Cultural entrepreneur Magnus Renfrew on the changing landscape of the Asia-Pacific art market and how social media is impacting the way art is consumed
They arrive in national parks in noisy contraptions called Gypsys, point what looks like guns and phones at the big cats and are noisier than a troop of langurs
A few months ago he was in hospital in a critical condition. Now, designer Rohit Bal is back where he belongs — amongst artisans. He talks about originality, corporatisation of fashion, the Met Gala and AI
Schools are hubs that can bring us together for a collective action where children can help us grow up and become a more ecologically conscious and just society
As they have no pharmacies, animals and birds turn to mother nature’s own great resources: leaves, roots, soils and insects with medicinal properties
Written by his daughter Amal Allana, Ebrahim Alkazi: Holding Time Captive marks the centenary of Alkazi and outlines the times that shaped him
Wealth can be lost or stolen but it's our actions, compassion and gratitude that stay with us for posterity
In the making for more than a year, the exhibition pays tribute to the artist who passed away in January, at age 79
Lead actors Kani Kusruti and Divyaprabha on the Payal Kapadia-directorial All We Imagine As Light, how it became the first Indian film in 30 years to reach the Cannes film festival and the experience that prepared them for the shoot.
Padma Shri-winning Punjabi poet Surjit Patar, who passed away last week, will be remembered for his metaphors that spoke a thousand words and verse that took a nosedive into Punjab's pain and passions with equal felicity
There are single moms, single dads, foster moms, and joint families, as well as gloriously irresponsible parents
Nearly half a century after Shyam Benegal’s Manthan released, its freshly restored print will be shown at Cannes this month and in Indian theatres later.
As a new season of the globally-acclaimed Regency-era romance Bridgerton arrives next week and the spotlight shifts to its onlooker-outsider protagonist, a look at the perks of being a wallflower.
As the romantic spotlight shifts to Colin and Penelope in Season 3 of Bridgerton, actors Nicola Coughlan and Luke Newton talk about their friendship and on-screen transformation.
TV Santhosh’s works, on display in Ernakulam, Kerala, seek to question our understanding of our surroundings and ask who the real enemy is
Predators and their victims attach more survival value to working together than to going solo
Somalkar’s debut Marathi language film Sthal, which opened the HFF 2024, shows the helplessness of a woman trying to fit in the ideal bride frame of society. The movie first premiered at the Toronto Film Festival in 2023, where it won the prestigious NETPAC award
Starring Rahul Bose, Aparshakti Khurana and Ishwak Singh, Berlin is set in ’90s Delhi, during the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The Delonix regia, to give it its scientific name, is a native of Madagascar, and even though it is now widely distributed across the tropics and subtropics, it was not known outside of Madagascar till about 200 years ago
In an exhibition that is on till May 18 at the India International Centre in Delhi, The Raza Foundation has brought together works of over 25 artists to celebrate Gond Qalam in its traditional form and the contemporary interventions that have influenced it over the decades
Raghu Rai, India's first Magnum photographer, on his ongoing exhibition in Delhi, finding magic in the ordinary and exploring life through his lens.
Writer Moin Beg on how the world of Lahore’s courtesans and their crucial role in the Independence struggle led him to write the story of Heeramandi and the two decades it took before Sanjay Leela Bhansali brought it to life.
The 10-day festival will premiere about 40 feature films, including Jayant Somalkar's Marathi-language film Sthal and Atul Sabharwal’s spy drama, Berlin (2023)
The big takeaway from teaching your children how to behave with empathy and kindness around animals is how they hopefully will behave around people too. And that’s a win-win all the way
The book is an attempt to recover the strength of Rushdie, the person, occluded by Rushdie, the targeted writer


