Finally, some justice for the art fraternity
In this age when “presentation is king”, curators and exhibition designers vie to mix cognac with chole-bhature, soufflé with sambar, ballet with Bharatanatyam and Malhar with M.F.
The love and want for a world in black and white
I have had a long-term romance with black and white. With all the naiveté (foolishness?) of youth, I was convinced that life and people were either black or white. But lessons along the way illuminated the vast areas of grey that populate life and people’s characters. And if black and white are two ends of the spectrum, then it is the grey that is the main river that flows in between.
Classical visual arts lack literature but two gems stand out
The other day, watching a beautiful Odissi performance by Sharon Lowen triggered off a thought that what would classical Indian dance and theatre be without the Natyashastra?
New trends here to stay? Inshallah
There is something infectious about the New Year.
Artists’ camp in J&K to renew art
Gar firdaus bar rooh-e-zameen ast; Hameen asto, hameen asto, hameen ast…; If there be Paradise upon earth; It is here, it is here, it is here
Blending romance and intimacy
I have often scoffed at photography as being second grade to art.
It happens only in Indian art world
I simply love Bollywood for coining some of the most appropriate catch phases or stories that are so apt, that the brightest poets and litterateurs couldn’t have thought of a better w
Memoirs of two different generations tell similar tales
They are both artists whose imagery is almost autobiographical.
Masks and faces: An artist’s impression of the world
Theatre traditions across the world have held masks in very high esteem, with a great deal of significance and emphasis being laid on delineating the identity of a character or highlighting his or her
Capturing many facets of the man who was M.F. Husain
I think it is perhaps it is too early to take an absolutely dispassionate view about M.F.