australia india cultural exchange

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KINDNESS उद रत ऑ ट लय भ रत क तक व नमय australia india cultural exchange

... व र त वक दय अ नव य प स अ य शत प रण म क स थ एक व नमय ह... एडम फ ल र और ब रबर ट लर: दय क ब र म... real kindness is an exchange with essentially unpredictable consequences... Adam Phillips and Barbara Taylor: On Kindness

उद रत Kindness / Udarta australia india cultural exchange Celebrating twenty years of creative cultural exchanges between Australia and India funded by the Australia-India Council 1992 2012.

KINDNESS उद रत ऑ ट लय भ रत क तक व नमय australia india cultural exchange 2012

kindness / udarta australia india cultural exchange 20 Year Anniversary Project foreword How better to understand other cultures than through their art? Artists have long been inspired and enriched by other cultures. They have gained insights into themselves and their own source of creativity by studying other lands, other cultures, other traditions. It s not only artists who prosper through this exchange. We can all gain understanding of what we share and where we differ in values and aspirations from the arts of other cultures. The strong human need for self-expression connects us all. Creative connections promote a deeper, more sophisticated understanding and heightened respect for the cultures and values of others. The Arts in many forms literature, visual art and music to name a few have a way of demolishing barriers between cultures and peoples that formal diplomacy can rarely match. Australia s cross-cultural exchange with India has a long and strong history. We celebrate that relationship in this book which accompanies the cultural project On Kindness / Udarta. Australia India Cultural Exchanges 1992 2012. The publication, along with an exhibition and a public program of collaborative music performance and literary dialogue, will celebrate 20 years of cultural initiatives by the Australia India Council. The Council s work has always emphasised cross-cultural dialogues and collaborations between Australian and Indian artists. This publication epitomises the goals and spirit of the Council. Since 1992, the Australia India Council has been working to broaden the relationship between Australia and India by encouraging and supporting contacts and increasing levels of knowledge and understanding between the peoples and institutions of the two countries. The friendships established, and the insights that have flowed from 20 years of cultural exchanges, form a valued component of the deepening relationship between our two nations. We have growing trade and investment links. We share an obsession with cricket but there is more. This project, and the book that will be its lasting record, offer a window into two decades of ongoing artistic and cultural connections. I congratulate the artists and organisations from both countries who have contributed to all aspects of this cultural exchange since 1992. I commend their respective visions, and their shared endeavours. I commend also those involved with this history-marking project, conceptualisers Suzanne Davies, Dr Alka Pande with Helen Rayment. The celebration of this milestone is another example of the continuing strength of the Australia India relationship. John McCarthy AO Chair, Australia India Council 5 kindness / उद रत

kindness / udarta australia india cultural exchange preface This publication, Kindness / Udarta. Australia-India Cultural Exchange, is the cornerstone of a project in both India and Australia to celebrate twenty years of cultural exchanges between visual artists, writers and musicians. The other elements of the celebration include an exhibition of art works from the publication, music performance by Sandy Evans and Adrian Sherriff from The Australian Art Orchestra (AAO) with Guru Kaaraikkudi Mani s Sruthi Laya Ensemble, and literary discussion between celebrated authors Kiran Nagakar and Christopher Kremmer at the India Habitat Centre, New Delhi. The live performances at the Habitat Centre will be broadcast by Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) Radio National and Radio Australia. The entire project will live on electronically through the web links of the RMIT (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University) Gallery and Australia-India Council (AIC) and (ABC) websites. We thank Tony MacGregor, Arts Editor, Radio National, for his enthusiastic engagement with this project. The contributing artists represent a significant sample of creative people who have experienced each other s culture, visited each other s country, worked together, and built relationships based on friendship and mutual respect. The AIC has enabled most of these creative relationships, either by direct funding or by financial support for organizations themselves engaged in promoting cross-cultural understanding through the arts, such as Asialink, Asia Pacific Triennial and Nataraj Cultural Centre, Melbourne. It is important to record that the AIC is an initiative of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Federal Government of Australia. Its work is an expression of the collective wishes of the Australian people for closer relations with India and her people. A sincere sense of goodwill has for twenty years been the bedrock of the AIC program. It continues to underpin that which we now celebrate. As is so often the case, this project is the result of meeting many needs and desires. There were pragmatic needs to develop a map and means of contacting cultural alumni ; to celebrate twenty years of AIC initiatives with a tangible record and, not least, to demonstrate the resonance and strength of relationships built on the cross-cultural dialogues which the arts can so readily engender. It is this last stated ambition that best captures the diverse nature of the material printed in Kindness/Udarta. Here, we can quietly reflect on the nuanced levels of insight and engagement with the overarching thematic within the complexities of intercultural exchange. Initially, in the spirit of simple curiosity, we wanted to test responses to notions of kindness, a quality we considered essential in any humane exchange. The Visual Arts Gallery at the Habitat Centre, New Delhi, is a central cultural location that could accommodate the range of activities envisaged. It is in the spirit of goodwill that the Visual Arts Gallery agreed to be hosting partner. It is fortunate that the two principals responsible for conceptualizing and delivering the enterprise have enjoyed a positive working relationship. This has led to a highly flexible curatorial process, more good spirited wrangling than curating, with much ongoing debate. Importantly, it was agreed from the outset that a response to the notion of kindness would underpin the project, recognizing that such a notion, while ostensibly simple and compelling, would generate vastly different responses given its variable connotations in different contexts. We started with the western, European account of its defining attributes, drawn from the writing of English psychoanalyst Adam Phillips, and Barbara Taylor,n 6 उद रत / kindness

