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Dazzling Victoria Hall, A Landmark Restored By CM Stalin At A Cost Of 32.62 Crore

Dazzling Victoria Hall, A Landmark Restored By CM Stalin At A Cost Of 32.62 Crore
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Godse by any other name - The Hindu


A scene from the play. Photo: Mohan Das Vadakara
 
A new play that explores one horrific moment in the past to raise unsettling questions about the future
There is something deeply troubling about Chennai-based playwright Prasanna Ramaswamy’s new play
This is my name. Long after it is over, it leaves you with a sense of disquiet and lingering insecurity. The 90-minute theatre performance featuring a large ensemble cast was recently staged in Chennai to somewhat muted response, thanks to COVID-19.
The play is ostensibly an exploration of the past — Nathuram Godse’s defence of his assassination of Gandhi. Yet, in doing so, the play essentially raises uncomfortable, deeply unsettling questions about the future.

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Affordable art by Chennai veteran artists at Cholamandal Artists' Village, displayed


Affordable art by Chennai veteran artists at Cholamandal Artists’ Village, displayed
Updated:
Updated:
April 21, 2021 16:41 IST
Micro Trends 2021, a display of affordable miniature and small format works by 23 artists at Cholamandal Artists’ Village, aims to takes art beyond a niche audience
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P Gopinath’s acrylic on canvas work
  | Photo Credit:
special arrangement
Micro Trends 2021, a display of affordable miniature and small format works by 23 artists at Cholamandal Artists’ Village, aims to takes art beyond a niche audience
In 1971, KCS Panicker, president of the Progressive Painters’ Association founded in 1944, led a brigade of artists from Madras to Pune to display miniature works. To everyone’s surprise, they returned empty-handed having sold all the artworks. Veteran artist P Gopinath was one among them.

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