Thursday, November 13, 2014
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Congrats to Mars Orbiter Mangalyaan team
8 things more expensive than Mangalyaan Mars Orbiter mission!
http://blogs.wsj.com/ indiarealtime/2014/09/24/8- things-more-expensive-than- indias-mars-mission/
http://blogs.wsj.com/
Monday, September 15, 2014
I came across this wonderful viewpoint on Japanese Belief– Is it religion, is it atheism by Yukiko Murano
Sharing a shortened version
Yukiko Murano is a Tea Teacher, Head
of the International Team of Japanese Tea Ceremony Omotesenke Way in Tokyoa shortened version is given here:
Japanese live and feel with Nature. Nature are full of Spirits in Japan. 八百万の神 this is a metaphorical number of countless deities in Japanese soil. Mountains, Snow, volcano, Onsen, hot springs, Ocean, lakes, marshes, rivers, waterfalls, even wind, rain, typhoon, fog, big trees...everything are Spirits in Japan. We worship nature. The translation 'God' seems originally inappropriate, as the unique recognition 'Kami' which is right, but then may be 'Dou' is more right to explain our belief or behavior. Shintou神(道(tou-dou) is not 神(教(kyou-religion) after all. Not Allah nor God, but Kami. There is awe for the Invisibleness. Dou is the invisible restrictions and affirmations based on the individual moral criteria. Through timeless endeavour and study and research teachers of Dou teach people each of the Dou Ways. Like in fighting, mentors for Judou, Kendou, Aikidou and Sumo were needed, and in ordinary life- Flower Dou, Chadou, Kodo, Shodo. And may be how to love people 'Dou' based on moral way, which may be too traditional but not unfair. Teachers in Japan are like doyens. People pay respect to teachers. How to be a desirable individual and harmonize with others in the society. The basic answer is always in Nature. Not in Koran nor Bible.
Agricultural life-style and the constant repetition of the natural four seasons including natural disasters bring to the Japanese a stable belief that nature overwhelms, gifts and blesses, creates tragedy and sorrow. Earthquake and tsunami, typhoon and flood devour living things, but we see it as natural deeds, and try not to conquer them but try to co-exist and manage. No bible or Koran but based on the Classic forklore 'Kojiki'古事記、the mythical fable, that we believe our nation derives from. This is a reason we call ourselves: Non-God people, Atheists. But every one of us believes in natural Awe and behaves as Dou guides us.
Through the Historical coalescence, Shinto and Buddhism were together, 神仏習合 in Japan until Samurai Epoch. Then we do have Zen Temples where No Buddhist Statues are existing (some are), but priests guide people toward 'Zen' and 'Dou' mind. If you feel like questioning through the self-discipline, what is the 'Truth' of our being and how we can live our life in a right way. More philosophical than religious.
I have added here images of Ise shrine with pebbled garden -Shinto shrine (above) & Ryoan-ji dry landscape garden- Zen (below)
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
HIMMAT SHAH – India’s Living Van Gogh
Today Himmat celebrates his 81st
birthday
May he go bouncing
on to a century and like the great Japanese artist Hokusai keep on belting out
more n more great art.
Himmat Shah's studio was for several years at the Lalit Kala Akademi’s Garhi Artists Studios complex in New Delhi. I joined the Printmaking studio after completing B.F.A. from Delhi College of Art and met Himmat, one of the greatest living genius of India... i compare him to my all time fav Van Gogh...thankfully he has not had such a difficult life
Below I give some excerpts from @myHimmatDiary, and some
pix of his works
Today Himmat Shah lives and works in Jaipur
Please check out more of his artworks and his fab book
“Terracotta” on his website www.himmatshah.com
Garhi Artists
Studios 1980’s
My first encounter
with Himmat Shah
Huge wooden door coloured silver....ajar....Himmat in his
lounge chair with his inveterate cap and little boy grin...its open house for
all..
For me - who could only admire my fav’s like Matisse, Paul
Klee, Jean Arp, Noguchi, Archipenko, Miro through books - a Pandora’s box
thrown open.....what works of genius! an enthralling world of sculptures,
murals, prints, drawings...the mysterious, the unsaid, the abstract has always
appealed to me the most...and Himmat’s work is all that and more...
Garhi
Artists Studios
What does Cabbage
have to do with Creativity?
