India Today Group Online
 


July 02, 2001
Issue



COVER
   

The Luckies
The Labelled, Urban, Chilled, Kicked-with-life Indians are here. The most fortunate ever if only for the choices before it, this generation is glib, global, cocky and informed-and chases success with an awesome spending power.

 

 
STATES
   

Wages Of Peace
The Centre's decision to extend its cease-fire with the NSCN(I-M)
to three other north-east states leads to large-scale violence
in Manipur.


Man Of Letters
Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik's skill with the quill has the PMO busy acknowledging his missives. And on occasion agreeing to his demands.

 

 
NEIGHBOURS
 

Civil Lines
Pervez Musharraf's assuming the office of President is being seen as a bid to legitimise his position. A look at what this means in the context of his India visit.

 

 
DIPLOMACY
 

Peace In Pipeline
India wants to put on Iran the onus of ensuring safe transit of gas.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
  Home  
 

METROSCAPE

New Beginning

Neither the tormented Priya Kapoor in Saans nor the petulant Ketaki in Khandaan could ever comprehend Neena Gupta's bohemian living or exhibit her flair for production and direction of small screen serials. After many years and over 40 dramas, including the TRP-hogging Saans, Siski and Palchin, Gupta is back where she began-in Hindi films.

She is now the director of a "contemporary love story" produced by Pantaloon Films (of the Hrithik Roshan-Esha Deol starrer Tum Jaane Na Hum). The theme, she says, is about what she knows best-women. "They're fascinating. I find women are always nasty to other women... I've always had the maximum trouble with them!" Currently absorbed with two soaps she plans to produce for Doordarshan and Star, Gupta's keeping mum about the film's storyline: "It is difficult to deliver a classy and commercially viable product."

Hasn't Indian cinema always thrived on this premise?

Glint Conscious

First, for some figures. India is the largest consumer of gold (in any form), touching 855 tonnes per annum. The US comes in a distant second with 350 tonnes. So how do you make sure the rest of the world catches up? The World Gold Council's figured out a way: an annual India-specific jewellery design contest called Swarnanjali that will move away from the chunky pieces Indians associate with gold to more lightweight options for the global market. Last year's winners were egged on to do just that when the organisers incorporated two new categories, men's accessories and a "casuals" line.

NECK TO NECK: Swarnanjali's winning designs

Last week, Kolkata jewellery house PC Chandra put the last year's 36 winning designs on the ramp with a fashion show-another promotional. "Gold jewellery isn't only about wedding wear," says WGC's manager (East) Manos Mukherjee. "We should start looking at low-carat designs that most other countries prefer." Especially now, when Swarnanjali winners also get a shot at the WGC's international contest, Gold Virtuosi. Last year, five of the 36 Indian designs won honours. Taking a cue from all this, PC Chandra plans to go funky too. "We want to tell people you can wear gold in a trendy way," says director Suvro Chandra. "After all, gold never goes out of fashion."

PURPOSE OF BEAUTY: When beauty expert Blossom Kocchar and South African model Shelley Pearce (left) co-hosted a workshop in Delhi last week, it wasn't just make-up tips people had gathered to hear about. It was the announcement that the QCGirl International Model Hunt, a contest with a first prize valued at $35,000 and contestants from 33 countries, is being extended to include India this year where the world finals will be held. Variety is the spice they claim for their own: each contestant can present their own 60-second routine in the clothes and music of their choice. The only qualification is that a participant must be between 17 and 30 years. To win the finals in October, she would need "character and personality", says judge-to-be Pearce. Let the preening begin.

Private Goes Public

Paintings by Mesquita

The Bodied Self, an exhibition of 12 works by artists Jehangir Jani, Anju Dodiya and Theodore Mesquita offered three diverse, enticing interpretations of a social conundrum-separating private desires from the necessities of social mores.

The artists at Sans Tache; Jani and Dodiya (right)

The selection of watercolours, curated by critic-poet Ranjit Hoskote at Mumbai's Sans Tache Art Gallery, was inaugurated last weekend. Good thing, too: people had a day off to decipher Dodiya's "Pillory", for example, which, inspired by medieval European history, displayed both the royal influence and the brute force of the period. Sculptor-installation artist Jani stayed closer home with his Kalighat-inspired works of colour-drenched man and animal, both of whom remain heroic and vulnerable in their nakedness. Out-of-towner Mesquita (he lives in Panjim, the other two are Mumbaikars) gathered his thoughts from the German art nouveau (Jugenstil) period; in Later day saints, he uncovers the "half truth of dreams and fears" that plague the individual, delving into a culture he feels is no longer defined.

The exhibition, which Hoskote describes as "intimate" (he had Jani in mind here) is on till July 14. Till then, try defining the undefined.


 
 
 



     METRO TODAY
 
   

MetroScape

City Of Sins
If you missed the ambitious take on the world's select metros called "Century City" at the swank Tate Modern in London, an exhibition in Mumbai will fill that gap just a bit.
more...

Looking Glass

Delhi Play:
Back to the Convent

Delhi Decorative Art: D'addomio

Kolkata Restaurant: Thai Tonight

 

 
    Web Exclusives
DESPATCHES
 

A Hare Krishna cult member's spiritual quest meets with a rude end. But he isn't the only one on trial. The credibility of the Orissa police is equally at stake, writes INDIA TODAY's Special Correspondent Ruben Banerjee in
Sleaze And Salvation

 

 
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