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A space for lesser-known modernists, women artists

Even as the fair has successfully grown its year-round presence over the past year, much beyond the 4-day event, Asokan says that their digital platforms have grown to become the go-to source for Indian and South Asian art and culture…writes Sukant Deepak

Alongside modern masters, the 2023 fair will bring forth works of several lesser-known modernists, women artists, folk art forms, and young trailblazing artists from previously unexplored parts of the country, including the fair facade which will be transformed into an artwork by contemporary Warli artists and sibling duo, the Vayeda Brothers.

Aiming to drive the conversation towards a more inclusive art world of the future, the fair will host a talks programme titled ‘Align & Disrupt’ curated by Shaleen Wadhwana to deep-dive into essential questions, from representation, philanthropy, patronage, disability, and sustainability.

“For the first time, the key learnings from the talks will be documented in an action plan which will be widely circulated and made accessible to the public,” India Art Fair Director Jaya Asokan tells.

Artworld heavyweights from the likes of Anish Kapoor, JR, Osvaldo Gonzalez and Kiki Smith at Galleria Continua’s booth, standout installations by international artists Anne Samat, Antonio Santin and Diana Al-Hadid at Marc Strauss and Galerie Isa’s booths respectively, as well as established household names in India from Raja Ravi Varma, Amrita Shergil and M.F. Husain to the works of superstar artists Bharti Kher, Dayanita Singh and Nikhil Chopra will be witnessed at fair.

Stressing that 2023 is a year for great art, starting with India Art Fair and Mumbai Gallery Weekend which kick off the season, followed by Dhaka Art Summit and Photo Kathmandu Chennai Photo Biennale and Serendipity Art Festival in Goa which open later in the year, Asokan assures that despite the growing number of Corona cases, she is confident at this stage that the event will be held in February in Delhi.

“We will implement strict sanitary measures and guidelines outlined by the government to ensure the health and safety of everyone coming to the fair.”

Even as the fair has successfully grown its year-round presence over the past year, much beyond the 4-day event, Asokan says that their digital platforms have grown to become the go-to source for Indian and South Asian art and culture.

“Our website is a rich repository of editorial features, films, and interviews, as well as means to get to know about the latest jobs, open calls, residencies and opportunities in the art world which are listed under the Noticeboard, as well as a guide to South Asian art exhibitions and events happening in India and globally. We have also actively expanded our programming, by supporting projects and participating in events such as Kochi Muziris Biennale, Serendipity Art Festival, Delhi Art Week, Delhi Contemporary Art Week, Mumbai Gallery Weekend, and Madras Art Weekend, all while continuing to forge cultural dialogue and drive the international conversation on Indian art.”

The 2023 fair has several new initiatives, from an expanded floorspace, with three large exhibition halls dedicated to galleries representing a breadth of established and emerging talent, including returning and new galleries.

“An extended studio space will showcase digital projects and artworks including those by the fair’s first-ever Digital Artist in Residence (DAIR), Mira Malhotra, Gaurav Ogale and Varun Desai, as well as digital art workshops curated by Today at Apple. The all-new India Art Fair poster zine titled Fire in the Belly featuring eight extraordinary woman artists and creative powerhouses, each presenting a vision for a more equal world will also be launched,” she says.

Asokan, who has worked in the fields of arts, fashion, design, and luxury says that while art is at the heart of the fair, and whether it’s the latest in fashion, design, luxury, technology, or any other creative field, their attempt has always been to bring all of these together at the art fair, in some capacity or the other.

“A partnership that we are extremely proud of is BMW India. At the 2023 fair, we look forward to unveiling the new X7 covered in the winning design by Bangalore-based painter and my personal favourite, Devika Sundar.”

She adds that works by India Art Fair’s Artists in Residence — young and rising artists who are experiencing serious career momentum — too are unmissable, be it conceptual artist and feminist Lakshmi Madhavan’s textile installations which pay ode to the dying tradition and makers of the traditional gold-and-white Kasavu textiles of Kerala.

