Monday, November 30, 2009

Thane Kala Bhavan

Yesterday I visited Thane Kala Bhavan, the art gallery built by Thane Municipal Corporation near Kapurbavdi Naka.
It’s a fine initiative started by the TMC and kudos to it for that. The art gallery was a long pending need of the city which boasts population in excess of 1.5 million and is termed as cultural sub capital of the state of Maharashtra.
The gallery is spread over 3 floors and has 16000 square feet of space dedicated to history of the city, fine arts, presentations and conferences.
The first gallery on the ground floor –“Ulhas” depicts the historical, geographical and cultural facts about the city. It gives information about various landmarks of the city and how they were built.
The three floors contain art galleries “Bhatsa’, “Tansa” and “Vaitarna” that are dedicated to various art shows and exhibitions. The galleries give a 360 degree view to the patrons.
Currently the gallery is holding a group exhibition of paintings - Stroke of Trinity, by Mr. Madan Mane, Mr. C.V. Gadkari and Mr. Sagar Bondre. The seiries of paintings titled “Reflections” by Mr. Mane is particularly exceptional.


The third floor contains state of the art conference hall "Upvan" that plyas host to various presentations and slide shows. I watched a vary interesting and informative slide show by Mr. Girish Vaze about fauna of Mumbai city. Did you know that you can watch about 360 species of birds in and around Mumbai?


The gallery also has 2 conference halls dedicated for workshops and performing art and a library.

Thaneites can witness established as well as upcoming artists' work through the exhibitions. The gallery has already garnered a very good response from the citizens.


Monday, November 16, 2009

Let’s salute our Band of Brothers

Here is an interesting article from yesterday's Economic Times -
LETTER FROM LONDON
Let’s salute our Band of Brothers

SUDESHNA SEN

VISITORS to London over the past few weeks, especially from India, are usually puzzled as to why everyone, from CEOs to secretaries, are wearing a strange, red paper blotch on their lapels. If you happened to be around at about 11:00 a.m. on November 11, you’d wonder why the whole country came to a standstill. Those odd badges are red poppies — everyone wears them for almost a month before and after November 11, which is variously called Armistice Day, Veterans Day or Remembrance Day around the world. The tradition goes back to the end of the WWI, to the ubiquitous red poppies that insisted on blooming in the killing fields of Flanders, according to a Canadian medical poet.

Now it’s more or less a generic day honouring any soldiers who’ve died in battle, in every Commonwealth country, Europe and the US. And no, we’re not just indulging in one of those sentimental British things — the origin of the artificial red poppy was to raise funds for soldiers’ charities, and even now we all drop a few coins in the charity box to buy our funny red lapel badges. It helps. India is perhaps the only Commonwealth country that doesn’t mark this occasion in a big way. And, umm, if South Africa can, after what they’ve been through, the argument that it’s a symbol of white, colonial rule seems a bit weak. And if Europe and Germany can do it together, the argument that remembrance breeds division is even weaker.

Sometimes, hapless tourists from India, who happen to be at my mercy, get dragged off to trudge around Hyde Park Corner — not, as they’d like, on the way to Harrods but in the opposite direction, up Constitution Hill. It’s usually when I’m in a cranky mood, and insist on making them look at the World War memorial for soldiers from the Indian subcontinent, Africa, and Caribbean — an estimated 5 million — and crane their necks to read the names of all those from the erstwhile British Indian army to get the Victoria Cross — the highest bravery award then.

I was once told, can’t vouch for it, on a cold foggy November morning, to the accompaniment of Gurkha bagpipers and a smattering of octogenarian British Indian Army veterans in wheelchairs, that the British Indian army has the highest tally of VCs from the World Wars. Something to be proud of, I’d think, but it never made my history books in school.

Usually, my traumatised victims are more than glad to escape and run off to shop on Oxford Street. As Baroness Sheila Flather, one of Britain’s leading diaspora luminaries and an architect of the memorial, once told me rather sternly, it’s almost impossible to get anyone in India interested in these things. But British Indians make the effort, every year. So if you had a grandfather in North Africa, Burma, or Japan, well, someone cares.