I worked in the Printmaking Studio. My mom came to visit
me.
She passed a studio with the large door wide open.
Her reaction “why on
earth was a man slicing cabbage in there...
surely there should be an artist
working at his art?”
That man – Himmat Shah was slicing cabbage to make delicious gujarati khichdi for all of us young artists who often floated into Himmat's studio for a free meal.
For me (my mom an excellent cook always gave me a delicious
lunch dabba) it was the sheer, ethereal joy
of enjoying Himmat’s genius – and listening to his riveting musings.
By the way Himmat thought my mom was very beautiful with
her flawless skin and doe eyes. I agree but lament that I have not been gifted her beauty
Triveni
Kala Sangam
My first Art
Exhibition of Etchings
Himmat came to the opening of my very first art exhibition.
I was honoured...such a senior artist. My etchings were absurdly abstract and
most people thought I was off my rocker...they thought the same about my
heavily ethnic apparel too...which hardly anybody knew about then....now its
available on the streets of Lajpat Nagar market and every Tom, Dick or Harry
rather every Timsy, Dolly or Harpreet are wearing...sorry for the digression...
Himmat asked me if I would give him one of my etchings
titled Amobae !!!! speechless I
dumbly nodded my head
Himmat’s
house
“We are all
Artists”
Post a wonderful time at the Delhi Book Fair, where Himmat
managed to beat us in picking up the best Art books, we invited ourselves over
for dinner. The cook entertained us with an impromptu “Magic show”. When we
lauded his talent – he informed us “everybody in this house is an artist” on
which Himmat guffawed – the cook had clubbed himself in the same genius as Himmat
Coffee
Home, Connaught Place 1980’s
A frisson up my
spine
Deep winter in New Delhi...dusk...Coffee Home spilling over
with people, dosas, sambhar, idlis, tea (not necessarily coffee). I feel a
frisson up my spine...there is a presence – a benign presence...i look up...its
Himmat in his Himmat cap and husky phiran quietly standing beside my table,
looking down at me.
Thanks to taking up a full-time job I had discontinued
going to Garhi, this chance encounter with Himmat was so special
Getting
Married is so Great
Maybe I should get
married several more times....:-)
No doubt i am blessed with a great spouse
but one of the
best perks possible of marriage –
Himmat gifted us his most fab sculpture!
now now stop being greedy...
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Georges Braque (1882-1963)
famous french painter, sculptor, collagist
Initially followed style of Impressionism and Fauvism. The Fauves such as Henri Matisse & Andre Derain used brilliant (or wild) colour palettes to express emotions thus being dubbed as wild beasts.
Braque is most famous for having developed "Cubism" with Pablo Picasso
Cubist paintings display geometricity, effects of light and simultaneous/multiple perspective.
In cubist paintings the forms seem to comprise of many broken up cubes, earning the term "bizarre cubes". Later cubist work were made by collage technique
1909-10, La guitare (Mandora, La Mandore), oil on canvas, 71.1 x 55.9 cm, Tate Modern, London
1913, Nature morte (Fruit Dish, Ace of Clubs), oil, gouache and charcoal on canvas, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.
famous french painter, sculptor, collagist
Initially followed style of Impressionism and Fauvism. The Fauves such as Henri Matisse & Andre Derain used brilliant (or wild) colour palettes to express emotions thus being dubbed as wild beasts.
Braque is most famous for having developed "Cubism" with Pablo Picasso
Cubist paintings display geometricity, effects of light and simultaneous/multiple perspective.
In cubist paintings the forms seem to comprise of many broken up cubes, earning the term "bizarre cubes". Later cubist work were made by collage technique
1909-10, La guitare (Mandora, La Mandore), oil on canvas, 71.1 x 55.9 cm, Tate Modern, London
1913, Nature morte (Fruit Dish, Ace of Clubs), oil, gouache and charcoal on canvas, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
M Balamuralikrishnan performing at Nehru park, new delhi on sunday 22 march 2014
heard lovely performance by the legendary M Balamuralikrishnan yesterday
lovely rendition of Raag Hamsadhwani....enjoyed the camaraderie of the group of 5 musicians on stage
lovely rendition of Raag Hamsadhwani....enjoyed the camaraderie of the group of 5 musicians on stage
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