“Varanasi-based Debashish Paul will engage audiences in a thought-provoking performance art piece expressing his innermost joys and fears as a queer artist or the Warli artists and sibling duo who will transform the facade of India Art Fair into the ‘Forest of The Future’,” she concludes.

ALSO READ: How Hindi films are losing ground to South India?

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Arab News Lite Blogs

Delhi HC refuses to stay airing of Netflix series ‘Trial By Fire’

Earlier, the court reserved its ruling on a petition filed by real estate magnate Sushil Ansal seeking a temporary halt to the streaming of the series, expected to be launched on January 13…reports Asian Lite News

The Delhi High Court on Thursday refused to stay the release of the upcoming Netflix series “Trial By Fire”, which is based on the 1997 Uphaar Cinema fire tragedy.

Earlier, the court reserved its ruling on a petition filed by real estate magnate Sushil Ansal seeking a temporary halt to the streaming of the series, expected to be launched on January 13.

A single-bench judge of Justice Yashwant Varma was dealing with the case seeking interim relief.

Ansal had filed a suit seeking permanent and mandatory injunction against the series and a restraint of further publication and circulation of the book titled “Trial By Fire – The tragic tale of the Uphaar Tragedy” by Neelam and Shekhar Krishnamoorthy, who lost their two young children in the 1997 catastrophe.

In November 2021, a Delhi court sentenced Gopal Ansal and his brother Sushil Ansal to seven years in prison each for tampering with evidence. However, the sessions court lowered it to the already completed period in July of last year, and thus they were released after serving little over eight months of the total sentence.

Delhi High Court. (File Photo: IANS)

Neelam Krishnamoorthy also serves as the chairperson of the Association of the Victims of the Uphaar Tragedy, which has fought long and hard for justice against the Ansals.

Representing Ansal, senior advocate Siddharth Aggarwal had stated that Ansal’s real name is used three times in the trailer, hurting his reputation and other rights, despite the series’ warning that it is a piece of fiction.

In response, Justice Varma had said: “This may be their critique of their judgment and anguish of the parents, but it cannot be a claim for defamation.”

Ansal’s counsel also said: “Today the only glimpse we have into what’s going to be released is the book which makes it clear that I’ve gotten away scot free.

“What we have today is more than a prima facie basis to make an allegation that the movie is going to be a mischaracterisation of me, the process and judgments.”

Senior advocate Rajiv Nayar appearing for Netflix had submitted: “On September 19, 2016 the book was released. On December 18, 2019, there are news reports that a web series is going to be created. On November 8, 2021, the plaintiff was sentenced to 7 years with Rs 2.25 crore fine, widely reported by the media.

“There is an appeal in the sessions court and in July, conviction is upheld but reduces the sentence for the period already undergone. This is all in the public domain. But what’s more significant is the date of December 14, 2022 where we announce that we’re going to have web series from January 13. On December 14, our intention to screen it on January 13 is shown to the press. And this plaintiff knocks on the door at the last minute.”

Senior advocate Vikas Pahwa had argued on behalf of Krishnamoorthy that Ansal was previously aware of the book’s publishing because it was mentioned in a 2012 plea presented to the Supreme Court.

Responding to this, Nayar had argued: “I have to interject. I didn’t know about this. A gentleman who tampers with evidence, who was convicted for section 304A, should now be convicted for perjury? Complete misrepresentation of fact.”

Ansal has contended that the publication of the contested series will further harm him and will constitute a major violation of his fundamental rights, particularly his right to privacy.

He also claimed in the lawsuit that he had apologised to the victims’ families in front of the Supreme Court and expressed regret for the terrible incident.

Additionally, he claims that after learning that the contested series is based on the contested book, he purchased a copy of it and was shocked to find that it contained a one-sided narration of the unfortunate incident.

