Sunday, November 25, 2007

Kathakali @ Rasa


[ Here's my Web Album of the event]








Kathakali performance by the internationally acclaimed artiste Kottakkal Sasidharan Nair, of Darpana Academy of Performing Arts, Ahmedabad. He performed 2 stunning pieces of this great, difficult to perform, rigorous dance-drama craft. One piece of the performance here included evincing of all the NavaRasa.

Nava
means "Nine" and Rasa is often translated as "mood", "emotion", "expression" or "sentiment". The Navarasa, in the dance scriptures refer to the nine expressions that humans often show. These are love (shringaara), laughter (haasya), kind-heartedness or compassion (karuna), anger (roudra), courage (veera), fear (bhayaanaka), disgust (beebhatsa), wonder or surprise (adbhutha) and peace or tranquility (shaantha).

It was staged as part of an evening of music and dance at Rasa Restaurant, Holiday Inn, King's Cross, London. During this trip to UK, he has been invited to perform at some of the universities and cultural forums. Though I was expecting to see a performance with the ealborate and appealing constumes of Kathakali, it was not to be. When I queried about it to the artist, he informed that, Unfortunately,travelling with the full costume is so unaffordably costly for the poor artists, as are the costumes for different characters which were being performed. Therefore it isn't practical to have those while travelling unless there are sponsors for it.

{ Sasidharan Nair sought Kathakali training in Kottakkal, Kerala, under the famous artist Kottakkal Krishnankutty Nair. Subsequently, he received training in Bharatanatyam and Kuchipudi from the world renowned Dr. Mrinalini Sarabhai, Founder-Director of Darpana Academy of Performing Arts, Ahmedabad. He also learned Koodiyattam under Kalamandalam Narayana Chakiyar. He has been a teacher, resident artist and member of faculty of Darpana Academy since 1973.
An interview with the artist-- http://narthaki.com/info/intervw/intrvw96.html
His website-- http://kottakkalsasidharan.com/
}

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Thursday, November 08, 2007

Peeking at a Peacock Thru the Lens..



Strutting its Stuff.. Those were beautiful moments which were lingering in memory for a long time, because of the kind of interaction..with this peacock. I crouched with camera in position to catch its eye-level shots.. and stayed put for 10-15minutes and waited for it to come from 5-10meters away and let it move free, without moving my feet and just turning the torso slightly for the angle. May be because of that it felt confident, It came so close and started looking at its reflection from the lense and almost pecked on it.. At that moment I tried to remain as still as possible, regulating the breathing to smoothen it out, trying to reign in the excitement..















The Effects of Light falling at different angles and intensity on the feathers and the change in the iridescence is interesting ..


Monday, November 05, 2007

The KICK of English Premier League Football..


The thrill of the best of football.. that I've ever seen Live..well, in flush and blood.. with a capacity ~42k crowd at Chelsea's home stadium this weekend..

Chelsea routed Manchester City 6-0, though ManC have been playing better football this season in 10matches so far, and been in the top 3 of the Premier League and Chelsea hadn't got into top-6. Though pretty much 1-sided, and that fight-'kick' missing, it was top suprisingly top-quality fast-paced deadly-precision football, the best this year from the stinkingly-filthy-filthy-rich Abramovich's Chelsea. With fanatic English crowd, thoughts would also cross your mind, of football hooliganism. Not difficult to understand why these could be their breeding grounds, observing some of the reaction at the stands for the visiting team's supporters, even though in this set up they were just 10% in a corner next to our stands. ( 4 of my Brit work-colleagues also came with free ticket offer from a client.)

To watch the likes of Didier Drogba and even Andriy Shevchenko scoring in deadly style, with deafening din of cult-home-crowd was a treat to the senses!.

Being there, I have a feeling, convinced rather, to thousands of people, it can be acting as a therapy as well!!..
Well, unless your side loses often ;)

Your hair would stand up each time you stood up with the crowd, to take in the action when you could smell the goals coming with the passes.
Before you realise, you are hollering, fisting and rooting with the crowd!

Whatta KICK!!

Saturday, November 03, 2007

The 5300km Mediterranean Road Trip :Thru France,Monaco,Italy,Swiss

 Alpine Ibex @ Aosta. Seen while trekking in Gran Paradiso National Park(Parco Nazionale del Gran Paradiso, as they call it), Valle d'Aosta (near Monte Bianco/Mont Blanc), close to Italy-France border.


The Vitruvian Man
wood sculpture outside
 Leonardo da Vinci museum
@ Vinci, Tuscany, Italy

Trip Summary:

Duration : 11 days from the 5th-15th of April '07
Distance covered : 3350+ miles (~ 5375 kms)
Road Trippers : Rahul, Sahina, their 5-year old kid Prithvi, and Yours Truly.
Trip Steed : '98 BMW E36 323i
Countries driven through : England, France, Monaco, Italy, Switzerland


Route Maps >>

Day1
| Day2 | Day3-4 | Day5 | Day6 | Day7-8-9 | Day10 |
Day11 [Dijon-Calais-{ChannelFerry}-Dover-London] >>





[..Below..Driving through Millau Viaduct (Southern France),the tallest vehicular bridge in the world, with one mast's summit at 343 metres (1,125 ft) — slightly taller than the Eiffel Tower.]


