In Mumbai recently, the team of Japanese film One Cut from the Dead spoke of how their low-budget project became a surprise top-grosser
Installed at the gallery of Delhi’s Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts, the work, titled Conceived Mirror, is nudging visitors to delve deeper into present realities just as the works of 17 other artists who feature in the exhibition titled “Voiceover”.
Noted writer-illustrator Gavin Bishop on making picture books for children, illustrating the history of New Zealand, and why Maori legends are important
An exhibition explores if India’s queer community has actually benefitted from their new-found legal freedom
At a sold-out concert in the Capital last week, tabla maestro Zakir Hussain proved why he is still the master of percussion
Two cricketers made us cringe. Don’t read more into it
Actors Vicky Kaushal and Yami Gautam share insights into the making of Uri: The Surgical Strike
Delhi-based artist Roy Thomas was always curious to bring together his work alongside Western masters who were his inspiration. “I would always wonder what was Raja Ravi Varma thinking when he took inspiration from the West to produce these painting with Indian themes,” says Thomas.
Produced by the team at Migration and Asylum Project (MAP), a Delhi-based refugee law centre that works for forced migrants and refugees, it takes us through the different stages that asylum seekers encounter in search for a new life.
As it turns 97, Sabyasachi Mukherjee of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya, talks about how Mumbai’s largest museum has stayed relevant
Historian Swapna Liddle’s latest book maps the making of Connaught Place, the colonial capital of New Delhi.
Taking forward the legacy of Bengal’s crafts, artist Sharmila Sen presents works that have stories to tell
Gaa Re Maa celebrates differences between the old and the new, using music as a tool
Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who was the chief guest, gave away the prizes to 29 winners across 18 categories from print and broadcast journalism.
“We used to engrave it with hangul horns and ivory, but today we use the horns of the sheep. My grandfather would make beautiful floral designs out of ivory," says Ghulam Muhammad Zaz.
In Roopa Pai’s guide to the ancient texts, she takes us to the forest labs of the past, to thinkers and philosophers, who contemplated the universe and reflected on the Vedas.
Donisha Prendergast, on her grandfather Bob Marley, the many definitions of the Rastafari and its music that calls people to action
In this exhibition, Santosh Kumar Das portrays Krishna as a flute player, a musician, a dancer and a god holding a mountain on his finger tip in his Krishna series, many of which form the crux of over 40 works on display.
The first edition of the English Hans, priced at Rs 100, has 13 stories culled from the first year of its relaunch in 1986 till 1991. The next edition will take on the best work from the next five years, and so on.
The Ministry of Textiles organised ‘Artisan Speak’ on Saturday, an event to showcase India’s textiles and honour the people behind the loom.
Ashwath Bhatt has dealt with his own share of conflict. He was a teenager in 1990 when his family fled Kashmir after threats of violence. He seldom visits Jammu, where his family sought shelter and were denied after escaping the valley.
The second season is written by Charudutt Acharya, who also penned season 1. The first season was a fairly insular story. It centred around a character and her husband, their child and two potential lovers.
In 2012, actor Manisha Koirala was presented with a death sentence: stage three ovarian cancer. In her memoir, she traces the journey of her long battle to survive
Eight Bangladeshi artists submerge themselves into their country’s tumultuous history, universal repercussions of war, and inclusivity of art
Playwright Rahul Seth on writing about survivors of violence, returning to the stage after 30 years in corporate America, and his new theatre company.


