Artists & Performers

Musical Artists

Throughout the weekend, musicians will offer moments of celebration, contemplation, movement, and connection, creating a soundtrack for the experience and helping us reconnect with ourselves, each other, and the living world around us.

Tritha

Tritha is a vocalist, composer and producer blending over 25 years of North Indian classical training with electronic and global influences. Her work connects tradition, innovation and social change through powerful musical expression.

Johan Selva

Composer, singer, and multi-instrumentalist, Johan Selva blends voice, electronic production, and traditional Andean instruments like charango and flutes. His music creates an immersive journey between nature, ancestry, and modern electronic sound.

Lily Jung

Vocal artist trained in classical lyric singing and jazz, Lily Jung weaves global vocal traditions from her travels into a powerful, embodied voice. Known for The Voice (2019) and SKÁLD, she blends ancestral chants with contemporary expression.

Soular Folk

A musical journey with Juni and Olivier, blending indie folk, medicine songs, and collective singing. Inspired by nature, mythology, and the rhythms of life, their music creates spaces for connection, celebration, and shared presence.

Exhibitions

A selection of exhibitions and artistic installations will be accessible throughout the Convergence, creating spaces for reflection, creativity, and dialogue.

The Blue Kilometer

By Harvey Tulcensky

A contemplative exhibition of flowing blue landscapes, where lines reveal hidden connections between order and possibility. An invitation to slow down, observe, and imagine new paths forward.

“I remember, clearly, the first time I saw an image of the Earth from outer space. So much blue, with white clouds floating above.
More recently, I have become aware of how our planet now looks from space, with its overcrowded cities spreading out and covering more and more of what used to be natural landscape, its forests and plains depleted and greatly reduced, its flowing rivers now polluted, brown, and filled with waste.
If this continues, it will be us who ultimately disappear. I prefer to think that we can change course before it is too late, and choose survival over destruction. We are headed for what may well be a point of no return. Time is running out, and time is what is at the core of all my work. We must act now!


This is what the Blue Kilometer symbolizes for me.”


–- Harvey TULCENSKY, June 2026

www.harveytulcensky.art