The following text is in Rahul's words. Photos and captions/descriptions from yours truly:

Coolest moment
1. Using a Porsche 911 Turbo and a Corvette V8 as pace cars at 135mph average on the stretch between Dijon & Reims in France. At one point I glanced at the speedo and got psyched seeing 145mph (~230+ kmph). Eased off and decided that I wouldnt cross 140mph. After about 10 minutes, the 911 eased off and I overtook him by maintai
ning my speed (~135mph). While passing the 911, I stole a glance to see who was driving and whether it was a left or a right hand drive. The guy got cheesed off with my cheeky move and zoomed past me. The ease and oomph with which he overtook at 135mph was like how I would overtake at say 80mph!!!

Hairy moments
1. nearing the end of the petrol tank on Easter sunday (8 April) and finding all petrol bunks closed in the french country side. With less than 2 litres left in the tank, managed to locate a pump in Castellane using the GPS, only to find that they didnt accept Euro currency and UK cards. Then got friendly with a french biker and filled up using his French credit card and paid him cash!!!

2. following a car into a restricted zone in St Tropez without knowing it was a restricted zone. Realized it was a restricted zone when the bollard came up and banged the car from below.
< http://www.barriers andbollards. com/Automatic_ Retractable_ Bollards. htm>
fortunately it hit the outer edge of the rear bumper. a metre and a half earlier and i would probably have lost my drive shaft and/ or differential! !!!

Impressed by:
1. The AutoStrada joining Nice with Genoa - It is one loooong stretch of tunnels and bridges across mountains and valleys. The road goes through 1km tunnel and then a 1km bridge and then a 1km tunnel and then a bridge and so on and so on forever!!!!

2. the 11km tunnel through Mont Bianco (Mont Blanc) - It is one STRAIGHT tunnel through the mountain on the border between Italy & France. Mont Bianco, I hear, is the tallest mountain in this part of the world.


3. The cities of Siena, Perugia and Nice -
Siena - In the main city vehicles other than cop cars and taxis are not allowed. The philosophy is that its for the people to live, not for cars to pollute. To add to the whole experience, we met an old Italian dude, who used to run an italian restaurant in Chelsea. he gave us the history of Siena and walked us through the best route possible into the square. Historically Siena and Florence have been at loggerheads with each other, trying to be the centre of renaissance. Fantastic!!! BTW, Siena hosts a horse race called Palio. (Now you know from where Fiat gets its inspiration,
for its cars in India)
Da Vinci on the street. 'Chalk-n-Charcoal on Concrete' version of Oil-on-Canvas. Street scene from Siena. The artist on the pavement, doing Leonardo da Vinci's 15th century oil painting, Virgin of the Rocks/Madonna of the Rocks, depicting infant Jesus.

Perugia
- This is a bit of an odd ball town. There is a section of the town which is in the underground ruins of an old fort. Windowless yet swanky shops on either sides of a dark underground passage. Jazz is very big in this part of the world. I walked into a Jazz CD shop. It had this narrow door and steep dark steps leading down into an underground "nothing". I asked the storeowner where it led and he said it led to an ancient wine cellar which used to be a truscan temple before it became a wine cellar!!!

Old town in Nice - This felt a bit like the Jew town in Fort Cochin with spice vendors and fresh antique sellers!!! the promenade in Nice was like the Marine drive in Mumbai except there were topless sun bathers here. Me and prithvi spent time on the beach while Sahina & Sujith unsuccessfully tried to break into a Matisse museum ;-) The Socca we had from Socca Nisso was fantastic (and cheap).
"Le Blues fenêtre"
The Window "Blues"!;)
Antibes, Côte d'Azur / French Riviera.
I thought "Blues" was the mood!.. with the dark inside window and kind of dilapidated surrounding suggestive of it as well.
Sort of Melancholic looking lady in a reverie.. with a dress matching the "Azure" window,
.. a frame in stark contrast with the associated luxury, gaiety, frolic.. that its name generally seems to suggest.. of Côte d'Azur/French Riviera.
This was a sneaked-in shot from the street.. Had to very quickly and subtly click before she would become aware of my presence- which she did and left..
so didn't get in focus..

4. Idyllic isle of "Isola Polvese" in Lago Trasimeno with no roads and its
olive gardens
..
..
If I were to do it again, what would I do different?
Spend less time on the french riviera and more time in Italy. Dont get me wrong, the Riviera is cool. After all its where the rich go to hang out and let it all hang out. Yacht mooring charges at St Tropez harbour is apptly in the region of Euro 90,000 a week during peak season!!! the average yatch is double the size of a 3 bed house. You can see more Ferraris in front of the Monte Carlo Casino in half an hour than you would see in London in a month!!

But Italy... Italy has a raw charm. People are friendlier, food is nicer
(spicier?) and the landscape is amazing. Driving in Italy can be "interesting" . Lonely Bible suggests touring Italy on a bike and having seen the roads there, it is a FANTASTIC suggestion. The day (Friday the 13th of April) we drove from Tuscany to Cogne (in the alps) through Turin, the change in landscape was dramatic. From rolling hills, floral fields and olive gardens in Tuscany to the farmed planes around Turin to the snow covered Alps and pine trees in Cogne. Italy also has good beaches and dramatic cliff side drives along the coast, volcanoes, history, Mafia infested towns, Ferraris, Lamborghinis, Alfa Romeos, Maseratis and Valentino Rossi!!!

Italy has it all. A bit like India, in some respects.... :-)



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