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Influence of Kadambari Devi in Rabindranath Tagore's Paintings
Journal of Fine Arts Volume 2, Issue 3, 2019, PP 10-12 ISSN 2637-5885 Influence of Kadambari Devi in Rabindranath Tagore’s Paintings Disha Mondal* M.A., English Literature, Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, West-Bengal, India *Corresponding Author: Disha Mondal, M.A., English Literature, Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, West-Bengal, India, Email: [email protected] ABSTRACT Rabindranath Tagore began painting relatively late in his career when he was in his sixties. Nevertheless he produced thousands of works and was the first Indian artist to exhibit his works across Europe, Russia and the United States in 1930. His painting style was very individual, characterized by simple bold forms and a rhythmic quality, and later served to inspire many modern Indian artists. Tagore painted landscapes, animal figures and human faces. The human faces are a prominent constant in his artistic works. His painted faces depict various moods: fear, romantic, melancholy and many more to say. This paper intends to analyse who were these women who inspired Tagore to produce such paintings. Key Words: women, veil, darkness, emotion “I know not who paints the pictures on memory’s very busy. Now Holidays have begun. I am canvas; but whoever he may be what he is painting thinking of just to sit in a corner and paint. I don’t are pictures; by which I mean that he is not there feel like using my pen…” We can realize that with his brush simply to make a faithful copy of all Rabindranath was engrossed in painting so much that is happening.” Rabindranath Tagore Jivan that he even did not wish to write then. -
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Pamphlets Email: [email protected] 42 AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY 3 a Saint at Work a Saint at Work
AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY A Saint at Work William Penn Lecture 1950 WILLIAM PENN LECTURE, 1950 A Saint at Work A View of Gandhi’s Work and Message Delivered at Race Street Meeting House Philadelphia by Amiya Chakravarty Published by The Book Committee Religious Society of Friends Philadelphia and Vicinity 302 Arch Street, Philadelphia 2 AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY 43 A Saint at Work A Saint at Work as to a common bereavement. If this spirit remains with us, then indeed Gandhiji’s suffering will not have been in vain; like the death and suffering of other innocent men, his testimony will be a part of our future. Gandhiji will perhaps succeed with us in his death though we failed him in his life. In a last gesture of farewell, a friend of man folded his hands, and greeted us. And then when his body was carried away to the room where many of us had seen him at work, in happy conversation and full of affectionate joy, he was quiet and still. Perfect peace lay on him, as the candlelight Dedicated in friendship to played on his face and hymns were sung in God’s name, the Blanche And William Stuart Nelson hymns that he had loved. That is the picture of a heroic Howard University saint who conquered. Published 1950 by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Republished electronically © 2007 by Quaker Heron Press http://www.quaker.org/pamphlets email: [email protected] 42 AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY AMIYA CHAKRAVARTY 3 A Saint at Work A Saint at Work a challenge – a challenge which we cannot ignore. -
Sessions for Friday, April 29
Sessions for Friday, April 29 Friday, 08:00 AM - 09:30 AM Friday, 08:00 AM - 09:30 AM, Tuscan 1 Track: HOM, 1 Chair: Roberto Revetria 1 Session: Systems Dynamics in Healthcare 020-0252 Strategy Deployment in UK Healthcare Shulian Zhang, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Claire Moxham, University of Manchester, United Kingdom David Bamford, University of Manchester, United Kingdom Ben Dehe, University of Manchester, United Kingdom April 2009 was an important period for all National Health Service (NHS) Community Health Services (CHS) organisations as they were formally separated from the commissioning service in the Primary Care Trust (PCT). This had many implications, including the need to establish individual board, develop independent strategy, and set-up autonomous governance. The host organisation was keen to investigate the effectiveness of the current strategy deployment (SD) process and subsequently identify areas for improvement. Our investigation looked into adapting strategy deployment systems such as the Closed-Loop Management Systems (Kaplan and Norton 2008) at NHS CHS organisations which can facilitate organisational needs in the area of strategy deployment. As human capital with the suitable skills is required for any successful implementation of a management system, the researchers expanded the scope by including an assessment of the organisation’sreadiness for adapting formal strategy deployment systems in terms of management skills levels. 020-0357 A Systems Dynamics General Model for Supporting Transition to Lean Healthcare Roberto Revetria, University of Genoa, Italy Lean Healthcare, Kaizen and Six Sigma are rapidly transforming healthcare operations from 'new ideas' to a 'way of life.' At the same time, while the concepts of Lean are fairly straightforward, applying the tools to daily work can be counter-intuitive and thus require a credible model to be effectively applied. -