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Lite Blogs

Smart healthcare to prevent airborne diseases

At a time when state-of-the-art smart technologies are turning out smart healthcare products on a regular basis, there are devices to be picked out and choices to be made, a report by Pankaj Balwani

There is no escaping outdoor pollution. Especially for people living in a country that has been repeatedly ranked as one of the most polluted in the world in recent years. Not only during winters and the infamous smog in its metro cities, through all seasons, and in fact right through the year and in most parts of the country, people are continuously and directly exposed to some of the most harmful air pollutants present in the environment. As a result and it is no surprise that people are perpetually susceptible to a range of airway conditions including asthma, COPD, emphysema, bronchiectasis, and cystic fibrosis.

However, people don’t need to continue to suffer. At a time when state-of-the-art smart technologies are turning out smart healthcare products on a regular basis, there are devices to be picked out and choices to be made.

Airway diseases affect the tubes

While each airway disease is different in nature, implications, and the treatment regimen required for it, they all have some common symptoms. However, most notably, they typically involve and affect the tubes or airways that carry oxygen and other gases into and out of the lungs.(1) These diseases usually occur as a result of the narrowing or obstructing of the airways which in turn leads to airflow limitation, airway inflammation, and even hyperresponsiveness of the airways.(2)

Pollution causes as well as aggravates airway diseases

There is enough research available to show that air pollution doesn’t only induce the onset but also exacerbates airway diseases which may lead to an increase in respiratory morbidity and in some cases even respiratory mortality. Air pollutants such as particulate matter (PM) and ozone along with biological pathogens such as viruses and bacteria can enter the airway and through it reach the bloodstream posing a mortal threat to the life of the person. So, while air pollution has been known to induce the onset of asthma, it aggravates the conditions of COPD and bronchiectasis patients.(3)

The enormous burden of airway diseases

According to an estimate by Lancet, India has over 9 crore people who suffer from obstructive airway diseases today.(4) According to another survey, of the total global disability-adjusted life years or DALYs due to chronic respiratory diseases in 2016, a whopping 32% had occurred in India.(5) In another disturbing statistic, while India has 12% of the global asthma burden, a shockingly disproportionate 42% of asthma deaths in the world occur in the country.(6)

Modern smart devices ward off and contain the airway diseases

Keeping in mind the inevitability of the pollution that we all have to face particularly in terms of obstructing airways and the resultant conditions, there are sophisticated devices available today that address issues directly related to the airways. For instance, there is a first-of-its-kind vitalizer device, essentially a processor that employs a patent-protected process – replicating the natural principle of photosynthesis – and transforms the low-energy and polluted ambient atmosphere into clean, high-energy breathing air. The device releases air which is highly charged with oxygen molecules in its simplest and highly reactive ionic form something which our body is able to absorb in no time. With just 20-30 minutes of a breathing session, not only does the blockage of airways gets resolved instantly, the body gets replenished with a fresh and ample amount of oxygen or energy.

Furthermore, given the connection between obstruction or clearing of air passage and the strength of our respiratory muscles, there is another smart respiratory muscle training device that seeks to strengthen our respiratory muscles. Similar to how we train the regular upper and lower limb muscles in the gym, the device using resistance wheels exposes the diaphragm and other breathing muscles to adjustable but restricted airflow which effectively gives resistance training to the breathing muscles and thereby strengthens them.

Then there is a range of other devices fixing airway issues including endotracheal tube and laryngeal mask airways (LMAs) Positive Expiratory Pressure (PEP) devices to High-Frequency Chest Wall Oscillation (HFCWO) and Oral High-Frequency Oscillation (OHFO) devices to Intrapulmonary Percussive Ventilation (IPV) devices. Given the connection between airway disorders and cardio-pulmonary conditions, there is a device that even helps with the constant monitoring of cardiac arrhythmias, an extremely dangerous heart condition.

Therefore, if we can’t avoid pollution, we can definitely alleviate its ill effects. And since most of these devices are ‘smart’ and networked offering personalized assistance, we could become smart users!

