1/28/09

Dancing goddess


Dancing Devata, stone, early 12th century, Uttar Pradesh, India.

Indian art as a monument of a philosophical system in the history of mankind and doubted whether any other people on earth have treated symbolism in art as thoroughly as Indians. (J.G. Von Herder)

An Apsara or heavenly dancer, from Sittanavasal,7th century.


Vrikshaka, a Tree Goddess from a Hindu temple - 8th century.

1/26/09

Happy Chinese New Year!


Chinese New Year or Spring Festival is one of the most important traditional Chinese holidays. It is often called the Lunar New Year, especially by people in mainland China and Taiwan.
Celebrations were expected to carry on into the early hours of Monday,26 january, officially the first day of the Lunar New Year. Firecrackers are believed to scare off evil spirits and entice the god of wealth to people's doorsteps once New Year's Day arrives, which falls on Monday this year under the Chinese lunar calendar.


1/19/09

Joe Hisaishi


Mamoru Fujisawa (藤澤 守 Fujisawa Mamoru), known professionally as Joe Hisaishi (久石 譲 Hisaishi Jō, born December 6, 1950), is a composer and director known for over 100 film scores and solo albums dating back to 1981.
Complex and simple.. creative and mysterious... A music genious of modern times.

1/18/09

Erik Truffaz - Benares (2008)

Erik Truffaz is a Swiss-born French contemporary jazz trumpeter. Benares - it's his new project feat. Malcolm Braff, Apruba a Indrani Mukherjee.This latest release is a fantastic mixture between indian carnatic songs and jazz-groove.




1/17/09

Kambala


Kambala is traditionally a simple sport. Kambala is basically a traditional buffalo race in muddy waters, held from December till March. Starting at noon after prayers and invoking blessings from mother earth, the ‘Arasu’ or Chieftain pours milk onto the fields to symbolically inaugurate the race. It is a test of speed for the specially trained male buffalo pairs and endurance as well as grit for the jockey. The jockey, clad only in a skimpy loin-cloth has to run with the animals or do a balancing act on a wooden plank attached to the whip. Kadri Kambla must have been a great sight in the past. Imagine a valley, stretching from Kadri temple, which runs westwards to slowly widen at Kodialguthu…. Spectacular.

1/13/09

Pongal - Makar Sankranti - Lohri!


Makar means Capricorn and Sankranti is transition. There is a sankranti every month when the sun passes from one sign of the zodiac to the next. There are twelve signs of the zodiac, and thus there are twelve sankranti’s as well. Each of these sankranti’s has its own relative importance but two of these are more important - the Mesh(Aries) Sankranti and the most important, the Makar(Capricorn) Sankranti. Transition of the Sun from Sagittarius to Capricorn, during the winter solstice in the northern hemisphere is known as Makar Sankranti. From this day begins the six-month long Uttarayana, considered very auspicious for attaining higher worlds hereafter.

Makar Sankranti is celebrated all over India but with different name. There is also remarkable difference in the method of celebrations.

In Tamil Nadu, Makar Sankranti is celebrated as Pongal - a harvest festival.Pongal is a highly revered festival celebrated in Tamil Nadu to mark the harvesting season. An important festival in India, Pongal is celebrated by offering prayers to the Sun God. Pongal gifts are exchanged among family members, relatives and friends. Houses are cleaned, and all maintenance jobs are done before this festival. Held in the middle of January, it is a time when the people of Tamil Nadu get ready to thank God, Earth and their cattle for the wonderful harvest they have reaped. During the four-day pongal festival, different varieties of Rangoli are drawn in front of the houses early in the morning.

In Andhra Pradesh, it is Pedda Panduga.
In Kerala, Makar Sankranti marks the end of the pilgrimage to the famous Sabarimala Temple.
In West Bengal, it is Pithey parban – a harvest festival – and there is also the famous Ganga Sagar mela.
In Assam, it is Bhogali Bihu.
In Punjab, Jammu and in some parts of Himachal Pradesh and Haryana, it is Lohri.
In Central India, it is Sakarat.
In Orissa, it is Makar Mela.

Call it Lohri, Pongal or Sankranti, the festival conveys the same message — the bond of brotherhood and the spirit of oneness should prevail despite all odds.

1/12/09

Dream Come True



Dream Come True is a stunning sight of catchy colors, which lures the likes of even non-rose lovers to its side. This rose produces flawlessly formed yellow blossoms, blushed with ruby-red at the tips, all set amongst abundant matte green foliage. The big, bushy, vigorous plant yields long-stemmed, long-lived blooms with mild tea fragrance, making it lovely in the landscape and a great choice for bouquets.

1/9/09

M.S. Subbulakshmi


Sarojini Naidu called her the Nightingale of India. Her music was an expression of her deeply spiritual personality, and touched to the core all those who heard her. She sang with equal sweetness in eight languages, and countless households all over India still begin their day on the right note with her Suprabhatam, her Meera Bhajans.