Category Archives: Arts,Culture & Entertainment

Of women, by women, for women

Deepa, producer of the 'Sthree Dimension'. / The Hindu
Deepa, producer of the ‘Sthree Dimension’. / The Hindu

Deepa, a veteran of the visual media, was baptised in the medium at a time when the communication space was opened up for private channels. Since joining Asianet in 1998, Deepa has worked before and behind the camera as reporter, producer and anchor. After leaving Asianet, this award-winning media person worked as an independent producer covering environmental and ecological issues and agriculture. Last year, she returned to take up an assignment with Asianet News. Producer of the recently launched ‘Sthree Dimension’, she has joined hands with her batch mate and friend, Vandana, to conceptualise a talk show for women and of women; a panel discussion that discusses mainstream issues and not gender-related issues alone. Deepa explains what it is all about…

The need for such a show

Women are so poorly represented in most discussions in the visual media. The mandatory women in such discussions are usually politicians. Moreover, women are generally invited to speak when the topic is related to gender or gender issues. Even then the women we see are the same talking heads in almost every channel. It is as if women, the ordinary women that we encounter every day, have no opinions at all on any mainstream issues. There are group discussions. However, the sheer number of participants prevent any serious discussion or analysis. It becomes a venue for arguments and counter arguments and there is hardly any in-depth analysis. We wanted to create a space where women could discuss events that were hogging the headlines. That is how the show was conceptualised. And there are just four guests on the show.

The anchor

Vandana is an experienced media person who thinks on her feet and has a way with words. She has a sense of humour and is able to get the panellists to open up and express their opinion. We work as a team, choosing the topics and guests who appear on the programme. She does the research on the subject and, like any good anchor, ensures that each person gets the opportunity to talk and that the discussions do not deviate from the topic.

Talking heads

When we began, there were doubts if we could get enough women to speak on topics related to politics, economics, health and so on. In addition, we wanted to avoid the faces that we have always seen on various panels. To our pleasant surprise, we were able to get plenty of articulate women from different walks of life. For instance, there was a research scholar who was able to give a very different perspective on the Jayalalithaa issue. She argued persuasively that the former Chief Minister was a symbol of empowerment for many women and that she should not be relegated to the margins of politics because she has been found guilty of corruption. Similarly, there were many instances when the women panellists impressed us with their clarity of thought and interesting takes on different issues. Instead of assuming that women could only talk about certain subjects, we were giving them the opportunity to air their views on current events and they were making the most of the opportunity.

Issues taken up for discussion

The programme is just four weeks old. During the period we covered topics ranging from education, politics, health and lifestyle. While one of the episodes discussed the stand taken by V.M. Sudheeran, president of the Kerala Pradesh Congress Committee, another analysed the Congress decision on Sashi Tharoor. Then there was an episode on the Jayalalithaa phenomenon, and also on the state of our schools. One feature that stood out was the language that was used by the panellists. It never went beyond the realms of decorum and even tricky issues were handled with sensitivity and sensibility.

The response

I feel it is too early to evaluate the programme. But the feedback from those who have seen it has been positive. Nowadays TRP ratings are important and I am optimistic that this show will make the mark.

‘Sthree Dinmension’ airs on Saturdays at 9.30 p.m. on Asianet News.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> Friday Review / by Saraswathy Nagarajan / Thiruvananthapuram – October 23rd, 2014

Documenting the evolution of Christianity in Kerala

A parish under the Kottapuram diocese./ by Special Correspondent
A parish under the Kottapuram diocese./ by Special Correspondent

Diocese of Kottapuram to produce docu-fiction

Taking a trip down the history lane of Christianity in Kerala can be a bit daunting. For, there can be no end to it.

From the legend of St.Thomas to the present period, it has travelled through a pattern of historical complexity, witnessing many ups and downs.

