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COVER STROY


War On Terror: Freedom
From Hell
War On Terror: The Alliance Sweep
Afghanistan:Who Will Rule Kabul?
Al Qaida:Targeting the Brain Pakistan: The General's Bloody Nose
India: Shifting Base

OTHER STORIES


Economy: Futile Grandstanding
Neighbours: Escape To
The West

Crime: Stolen Gods
Sports: The Homecoming
Society & Trends: Look Who's Preening
Wildlife: Changing Stripes
Cinema: Dreams Limited
Offtrack: Live and Let Live

COLUMNS


Fifth Column: Taveein Singh
American Eye: Dennis Kux
Kautilya: Jaiiram Ramesh

NEWSNOTES


Caplooks
Confessional
Tremors

 
METRO TODAY
 
Hell Over Heritage
Delhi's recent passion for preserving its old structures is proving to be a tough task. Especially in the walled city, where owners of havelis like Namak Haram ki Haveli and Ladli Devi ka Bada Mandir are resisting any kind of government interference.
More
Looking Glass
 
 
The golden forts of Jaisalmer share a special bond with Sue Carpenters, an English woman who made it her mission to save them from ruin.
NRI DIARY

London Diary
India Calling
Media: Game of Survival Development: A New Lifeline
Looking Glass
Diplomacy: Slow & Steady
Diaspora: Rising From the Roots
Business: Fall From Grace
American Roundup
Weekly Round Up
The Arts: Pin-up Icons

 
DESPATCHES

Official apathy and a rural mindset ensure that child labour continues to thrive in the cracker town of Sivakas in Tamil Nadu. INDIA TODAY Special Correspondent Arun Ram reports on the social evil in
Rolling On
 
INDIA TODAY CONCLAVE

Unfortunately, due to the conflict in Afghanistan and turmoil in the region, we have been compelled to postpone the India Today Conclave.
 
CARE TODAY
 
SPECIALS
 
INDIA TODAY HINDI
 
 
 CURRENT ISSUE NOV 26, 2001  

METROSCAPE

Pillar Instinct
FOR THE MARKET: Three little pigs and the memory pillars by Bastar artists

The Murias of Bastar, an area in Chhattisgarh roughly the size of Belgium, live secluded in their wooded uplands, sprucing up their youth dormitories with suggestive chip carvings. Their neighbours, the Maria Gonds, dance around with headgear of bison horn and make huge wooden and stone memory pillars for their dead ... the residue of an ancient monolithic culture. Now, at a show in Mumbai, four artists from the region have used their wood-carving skills to make some exciting improvisations to tradition.

   METROSCAPE
OTHER METRO STORIES

Hell Over heritage
Fitness In The Family
In Search Of Art
Dinner Belles
Metro Minutes
Show Of French

Shantibai, 40, made a 5ft 3in self-portrait (unabashedly in the nude) holding a mallet. Kabi Ram transformed pigs, an integral part of the Bastar landscape, from a diet to a deity when he made three lifesize ones and arranged them as the snorty guardians of a memory pillar temple. The pillars, a rich orgy of figures, were made by veterans Ghasu Ram and Raj Kumar in continuance with style that had been partly introduced by Mumbai sculptor Navjot Altaf for her collaborative works with these artists. Now their coming into their own. The exhibition, now showing at Sakshi Gallery, is on till November 23.

-Anshul Avijit

Lost And Found

In December last, a painting by Hemendranath Mazumdar of his wife (below) was stolen from the ancestral house of Kalyan Chowdhury in Bhanderhati, Hooghly, only to resurface mysteriously at auctioneers Bowrings earlier this month. Chowdhury immediately complained to the Delhi Police, who swiftly had the Rs 20 lakh painting withdrawn from the auction. In this connection, Prakash Kejriwal, the owner of Chitrakoot Gallery in Kolkata, which supplied the work, has been arrested. Mazumdar's seductive art, done during the first half of the last century and previously ignored by collectors, appears to be on a high.

Design Diplomacy

Somebody asked me if we're competing with FTV," French Ambassador Bernard de Montferrand said the other day. Er ... actually, we were wondering too. Once fixated on the American Embassy, Delhi's fashion fraternity has now made the French envoy's home a venue of choice. The Montferrands have hosted three designers' shows in less than two months: Suneet Varma, Ashish Soni and last week, Neelam Saxena. But French interest in Indian style goes beyond that. Next March, says the ambassador, Delhi will witness a French fashion week where "a top French couture house" will participate along with select Indian designers.

As for Saxena, after unapologetically starting two hours late, the lady ushered in a relentless explosion of sound, colour and embellishment on the ramp. Perhaps in deference to the diplomatic venue, the audience maintained a discreet silence.

-Anna M.M. Vetticad

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