(1) https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000066.htm

(2) https://erj.ersjournals.com/content/28/2/264

(30 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4740163/; https://erj.ersjournals.com/content/52/1/1702557

(4) https://health.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/industry/spreading-awareness-is-essential-to-curb-the-increasing-incidence-of-obstructive-airway-disease-oad-in-india-experts/87916438

(5) https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(18)30409-1/fulltext

(6) https://health.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/industry/spreading-awareness-is-essential-to-curb-the-increasing-incidence-of-obstructive-airway-disease-oad-in-india-experts/87916438

(Pankaj Balwani is the Founder & CEO of Xplore Lifestyle)

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Film Review Lite Blogs

‘Guilty Minds’ exploring how powerful people can brought down

The eighth episode showcases arbitration in a medico-legal case. By the ninth episode, the series loses steam and deals in a frivolous case involving a dating app. And the tenth episode finally unravels the Bhalla case…writes Troy Rebeiro

Series: (Streaming on Prime Video), Duration: Average 48 minutes per episode (Total 10 episodes), Directors: Shefali Bhushan, Jayant D. Somalkar, Cast: Shriya Pilgaonkar, Varun Mitra, Namrata Seth, Sugandha Garg, Kulbushan Kharbanda, Benjamin Gilani, Satish Kaushik, Vijendra Saxena Diksha Juneja, Pranay Pachauri (Rating: ***1/2)



This series is an engaging drama that involves characters indulging in legal practice. It also explores how even powerful people can be brought down- by scandal and how secrets can never truly stay buried.

This series primarily showcases the two law firms – ‘Khanna and Khanna Associates’ and ‘For the People Associates’, their workings- and the stories of their executives and their clients.

KKA is headed by the patriarch L.N. Khanna (Kulbushan Kharbanda) and the management team includes his two sons, grandson Shubhrat (Pranay Pachauri), granddaughter Shubhangi (Namrata Seth) and Deepak Rana (Varun Mitra), the promising, star lawyer and partner in the film.

FTPA is a two-member team consisting of Kasaf Quaze (Shriya Pilgaonkar), the daughter of Judge Munnawar Quaze, and Vandana Kathpalia (Sugandha Garg). The duo takes on the cases and tries to find solutions in unconventional ways. Kasaf also happens to be Deepak’s classmate and an old friend.

The narrative mainly focuses on the personal lives, rivalry, and romance of the key characters and the cases they indulge in. While the two firms face off in most of the cases each episode tackles one major case apart from the politically driven Bhalla Case, which runs throughout the series. And to add a little chutzpah to the narrative, there is a stand-up comedian who spices up the telling.

The first episode deals with a case of sexual exploitation involving the film director Divendu Khurana. The second episode tackles a cold-blooded murder committed by a brilliant student. The third episode has both the law firms facing off in a corporate case that deals with environmental issues. The fourth episode deals with an HR case where a founder member of a medical firm is made redundant.

The fifth episode deals with a copyright infringement case. The sixth episode tackles a hit-and-run case where interestingly- the car involved- is a driverless car. The seventh episode investigates the death or suicide of a Private Security Agent Kochar.

The eighth episode showcases arbitration in a medico-legal case. By the ninth episode, the series loses steam and deals in a frivolous case involving a dating app. And the tenth episode finally unravels the Bhalla case.

Each episode is taut and brilliantly packaged with well-thought stories and scenarios. The series is able to consistently maintain the engagement and technical quality seen in only ace productions, and the writing – in terms of tone, every intense moment is executed with excellence and always achieves the impact it reaches for.

The performances too are excellent to the extent that it feels improper to refer to them as performances. Each actor is natural, and the character they essay seems to be their second skin.

The only issue, which is too minor but still needs to be pointed out is the shaky camera work, especially during some of the intense moments in the episodes. This can be prominently seen in episodes one and six. It mars the viewing experience.

The music and background score have the pulse of an era gone by and is satisfying. It adds a bit of freshness which works to the series’ advantage.

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