The Diocese of Kottapuram, located near the ancient port town of Muziris, felt that it’s an intricate journey, the significance of which should be conveyed to the masses. With that in mind the Diocese has come up with a docu-fiction – a brave attempt to encapsulate in five hours, the 3,000-year long history of Christianity right from the golden days of the Muziris to the present day.

“The initiative is in line with our long tradition of taking up technological innovations for mass communication. It was printing press in the 15th century and radio and television in the five centuries later. The attempt is to visualise many important aspects of our history that remain largely unknown, underrated and relatively uncelebrated,” said Fr. Rockey Roby, official spokesperson of the diocese.

Shooting of the docu-fiction to be directed by Mohanroop is set to begin next month. The voluminous script, which runs into over 40 pages, has been finalised by a monitoring committee comprising the diocese officials, historians and researchers.

Mr. Mohanroop said the project would be groundbreaking at many levels whether in its definition of spectacle or its dialogue with technology. “A lot of research has gone into identifying the cultural traits of periods being dealt with such as the attires and the language spoken and much more. The film will be shot by recreating the panoramic visuals of bygone centuries in all its splendour and magnitude,” he said.

Some of the key events that will form a part of the docu-fiction include the arrival of St.Thomas the Apostle, which is believed to have taken place in AD 62, the synod of Diamper in 1599 and the Coonan Cross Oath in 1653. Besides, the parishes of Maliankara, Sambaloor and Paravur will also find a place in it.

The final cut, which would also be a comprehensive history of the Church in Kerala, is scheduled for a release six months from the shooting.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Hiran Unnikrishnan / Kochi – October 20th, 2014

Documentary on playwright screened by Cochin Film Society

Poet and playwright Kavalam Narayana Panicker at the screening of a documentary on his works directed by Shivamohan Thampi in Kochi on Thursday. PHOTO: K.K. MUSTAFAH / The Hindu
Poet and playwright Kavalam Narayana Panicker at the screening of a documentary on his works directed by Shivamohan Thampi in Kochi on Thursday. PHOTO: K.K. MUSTAFAH / The Hindu

‘Spatial Rhythm’, a documentary on poet and doyen of theatre Kavalam Narayana Panicker directed by Sivamohan Thampi, was screened by Cochin Film Society in the city on Thursday.

Prior to the event, Kavalam spent sometime at the Nanappa Art Gallery at the invite of artist T. Kaladharan where he spoke on the documentary, his works and recited a few poems. “It is a good documentary,” he said. “Thampi has known me for quite sometime, but fortunately our closeness hasn’t influenced him to train the camera on me. The film is about my works,” said the dapper playwright.

“I have always looked at things from my outlook as a villager and fundamental to my art is my conscience bestowed by a value-based world surrounding the village,” he said and recited, at the request of Mr. Kaladharan and the audience a few poems, including ‘Yathrachirakil’ on life’s passage to the infinity of death. “While on that journey as a community, can’t we work towards ending strife in the name of religion, caste and belief?”

As is typical of his work, suffused as they are with a deep sense of rhythm characteristic of rustic living, a poem that sounded like a rustic limerick rich in colloquial expressions and folk tenets was also rendered by him.

Theatre personality Prof. Chandradasan was present.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu/ Home> News> Cities> Kochi / by Special Correspondent / Kochi – October 24th, 2014

Kerala bakers plan 600-ft-long cake to mark baking legacy

The eggless cake will be prepared by a team of 30 cake experts on October 30. Representational image
The eggless cake will be prepared by a team of 30 cake experts on October 30. Representational image

Thiruvananthapuram:

In a first, the Kerala Bakers Association (KBA) is planning to bake a 600-feet-long cake to mark the 131st anniversary of cake-making in the country.

The association is planning to bake the cake at a convention centre in Thrissur on October 30 to showcase the legacy of ‘plum cakes’ in the country.

According to local historians, the first cake in the country was baked by an Indian in the historic town of Thalassery in north Kerala over a century ago.