I’ve recently taken to wondering why India doesn’t do memorials as a cultural thing. One of the first things that strikes one in Europe is the number of war memorials. These are not, like Emperor Constantine’s arches or Nelson’s column, odes to military victory. These are plain, simple memorials for mortal souls, a name etched in stone, metal, bronze, plastic. Non-denominational, non-communal, non-political, remembering the boys (and girls) who died so you and I could live.

I’ve walked up a hill in an Enid Blytonish village in rural England, and under the moss and heather, there’s a weathered stone plaque with names of long-dead village boys who gave their lives in various wars. It’s a bit of history, a bit of local pride, a bit of sentimentality. And usually, there will be a few funny paper poppies lying around. Someone cares.

And then, I remember flying back to Delhi from Leh, very touristy, generally peeved about the hyper security… until I saw the flag-covered coffin sharing airplane space with me. Who was that boy? Dunno, but I don’t think I’ll forget him. It isn’t as if Indians aren’t patriotic. We celebrate Independence Day, Republic Day et al with extreme zeal. We teach our school children how wonderful our armed forces are, to revere war heroes. We weep buckets in Bollywood war movies, or when Lata Mangeshkar sings Ae mere watan ke logon. But we simply refuse to remember our soldiers who’ve died, consistently, in every war or engagement since 1914. We have national holidays for mythical superheroes from 2000 BC, but we cannot set aside a single day to remember our war heroes from the last century? Maybe sociologists, anthropologists and psychologists who study these things can tell me why we Indians insist on having mass amnesia.

As we come up to another anniversary, 26/11, how many memorials have you ever seen in India? There’s a 7/7 memorial in Hyde Park Corner — with names of all those who died in the tube bombings in London. Who will remember Tukaram Omble, 90 years from now, so a transient tourist could stumble on a plaque and know how and what he died for? Me, I’ve got my red poppy. In the absence of any Indian symbol, I wear it for all of them. The bodies I’ve seen, the heroes whose names I’ve forgotten, the martyrs whose names I never knew. That coffin I came home from holiday with. Someone cares.

Jai Hind.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Wake Up S!D

Its 5th October. Monday Morning. Rush hour. And as usual I am stuck in a traffic jam. Its raining heavily. Like the rains of July & August. I am peeping out of the window into the rain and can’t help myself thinking about Sid and Aisha – lead pair of Wake Up S!D enjoying the first showers of Mumbai exactly the same way.

Wake Up S!D is a very refreshing movie - one that I really enjoyed watching just the previous day. Well …. Sid is Sid (Siddharth Mehra) a lazy, unmotivated college goer from Mumbai; yet sweet, funny, honest and a good friend. Sid lives a life sans responsibilities. Fate crosses his path with Aisha on her first day in the city - a wannabe writer, who has decided to move to Mumbai to realise her dreams, to be independent and free.

As luck would have it, Sid moves in with Aisha in her flat (that he has helped her to convert in her home) after a tiff with his dad. Soon life compels Sid to take stock of the things. Wake Up Sid is the story of coming of age of Sid. Full marks to director Ayan Mukherjee who is in his 20s himself. He has handled the story with great maturity. The story maintains a consistent pace – neither slacking nor running too fast. The relationship between Sid and Aisha is handled in a subtle way. The rubbing of Aisha on Sid happens very naturally – from his efforts to preparing eggs to his realisation that he loves photography to his finally earning his first pay cheque. The film is also as much about Mumbai as it is about Sid and Aisha. The city is always there in the background as a silhouetted character against the backdrop of which the events occur. The movie speaks about the city with great love. As a viewer you can always connect yourself to the city – its freedom, independence, rush, youth, vitality, passion and also with the characters, be it Sid – struggling with his accountancy book on the night of exam or even Aisha’s roommate – hardworking, deserving yet unlucky.

The performance by all the lead characters is almost perfect. Ranbir is superb as Sid and Konkana gives full justice to Aisha as we have been made to expect from her.

The music is refreshing and catches the romance between Sid and Aisha seamlessly - "Iktara" and "Life is Crazy" being my favorites of the lot. Also the unsung hero of the movie is background score by Amit Trivedi (Dev D). It blends perfectly with the mood of the story and takes the story forward.

Go watch it.