalore. Anush, Arpana, Sangeetha, Uma, Mallik, Jahnavi and I met at Airlines hotel one evening. Janhavi Pai, a researcher friend had told me that these folks were interested in Bangalore’s trees and their stories and were discussing various ways to expand and share their experience. It almost seemed like a call and a dream come true.

For over 8 years now, I have been on the path to rediscover my own sense of engagement with Bangalore through unknown and untold social, cultural, political and historic layers. The trees of Bangalore are an amazing part of this story of urban Bangalore and its growth through the centuries.

In 2010, I was working at Maraa, a media and arts collective based in Bangalore, and we had collaborated with two artists from Vienna and the Visual Arts Collective, who run 1 Shanti Road gallery in Bangalore. As part of those explorations and inquiries, one of the activities was a small scale urban tree festival for Bangalore. More details on events from the 2010 festival can be found on this blog.

This city is filled with tree-enthusiasts, perhaps because we grew up with trees through the decades. Ecologists, hobbyists, nature and heritage enthusiasts, environmentalists, activists, artists, researchers – so many people in the city working on urban flora and fauna! Yet, there are very few and barely visible interdisciplinary networks. Many folks have probably never met beyond their own networks. Our intention as individuals in a group in contact with various experts, practitioners, enthusiastic public, students and networks was to try and facilitate a conversation and perhaps, interesting collaborations between various practices.

As we began to interact in September, Arpana, Sangeetha, Uma, Mallik, Anush and I (a mixed group of researchers, artists, technologists) began to share with each other lots of ideas, possibilities, research material, and resources. It suddenly seemed like a good idea to perhaps try a small pedagogical exploration within the realms of art and design. Since my move to design and art pedagogy at Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology, I had worked with students on complex urban space and heritage related contexts as sites of inquiry, exploration and research.

In the meanwhile, we also managed to get together various practitioners and experts from the city and organize a brainstorming workshop in October, 2013. Many people joined us for this workshop and contributed, and a few expressed interest in working with students as well.

Putting together a 4-week module on Bangalore’s trees, I organized a series of workshops for students. Sangeetha Kadur (nature visualisation) worked with students on tree ID-ing and journalling methods, while Mallikarjun Javali (technology, research) and Chandrashekar Balachandran (creative geography, pedagogy) discussed exciting topics like visualizing maps and open street map workshop. Uma Bharath (heritage, history and culture), Sumitra Sunder (art, activism, urban spaces) and I worked with students on engaging with the city’s public, and Dr. Subramanya (professor at GKVK) and Kiran Keswani (architect and researcher) inspired us to look at the Kattes of Bangalore as ecological and public spheres.

This intersection with Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology resulted in two groups of students working towards and producing two interesting project ideas and prototypes. These are described below and links are provided for one to sample.

The Green Mile

A group of 6-7 students produced an audio walk of Malleshwaram, developed around a route they thought allowed for a diversity of spaces, history and trees. This audio walk has been titled The Green Mile and is the first scratch. The walk consists of 15 small audio bytes around 15 locations with trees, that include various spaces like the local space of the tree, its utility, people’s memories and some historic/ecological context for the species.

You can download the audio walk, get a map here and take a walk in Malleshwaram. All you need is a good set of earphones and a device to play MP3 files.

Look, its a tree!

A second set of students were highly inspired by Sangeetha Kadur’s journalling workshops, so they decided to follow journaling as a method to document their thoughts on research that they did on trees. The group has put together a blog that documents their own journals and they hope to build this into a participative journal sharing forum for Bangalore’s online media users. They claim that their relationship with trees changed through this medium of documentation (as opposed to using photography as a medium to document). You can take a look at some of their work here. You can also send in material, illustrations and narratives to be featured on the blog.

Such work with students and young urban groups will be available at a public forum called City of Trees. This group is free for all to propose, contribute, organize, lead and document more such initiatives.

This project with students gave us as a group lots more ideas for NERALU, the upcoming tree festival for Bangalore which we are now in the midst of facilitating. For more about the tree festival, go to neralu.in.

 

This article was first published in the Neralu blog and is republished here with permission.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Garudachar palya: The “hot spot” in Whitefield’s IT Hub

Examining the heat island effect in densely built-up Garudachar Palya ward in Whitefield’s IT Hub, which also has limited tree cover.

Garudachar Palya is part of Mahadevapura constituency, with an area of 6.5 sq km, which includes four revenue villages — Garudachar Palya, Hoodi, Seegehalli, and Nallurahalli. These villages have stayed mostly the same, while the city has expanded around them with more organised development from the BDA. This mismatch has led to issues like narrow village lanes becoming crowded with traffic, as they’re now used as shortcuts to bypass main roads. Looking at population growth, between 2011 and 2024, the ward has seen an estimated increase of 62.24%. This rapid growth adds to the existing strain on infrastructure. Ward no…

Similar Story

Saving Dwarka Forest: Citizens approach apex court to protect forest land near Delhi airport

Delhi’s Dwarka Forest has seen brazen destruction thanks to a railway redevelopment project. A recent SC stay order has raised hopes.

According to a recent World Bank report, India presently accounts for a meagre 1.8% of the global forest cover. Even more concerning is the fact that an enormous ‘46,759 acres of forest-land have been sanctioned for mining’ across the country, over the course of the last five years, by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) itself. According to many ace climate scientists and researchers, our planet has already hit “the tipping point”. In this backdrop, the people’s struggle to save Dwarka Forest, one of the last remaining natural forest lands in a choking capital city, is a…