Taking cue from the European settlers in the Malabar region of Kerala, Mampally Bappu, a local entrepreneur, is said to have baked the first cake using local ingredients in the coastal town in 1883, they said.

To mark the occasion, the KBA has roped in scores of its members to prepare and exhibit the massive cake.

The event is being organised not just to commemorate the legacy of bakers in Kerala but to create awareness about the significance of baking industry in the economy, the association said.

“Kerala may be the only place in the world which has such a large number of bakeries. So we thought it is our responsibility to create awareness about its glorious past,” P M Sankaran, state president of KBA told PTI.

Mampally Bappu, who lived in Thalassery, was a visionary who introduced the exclusive taste of cakes to Indian foodies, he said. “Though there was a bakery set up in Bengal in 1880 to cater exclusively to the British, Indians could not savour the delicacies prepared there. Bappu made the first cake in his Royal Biscuit Factory in 1883,” he said.

Bappu had made the cake based on a sample brought by a European planter who lived in Thalassery then, he said.

Though Bappu’s descendants have been celebrating the legacy of cake-making as a family affair for many decades, the association decided to mark the occasion on a larger scale this year.

M P Ramesh, the owner of Cochin Bakery and a fourth generation member of Bappu’s family, is taking the initiative of making the giant cake, weighing over 3000 kilograms.

“The eggless cake will be prepared by a team of 30 cake experts on October 30. It will be exhibited for the next two days,” Ramesh told PTI. A 353.5 feet-long cake, showcasing significant features of Thalassery, was prepared by the association to mark the 129th anniversary of cake making in 2012, which gained entry into the Limca Book of Records, he said.

Besides the display of the giant cake, several other programmes and cultural events have been planned as part of anniversary this year, association members said.

source: http://www.english.manoramaonline.com / On Manorama /  Home> News> Kerala /  by Agencies  / Saturday – October 18th, 2014

Johny Lukos bags Madhyamasree award

Johny Lukos, news director, Manorama News channel
Johny Lukos, news director, Manorama News channel

New York:

Johny Lukos, news director, Manorama News channel bagged the Madhyamasree Award instituted by India Press Club of North America (IPCNA). M.G. Radhakrishnan, Editor, Asianet News has also won the award.

The award has been conferred in view of his outstanding contribution to contemporary journalism. The award will be presented on November 8 at a ceremony to be held in New York, India Press Club president Taj Mathew informed.

The awardees will share a cash prize of Rs 1.5 lakh among them. The winners were announced after the shortlisted candidates were evaluated by Malayalam film actor, Mohanlal.

source: http://www.english.manoramaonline.com / On Manorama / by The Correspondent / Saturday – October 18th, 2014

Mammootty’s ‘My Tree Challenge’ a Hit Abroad, Accepted by Australian Mayor

Kochi :

The ‘My Tree Challenge’ campaign, launched by actor Mammootty recently for planting trees, has crossed the oceans and reached other continents, with an Australian mayor accepting the challenge.

Stuart Slade, Mayor of the Glenorchy City Council, has planted a gumtree at the Tolosa park in the capital of Tasmania, an  island city in Australia.

The mayor, who named the tree ‘Gandhi’ as  an honour to Mahatma Gandhi, has also challenged the mayors of Melbourne, New York, Paris and London to plant trees.

Slade thanked Mammootty for the concept, while acknowledging it as a solace to the  planet that is fast becoming polluted. He also invited Mammootty to Tasmania, and urged him to pay respect to the Gandhi tree.

The Mayor, who is an enthusiast of India and the country’s development, came to know about the My Tree Challenge from Sajini Sumar, chairperson of the Multi-cultural Women’s Council of Tasmanaia.

The My Tree Challenge, a campaign involving planting of saplings and challenging others to do so, was launched by Mammootty on August 30 – inspired by the ‘Ice Bucket Challenge’. He had asked Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan and Tamil actors Vijay and Suriya to take up the challenge.