Annual Report 2018 Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 2018 CONTENTS Corporate Information 01 Chairman’s Statement 02 From the Office of the Managing Director 04 Corporate Social Responsibility 06 Financial Statements 08 CORPORATEINFORMATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS Mr S M Datta Mr Sunil Mehta Chairman Ms Shubhalakshmi Panse Mr Hari Sankaran Mr Vibhav Kapoor Mr Ramesh Bawa Managing Director CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Mr Krishna Kumar Gangadharan CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Mr Manoj Borkar COMPANY SECRETARY Mr Sanjay Mitra BANKERS HDFC Bank Limited STATUTORY AUDITORS M/s B S R & Associates LLP Chartered Accountants INTERNAL AUDITORS M/s Patel & Deodhar Chartered Accountants SECRETARIAL AUDITORS M/s Mehta & Mehta Company Secretaries REGISTRARS & SHARE Link Intime India Private Limited TRANSFER AGENTS C-101, 247 Park, L.B.S. Marg, Vikhroli (West), Mumbai 400 083, India Tel : +91 22 4918 6270 Fax : +91 22 4918 6060 The IL&FS Financial Centre, Plot No C-22, G Block REGISTERED OFFICE Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra (East), Mumbai 400 051, India Tel : +91 22 2653 3333 Fax : +91 22 2653 3056 01 CHAIRMAN'S S M Datta Chairman STATEMENT Dear Shareholders, India is also heading into an election year. This will add to the complexity of decision making for the investors. The The global economy has been posting a strong growth Private Equity Fund raise and investment environment for of ~4% p.a. in the recent past, and the expectation has the coming year will reflect this uncertainty. The impact been that this growth trend would sustain. Risk to this would vary across sectors. Certain sectors like consumer- growth are however tilted to the downside. -
THE RECORD NEWS ======The Journal of the ‘Society of Indian Record Collectors’ ------ISSN 0971-7942 Volume: Annual - TRN 2011 ------S.I.R.C
THE RECORD NEWS ============================================================= The journal of the ‘Society of Indian Record Collectors’ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ISSN 0971-7942 Volume: Annual - TRN 2011 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ S.I.R.C. Units: Mumbai, Pune, Solapur, Nanded and Amravati ============================================================= Feature Articles Music of Mughal-e-Azam. Bai, Begum, Dasi, Devi and Jan’s on gramophone records, Spiritual message of Gandhiji, Lyricist Gandhiji, Parlophon records in Sri Lanka, The First playback singer in Malayalam Films 1 ‘The Record News’ Annual magazine of ‘Society of Indian Record Collectors’ [SIRC] {Established: 1990} -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- President Narayan Mulani Hon. Secretary Suresh Chandvankar Hon. Treasurer Krishnaraj Merchant ==================================================== Patron Member: Mr. Michael S. Kinnear, Australia -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Honorary Members V. A. K. Ranga Rao, Chennai Harmandir Singh Hamraz, Kanpur -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Membership Fee: [Inclusive of the journal subscription] Annual Membership Rs. 1,000 Overseas US $ 100 Life Membership Rs. 10,000 Overseas US $ 1,000 Annual term: July to June Members joining anytime during the year [July-June] pay the full -
Tesis Doctoral
TESIS DOCTORAL luz y materia LA POESÍA ÚLTIMA Y LA PINTURA DE RABINDRANATH TAGORE COMO EMBRIONES DE LA MODERNIDAD INDIA agus morales puga DIRECCIÓN DRA. FELICITY HAND Departamento de Filología Española Facultad de Filosofía y Letras UNIVERSITAT AUTÒNOMA DE BARCELONA 2012 Índice Punto cero ....................................................................................................... 7 0.1. Introducción .............................................................................................. 7 0.2. Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941): vida y obra ....................................... 29 0.3. El contexto literario de Tagore: la India preindependiente ...................... 44 0.3.1. La modernidad literaria india (1800-1941) ....................................... 49 0.3.1.1. La implantación de la imprenta y la lenta desaparición de la poesía oral ...................................................................................... 53 0.3.1.2. Cambio del paradigma lingüístico e introducción del inglés como nueva lengua de prestigio ............................................................. 57 0.3.1.3. Respuesta a Occidente: revisión crítica de la cultura india, aparición de nuevas formas y consolidación de la prosa ....................... 61 0.3.2. El Renacimiento bengalí (1815-1919) .............................................. 69 Primera parte. La última luz de Tagore: los poemas de 1937 a 1941 ....... 75 1.1. Los pliegues del testamento literario de Tagore ....................................... 80 1.1.1. El giro lingüístico -
