
IT8217;S a blitz of Italian culture that began to hit India on Music Day, June 19, with the Delhi concert of Indian and jazz fusion music by Italian singer Francesca Cassio and her musical partner Marc Liebeskind.
Cassio has learnt dhrupad from Ustad Fahimuddin Dagar since 1995 and thumri for three years from Girija Devi of Benares.
Another fusion combo takes a multi-city tour in August when Duo Alterno of Turin8212;soprano Tiziana Scandaletti with pianist-composer Riccardo Piacentini8212;will present important early 20th century composers and a selection of texts from Rabindranath Tagore and Italian freedom poet Gabriele D8217;Annunzio. Fete de la Musique, or Music Day, was initiated in France in 1982 by the then French Minister of Culture, Jacques Lang. It flowed out of France in 1985 and is now celebrated in more than 80 countries.
In all, the Italian programme for India is solid enough to make most culture junkies smack their lips: Music, contemporary art, theatre and cinema, a re-emphasis on the Italian language, seminars, workshops, conferences, particularly the one on the first poet of the Renaissance, Petrarch and an exhibition on the links between ancient Rome and India.
Says Antonio Armellini, the new Italian ambassador to India: 8220;The cultural dimension has always played a vital role in Indo-Italian relations, not only because both countries are heirs to great ancient civilisations, but also because culture is considered by them an essential vehicle for the spreading of ideas, customs and habits, so distant and different from each other.8221;
The details are many and scrumptious, but some inter-civilisational points arise. One, the quality of exchange. India usually sends her best abroad, despite the undeserving few who swing international tours through political or bureaucratic favour. But the best of the West often stays away from India because of inadequate infrastructure.
But hopefully, stagers of Gaetano Donizetti8217;s 19th century opera The Elixir of Love, slated for November, will have demanded stage specifications beforehand and come prepared. Elixir is a comedy about a peasant Nemorino, who is in love with a landowner Adina and desperately needs a miracle to attract her attention.
Though full of fun and froth, the music, thankfully, is better than The Fakir of Benares, which is nice for tourism but not a good introduction to opera.
The point for the West, as the late music critic Dr Raghava Menon frequently lamented, is that we can do with simpler sets because we come from a classical tradition of ekaharya the solo dancer building structures in time through rhythm cycles rather than structures in space like ballet. But we8217;d like the music to be the best.
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A whole world of discovery awaits us, if the logistics don8217;t overwhelm the performance. Because our themes and temperaments are beautifully attuned
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However, Armellini is confident that Brand Italy will take well here: 8220;We think we have fine opera, which will work well in India, though we leave the big symphonies to our Germanic friends.8221;
Indeed, a whole world of joyous discovery awaits us, if the logistics don8217;t overwhelm the performance because the themes and temperaments are beautifully attuned. Sometimes in reverse, too. Our own prima assoluta Yamini Krishnamurti recalls dancing a Kuchipudi fragment of 8216;Bhama Kalapam8217; in Naples back in the 8217;70s to an appreciative audience that straightaway recognised and responded to both the operatic nature of Kuchipudi and its wilful, imperious heroine Satyabhama. 8220;I drove off into the Neapolitan night with cries of 8216;Brava!8217; and 8216;Bellissima!8217; ringing in my ears,8221; she says.
While huge Germanic orchestras may be difficult to bring here one can8217;t help thinking wistfully, though, that on June 10, Mercedes-Benz sponsored the Berlin Philharmonic8217;s recital at the Ataturk Cultural Centre in Istanbul during the music festival there, Indians will nevertheless get to hear a pianist from one of the loveliest places on the map: Sicily.
It is a pity he will play only in New Delhi, at the Nehru Memorial Centre on September 23 and not in cities such as Kolkata, Mumbai and Chennai, which have a highly responsive audience for Western classical music.
In contemporary art, Navin Kishore of Seagull Arts and Media Resources Centre in Kolkata is organising an exhibition of works from 15 artists who once gathered in a picturesque street, the Via Margutta in the heart of Rome, in the post-WW II years. They hung out in addas and swapped horror stories of going underground, jail and exile: Artists such as Amerigo Tot, Corrado Cagli, Gino Severini and Giuseppe Capogrossi, film directors such as Luchino Visconti, writers such as Franco Ferrara and Ildebrando Pizzetti.
At the local trattoria, there were separate tables earmarked for this volatile bunch of full hearts and empty pockets, who paid for their meals with sketches or canvases or by painting on the walls.
Another night, Pablo Picasso came to dinner at film director Luchino Visconti8217;s. Out of that visit was born a vivid portrait of the city with a bright sword depicting Via Margutta. A young Sicilian musician, Franco Mannino, played the piano in the background and went on to compose the soundtracks for many of Visconti8217;s films.
As they wandered about the warm Roman nights, somebody would declaim from Homer8217;s Odyssey, somebody else would add or amend sometimes it was writer Alberto Moravia, snapping out of a creative sulk. And finally, they would tumble starving into the studio of artist Amerigo Tot, who served them goulash in small terracotta cups.
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Kolkata, Delhi, Mumbai and Trivandrum will also get to see six films of Vittorio Gassman
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In this group was a young woman, Eva Fisher, who painted bright pictures of Roman markets and told all these stories, besides acquiring a number of works by her friends. The Kolkata exhibition of the Via Margutta group will come from her collection.
8220;We have a huge resource of books, music and 4,000 films, and we keep doing cultural events. Upstairs in our building, we have a lovely space about 2,500 square feet, like a five-room flat, with AC and wooden floors, which we use as a gallery,8221; says Kishore, who saved the Kolkata library of the Max Mueller Bhavan from a nationwide shutdown of MMB libraries and moved it to his arts center this year. 8220;When the Italians got in touch, I figured the Via Margutta would come there.8221;
Further, residents of Kolkata, Delhi, Mumbai and Trivandrum will get to see six films of that much-admired actor Vittorio Gassman, no stranger to the mad messiahs who ardently watched masters of Italian cinema amidst power cuts and dust storms in cobwebby film clubs.
Discovering the Italians on home turf promises to be fun. And perhaps they too will make discoveries about us because culture is famously 8220;an instrument for reciprocal comprehension8221;.
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SEASON OF SPLENDOUR
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A ready reckoner of Italy in India in the next six months: Music, contemporary art, theatre and cinema
8226; Singer-pianist concert of early 20th century songs from Tagore and D8217;Annunzio: August 26, Delhi; August 28, Chennai; August 31, Bangalore 8226; Exhibition on ancient Rome and India: August 16-31, Delhi 8226; Exhibition of works by 8216;50s Via Margutta Group, Rome: September, Kolkata 8226; Concert by pianist Christian Leotta: September, Delhi 8226; Workshop on restoration techniques with INTACH: October, Delhi 8226; International conference on Petrarch for the first Renaissance poet8217;s 700th jayanti: October 14-16, Jadavpur University, Kolkata 8226; Seminar on Italian Orientalist Indo-Tibetan studies Giuseppe Tucci: October 18-23, Delhi 8226; Conference on playwright and director Edoardo Erba: October, Delhi 8226; Italian opera, The Elixir of Love: November, Mumbai and Delhi 8226; Commedia dell8217;Arte workshops and shows: November, Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Hyderabad and Pondicherry 8226; Festival of films of actor Vittorio Gassman: November, Kolkata; December, Delhi, Mumbai, Trivandrum 8226; Exhibition of paintings, collages and installations by contemporary Venetian artist Igor Lecic: December, Delhi |
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