Mammootty had also planted a tamarind tree on the premises of Grand Hyatt Hotel, Dubai.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Kerala / by Express News Service / October 21st, 2014

Dignity in design

A worker at the loom in Tasara Kozhikode. Photo: K. Ragesh / The Hindu
A worker at the loom in Tasara Kozhikode. Photo: K. Ragesh / The Hindu

Twenty five years on, Tasara continues to bring imagination, aesthetics and exclusivity to weaving

There are no signboards in sight. Tasara, Centre for Creative Weaving, is lost in the small streets of Naduvattom near Beypore, and the lack of signage is deliberate. V. Vasudevan, its chief architect, only wants the curious and the committed to reach. Yet, in the past 25 years, a steady trickle of enthusiasts has landed here from across the world to learn and take back an aging craft woven with new colours.

At Tasara Kozhikode. Photo: K. Ragesh / The Hindu
At Tasara Kozhikode. Photo: K. Ragesh / The Hindu

The first international workshop at Tasara happened in 1989. Tell Vasudevan that makes this their 25th year surviving on creative weaving, he is blasé. Milestones do not matter. Tasara is a philosophy of life for him and family. And they are believers in quiet work. On November 1 begins a month-long residential workshop, a bi-annual feature on the centre’s calendar. “We have eight candidates coming from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, South Africa and Costa Rica. Every time there would be couple of them who are brilliant. The person from Costa Rica is a textile teacher,” says Vasudevan.

The double-decker residential complex — a large house — is readying for the workshop. Vasudevan, his brother and artist Balakrishnan – the man behind the engaging tapestries, sister Santha and a few more family and a handful of non-family members make up Tasara. The aim is a community where everyone pitches in for everything. Panchali who is scrubbing floors could be found at the loom moments later. Inside, Vasudevan shows his latest piece of work. A running spread of silvery grey coarse material is taking birth on the loom. “Carpet?” I ask. “No, sofa furnishing,” he says. Weaving with wild silk sourced from Chhattisgarh is tough, says the weaver. But it is for a customised order from Scotland, he adds.

A tapestry at Tasara Kozhikode. Photo: K. Ragesh / The Hindu
A tapestry at Tasara Kozhikode. Photo: K. Ragesh / The Hindu

Tasara’s biggest tapestry at 13 metres height and two-and-a-half metre width was done for The Paul Hotel, Bangalore. “It took seven of us four months to weave. But that is the only one we did for hotels .”

A slow game

At the hallway at Tasara are piles of hand-woven material. There are large tapestries , stacks of wild silk stoles, woven table mats, elaborate floor mats, yoga mats, hand-woven shirts and bed spreads — all from the loom. The space embraces art and mundane together. “Once in a while someone comes to buy. But it will all be sold slowly,” says Vasudevan.

‘Small’ is a big word here. Growing in terms of quantity is not the focus. “It is about doing things with dignity. Everything you do is part of your personality,” he says.

Remaining small and exclusive has let Tasara live. Their creations have been exhibited in Sweden, Switzerland, Holland, Germany and the United States. “I can say that there not many countries in the world that does not have a small thing of ours,” says Vasudevan.

Handloom can survive not by mass production, but by scaling down. This was a lesson Vasudevan learnt quickly. He began like many others in the 1970s of Kozhikode with Spider Weavers when weaving went bullish. “There was an enormous market for cotton crepe in the U.S. and U.K. and production was not matching up to the demand. The weaving hub was Kannur, but it spilled over to Kozhikode and many units came up.” Weaving was simple to learn and many came to make a quick buck. The bull ride though lost steam quickly.

“When crepe cotton went out, we wove satin bed sheets with viscous fibre. It went to Delhi, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai. When washing machines took over lives, these 90-inch bed spreads woven by 12 over a day and a half, was pushed out. A machine could wash only a bed spread at a time.”