On Kindness (2009). We were most interested in their characterization that real kindness is an exchange with essentially unpredictable consequences. We thank Madhu Sarin for her advice regarding the significant differences from this rendering in an Indian socio-cultural framework, and for directing us to the writing of Sudhir Kakar. But this was our learning and it triggered an ongoing struggle with words, their meanings and the actions they engender. So kindness became less a theme and more a non-prescriptive reflection on a state of mind and action, captured somehow, somewhere, in the nuances of meanings of the words daya, karuna, neki, namrata, sanbhavana, udarta. As we struggled to find a word that was neither patronizing nor embedded in compassion, the process sharpened our awareness of the necessity of intercultural sensitivity. While seeking the most culturally appropriate and Indian specific term, it was agreed from the outset that kindness as a quality was unequivocally essential for social cohesion in both intra and intercultural relations in an increasingly complex global environment. The pragmatic method we adopted was to identify and contact as many artists as possible. This involved extensive cross-referencing and considerable sleuthing and we thank Helen Rayment for her invaluable contribution in this and every aspect of the project. The natural attrition in this process assisted in identifying engagement with the topic. We thank most warmly all the artists, writers and musicians who so graciously responded to our invitation. We are deeply grateful that so many distinguished and celebrated figures, in both countries, have honoured this enterprise with their contributions. The range of work is extraordinary, reflecting the openness and diversity of the forces behind the initial cultural exchanges. Some works have been created especially, while other images, texts and most particularly music performances pre-existed and were submitted because they were considered pertinent. The task was then to combine images and texts. Here the words of Phillips seem so apt, as the various components make for relationships with unexpected outcomes, sometimes informing the other in terms of possible meanings with exquisite sensitivity; sometimes resonating at a remarkable, if serendipitous, graphic level. The sum of the entire project is a beautifully presented statement of creative goodwill. The concept of locating all creative participants from the beginning of the AIC was the suggestion of Asha Lele Das, AIC Country Manager at the Australian High Commission for that period. Jasleen Dhamija has proven an invaluable source of advice at key times in the delivery of the project. Minhazz Majumder has enabled us to make contact with several artists and we thank her and Professor Dhamija most warmly. Distinguished colleague Mohindar Dhillon has been a champion of bringing superb Indian musicians to Australia and he generously made his archive of recordings available to us for inclusion on the two CDs that form a significant part of the musical record in this project. Likewise we acknowledge the contribution of Margaret Lloyd whose efforts have enabled access to key musicians in Australia and India. We thank Vice Chancellor Margaret Gardner and Deputy Vice-Chancellor Daine Alcorn RMIT University, for the driving vision of a globally focused university and the support to enable initiatives such as this to be realized. Finally we thank the AIC for placing their trust in us to bring this project to life. Suzanne Davies Director and Chief Curator, RMIT Gallery Dr Alka Pande Curator, Visual Arts Gallery, India Habitat Centre 7 kindness / उद रत