The Hindu
The Hindu

Experimentation, adaptation and innovation proved the only way. There were enough reasons to shut down, few ways to survive. “Slow production is the weak point of handloom, but it has to be converted into our strength. Limited supply will always have demand.” The way forward was in being creative and creating custom-made, exclusive products. “I realised the significance of a counter experience. Handicraft would be valued only if it is exclusive. Secondly, it has to be more aesthetic. I tried to bring in the texture of a painting onto woven textiles,” says Vasudevan.

A random mention of his weaving enterprise to a German friend in Chennai led to an order for curtains at the Max Mueller Bhavan there. The weavers experimented and the order became their statement. Handloom bordered on art and drew attention. The curtains at Max Mueller led to an offer to collaborate for an exhibition by the Alliance Francaise in Chennai. It was the metamorphosis of the commercial enterprise Spider Weavers into the cultural Tasara. Collaborating with a French artist, the men and women of Tasara created tapestries what were soon given the name “woven art.”

Max Mueller Bhavan followed suit with the proposal for an international workshop. Painters came from within and beyond to create and execute ideas. Many artists have stayed and worked here — Adimoolam, Achuthan Kudallur, Jayapala Panicker, Surya Prakash and others. Ever since, international workshops have been an annual feature at Tasara. “When creative people come together something is bound to happen,” says Vasudevan.

Workshops are Tasara’s means to never stop learning. As enthusiasts come in from world over — from an IT guy to textile academicians — new techniques and ideas emerge. “At the last workshop, we were introduced to eco printing by a participant. Teaching is the best way to be updated,” says Vasudevan. They also allow an apprenticeship of six months free of cost for those interesting in weaving. Learning continues and Tasara lives. Sustenance is through workshops and small sales. “We have happily survived; importantly work does not feel like work.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus> Fashion / Kozhikode – October 10th, 2014

Where cosmos meets cartography

Kochi :

There was a sulphury-saltiness in the air that brought the smell of the sea to Jitish Kallat, curator of 2014 Kochi Muziris Biennale, as he sat watching the holiday crowd changing shapes at Fort Kochi’s Jawahar Park.

“This facet of Kochi – its involved local people – was a huge takeaway from the last biennale. They walked in with spotless innocence, like clean canvases. Their views were free from preconceptions about contemporary art. And this gives me guidance at work,” says Kallat.

Other biennales showcase a global migratory audience. But Kochi’s local art lovers, “deeply engaged in cultural, social and political purposes”, give all of us a new reference for a prismatic reorientation of the present, he says.

For Kallat, the biennale experience which “plucked him out of the solitude of the studio and dropped into the swirling milieu” is in itself an effort to turn Kochi into a protagonist in each of the 90 works that will be put up. “Kochi will be a viewing device and not vista. As a site, she offers a special orientation and signage to reach the present. We’ve conceived the event as an observation deck hoisted to picture a version of the world. Since Kochi plays a role, ideas are going to be site-responsive and not site-specific.”

Kallat wrote different and personal letters to all artists explaining the theme of the biennale before finalizing on the list of 90 artists from across the world. “We gave them historical and cosmological pointers. If the cartographic reference was 1500 AD, the cosmological puzzle was the sense of incomprehension among us that we are living on a planet that hurtles at 1500 km/minute through space,” says Kallat.

He explains: “Two chronologically overlapping, but perhaps directly unrelated historical episodes in Kerala sparked off my earliest thought processes. The period from 14th to 17th century was a time when the Kerala school of astronomy and mathematics was making some transformative propositions for locating human existence within the wider cosmos. It was also the moment when the shores of Kochi watched the arrival of a string of navigators sailing on early winds of colonialism.”

Each of the 90 artists who accepted the invite will endeavour to create an axis of time and space. “But for Vatsan Koleri (whom Kallat calls the umbilical connect between biennale I and II), rest are all new names with 45 of them coming from different South Asian countries,” he says.

In this voyage, Kallat sees himself as a mediator incessantly conversing with the artist, site and audience. “It’s not a challenge. And challenge is a very wrong word to use as there is no confrontation. There is still an unravelling going on and my bid is to draw site lines that allow cross pollination of art works,” he says.

“There is a biology of the project that can be moved only at the risk of altering metabolism. For, a biennale is very different from a museum show which can simply follow a set and predefined structure. Biennale offers flexibility and the broad contours sketched across Kochi’s horizons for biennale II give a large frame of play,” he says.

“Curating biennale has definitely changed me but no idea how it has…. May be when I go back to the quiet of my studio, masonry of this dialogue would find expression and better articulation,” he ventures.

“We will be using all the platforms, mainly the Aspinwall campus to mount biennale II also. We are also in talks to open two local houses and workshops for the artists. Two artists have already arrived and others are expected by end November and early December,” he says.

For Kallat, the thrill of the moment is in watching the “sentence being moulded by words that are also emerging”, much like the ever-changing form of Fort Kochi crowd moving in front of his eyes like clay on a potter’s wheel.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Kochi / Manoj K Das, TNN / October 04th, 2014

Leelavathi, Achuthan Honoured

Kochi :

Authors and literary critics M Leelavathi and M Achuthan were honoured by the organisers of the Kochi International Book Festival here on Sunday. The veterans of Malayalam literature are having prolific influence on the literary circuit in Kerala.

The function was inaugurated by writer C Radhakrishnan. Sree Sankaracharya University of Sanskrit, Kalady, Vice-chancellor M C Dileepkumar, PSC chairman K S Radhakrishnan,  prof Thuravoor Vishwambharan, prof Thomas Mathew, E N Nandakumar, T Jayachandran, E M Haridas and retired judge Justice R Bhaskaran were present. ‘Sathya-dharma Darshanam Ithihasangaliil’, by Leelvathi that was published by Kurukshethra Publications, was  released on the occasion. The Kochi International Book Festival is an annual event organised by a committee comprising ministers, MLAs and other eminent personalities.  Justice V R Krishna Iyer, MPs K V Thomas and P Rajeeve are members of the organising committee of the book festival. The 18th Kochi International Book Festival will be held from November 29 to December 8.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Kerala / by Express News Service / Octobe 13th, 2014

Get ready for some space trek

Thiruvananthapuram :

Sounding rockets will sear the skies and high altitude balloons will climb new heights at Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC), coinciding with the observation of the World Space Week (WSW) – 2014 from October 4 to 10 this year.

An array of programmes will be organized for schoolchildren during the week.

The programmes planned include an essay competition for High School Students on the topic ‘Space – Guiding your Way’.

Essays can be in English, Hindi or Malayalam. Handwritten essays not exceeding 2,000 words along with a certificate from the head of institution should reach the WSW office of VSSC on or before September 26.

The envelope should be superscribed WSW-2014 Essay Competition’.

The best essay will win the GSLV gold medal.

During the week, resource persons from VSSC will visit educational institutions in Kerala to organize lecture Programmes at high schools, higher secondary schools, teachers’ training institutions and polytechnics.

Interested institutions can register online on or before September 19.

A ‘Space Quiz’ will be conducted for school students on October 4. Students of class 9 to 12 can register on or before September 24 at wswquiz@vssc.gov.in or by post. Applications shall be certified by the head of educational institution. Only one team consisting of two students from each school can participate.

Following that, an open house will be organised at VSSC space museum, which will be open to public from October 7 to 10 from 9 am to 5 pm. On production of any photo ID card, free entry passes will be issued at the Canal Gate of VSSC upon arrival.

Further information can be had on the web portal http://wsw.vssc.gov.in.

The postal address for registration is WSW-2014 office, TDAD, VSSC, Thiruvananthapuram? 695 022, Phone: 0471-2564271/4272.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Thiruvananthapuram / TNN / September 11th, 2014