artists and writers Minam Apang Robyn Backen lado bai Inez Baranay Maggie Baxter Robyn Beeche Luke Beesley Saskia Beudel Sourish Bhattacharya Sandra Bowkett Barbara Brooks Lyndell Brown and Charles Green Louisa Bufardeci Janet Burchill and Jennifer McCamley Terry Burrows Rose Bygrave Peter Callas Isobelle Carmody Lee Cataldi Jon Cattapan Jayashree Chakravarty Kanchan Chander Georgia Chapman Amit Chaudhuri Mantu Chitrakar Maree Clarke Geoffrey Conaghan Monika Correa Vicki Couzens Keki Daruwalla David Davidar Parul Dave-Mukherji Meaghan Delahunt Jasleen Dhamija Moira Doropoulos Richard Dunn Michele Elliot Sonia Faleiro Jayne Fenton Keane Emily Floyd Roger Foley-Fogg Robyn Friend Ann Ferguson Shilpa Gupta Subodh Gupta Helen Geier Joan Grounds Libby Hathorn Barry Hill Jyotindra Jain OP Jain David Jensz Raj Kamal Jha Sangita Jindal Tushar Joag Ranbir Singh Kaleka Reena Saini Kallat Yuri Kawanabe Thomas Keneally Christopher Köller Bharti Kher Seema Kohli Derek Kreckler Christopher Kremmer Pradyumna Kumar Pushpa Kumar Kay Lawrence Bem Le Hunte Alison Lester Sara Lindsay Minhazz Majumdar Nalini Milani Djambawa Marawili Vicki McConville Sudesh Mishra Callum Morton Kirsty Murray Les Murray Pushpamala N Kiran Nagarkar Peter Nagy Surendran Nair Satendra Nandan Linda Neil Simeon Nelson Ian North Raqs Media Collective: Monica Narula and Shuddhabrata Sengupta Geoff Page RM Palaniappan Michael Panckridge Dr Alka Pande Mrinal Pande Louise Paramor Catherine Parker and Kamal Swami GiriRaj Prasad Mandy Ridley Louise Rippert Avino Ritse Rekha Rodwittiya Sharmila Samant Sangeeta Sandrasegar Haku Shah Mukesh Sharma Gulam Mohammed Sheikh Vicky Shukuroglou Jangarh Singh Shyam Dhiraj Singh Soda_Jerk Vipoo Srivilasa Josephine Starrs Jiten Thukral and Sumir Tagra Safina Uberoi K Venugopal LIYAWADAY WIRRAPANDA Jenny Watson Judy Watson Karl Wiebke Alexis Wright Judith Wright Louiseann Zahra-King John Zubrzycki musicians Australian Art Orchestra and sruthi laya Shri BV Balasai Sandy Evans Lachlan Davidson Guru Kaaraikkudi Mani Manjiri Kelkar UP Raju Natesan Ramani Philip Rex Niko Schäuble Shivkumar Sharma Adrian Sherriff U Shrinivas Alister Spence L Subramaniam The Subterraneans James Ryan James Muller Steve Hunter James Hauptmann Vaidyanathan Suresh Scott Tinkler

KINDNESS उद रत

giriraj prasad Untitled pot 2005 10 उद रत / kindness

sandra bowkett Another Side of Caste 2011 11 kindness / उद रत

Sonia faleiro I was invited to the Sydney Writers Festival in May 2011 to speak about my new book of non-fiction, Beautiful Thing, which is about a young bar dancer called Leela. The book took five years to write and I spent a lot of the time convincing the people who inhabited the fascinating if shadowy world of Bombay s dance bars, to talk to me. I spoke with bar dancers and gangsters and bar owners and pimps. But it was the hijras, the transgenders, who were hardest to convince. I d call one of them on the phone, they wouldn t answer. They d agree to meet with me, then wouldn t bother turning up. They d ask very personal questions, but also questions I didn t know how to respond to, such as why I didn t wear padded undergarments or why I couldn t just stay home and live the normal life I was blessed with. After months of pursuit I finally made a breakthrough. I was invited to the home of a hijra friend of Leela s. Her name was Masti, and she was magnificently tall and foul mouthed. In the course of the afternoon I saw Masti down numerous whiskies, dance wildly around her flat, and strike a fellow hijra violently on her face for stepping out of line. I fell asleep on the couch. I woke up with a start sometime around dawn, and found that someone had covered me with a spotless white chunni. I looked around and saw Masti on a chair, looking intently at me. Did you sleep well? She asked. Yes, thank you. She smiled with satisfaction. I covered you with my chunni. So everyone would know that if they touched you, they d have to deal with me. Masti invited Leela and me to the spiritual site of Haji Malang in Kalyan, outside Bombay. She said we d have to climb a small hill to get there. How small? I wondered. I was asthmatic. Just as I d feared, the hill was tall and steep. Steps were carved out of the stone and they were a foot high. Many pilgrims needed assistance, and some took to crawling like crabs. About fifteen minutes into the climb, I felt a familiar breathlessness. Another fifteen minutes later, I was wheezing. The hijras, in the meantime were bounding effortlessly along, singing and shouting. I felt like I was being suffocated. By this time the hijras were near the top of the hill, and evening had turned into night. The path ahead was illuminated by stars, and torches of fire. Masti, who was near the top, started looking around. She spied me and gestured with her hands, what happened? I shrugged. I couldn t even speak. Masti grabbed several other hijras and they bounded down as quickly as they d made it up. When they reached me, Masti looked into my face, You will make it, she said. I knew I couldn t, and I said so. Masti linked arms with me. Another hijra stood behind me, literally holding me up. Every time I needed to stop, they stopped patiently with me. Every time I was ready to give up Masti said, but we re almost there! And that s how I climbed the hill to Haji Malang. One nudge, one clutch, one kind word of support at a time. from Beautiful Things 12 उद रत / kindness

minam apang Blind Shots II 2010 13 kindness / उद रत

robyn backen An Eye for an Eye 2011 14 उद रत / kindness

inez baranay 15 kindness / उद रत

Dhiraj Singh Kali 2011 16 उद रत / kindness