SEAGULL Theatre QUARTERLY 244 Theatrelog Issue 29/30 Jun 2001 Acknowledgements
2 Acknowledgements 3 Introduction 7 ‘My kind of theatre is for the people’ KUMAR ROY 37 ‘And through the poetry we found a new direction’ SHYAMAL GHO S H 59 Minority Culture, Universal Voice RUDRAPRA S AD SEN G UPTA 81 ‘A different kind of confidence and strength’ Editor AS IT MU K HERJEE Anjum Katyal Editorial Consultant Samik Bandyopadhyay 99 Assistants Falling in Love with Theatre Paramita Banerjee ARUN MU K HERJEE Sumita Banerjee Sudeshna Banerjee Sunandini Banerjee 109 Padmini Ray Chaudhury ‘Your own language, your own style’ Vikram Iyengar BI B HA S H CHA K RA B ORTY Design Sunandini Banerjee 149 Photograph used on cover © Nemai Ghosh ‘That tiny cube of space’ MANOJ MITRA 175 ‘A theatre idiom of my own’ AS IT BO S E 197 The Totality of Theatre NIL K ANTHA SEN G UPTA 223 Conversations Published by Naveen Kishore 232 for The Seagull Foundation for the Arts, Appendix I 26 Circus Avenue, Calcutta 700017 Notes on Classic Playtexts Printed at Laurens & Co. 9 Crooked Lane, Calcutta 700 069 234 Appendix II Notes on major Bengali Productions 1944 –-2000 S T Q SEAGULL THeatRE QUARTERLY 244 Theatrelog Issue 29/30 Jun 2001 Acknowledgements Most of the material collected for documentation in this issue of STQ, had already been gathered when work for STQ 27/28 was in progress. We would like to acknowledge with deep gratitude the cooperation we have received from all the theatre directors featured in this issue. We would especially like to thank Shyamal Ghosh and Nilkantha Sengupta for providing a very interesting and rare set of photographs; Mohit Chattopadhyay, Bibhash Chakraborty and Asit Bose for patiently answering our queries; Alok Deb of Pratikriti for providing us the production details of Kenaram Becharam; Abhijit Kar Gupta of Chokh, who has readily answered/ provided the correct sources. -
2641 Calling Attention [3 DEC. 1969] to a Mailer of Urgent 2642 Public Importance MR
2641 Calling Attention [3 DEC. 1969] to a mailer of urgent 2642 public importance MR. CHAIR vlAN : She has the good will hear the experts and others and wishes of the v hole House. Government will then take final decision in consultation with the leaders. SHRIMATI YASHODA REDDY (Andhra Prade.h) : May I say that I went MR. CHAIRMAN : Hon. Members to the hospital with a good deal of will please remember that only a few anxiety ? 1 am happy she is all right and days ago they unanimously expressed 1 wish her very very long life and many their views on this matter. Now I have more terms in Rajya Sabha. got a long list of Members who have moved this calling attention motion. I suggest that 1 may select, as I selected CALLING ATTENTION TO A MAT- yesterday but a larger number today, out TER OF URGENT PUBLIC IMPOR- of the names which are before me. In TANCE view of the statement made to the effect that the leaders' views will be taken into REPORTED DECI: ION OF THE GOVERN- consideration by the Government, I may MENT TO SHIFT THE PROPOSED LOCATION OF make this selection and I hope the House THE STATUE OF MAHATMA GANDHI will agree with me. SHRIMATI LALITHA (R/fcA- GOPALAN) (Tamil Nadu): Sir, 1 beg to SOME HON. MEMBERS : Yes, Sir. call the attention of the Minister of Health and Family Planning, and Works, MR. CHAIRMAN : Now, Shrimati Housin j and Urban Development to the a Rajagopalan. Let the questions be short. ported decision of the Government to shift the proposed location of the sta ue SHRIMATI LALITHA (RA.IA- of Mahatma Gandhi from India Gat; to GOPALAN) : I am really surprised at the some other place. -
635301449163371226 IIC ANNUAL REPORT 2013-14 5-3-2014.Pdf
2013-2014 2013 -2014 Annual Report IND I A INTERNAT I ONAL CENTRE 2013-2014 IND I A INTERNAT I ONAL CENTRE New Delhi Board of Trustees Mr. Soli J. Sorabjee, President Justice (Retd.) B.N. Srikrishna Professor M.G.K. Menon Mr. L.K. Joshi Dr. (Smt.) Kapila Vatsyayan Dr. Kavita A. Sharma, Director Mr. N. N. Vohra Executive Members Dr. Kavita A. Sharma, Director Professor Dinesh Singh Mr. K. Raghunath Dr. Biswajit Dhar Dr. (Ms) Sukrita Paul Kumar Cmde.(Retd.) Ravinder Datta, Secretary Cmde.(Retd.) C. Uday Bhaskar Mr. P.R. Sivasubramanian, Hony. Treasurer Mrs. Meera Bhatia Finance Committee Justice (Retd.) B.N. Srikrishna, Dr. Kavita A. Sharma, Director Chairman Mr. P.R. Sivasubramanian, Hony. Treasurer Mr. M. Damodaran Cmde. (Retd.) Ravinder Datta, Secretary Cmde.(Retd.) C. Uday Bhaskar Mr. Ashok K. Chopra, Chief Finance Officer Medical Consultants Dr. K.P. Mathur Dr. Rita Mohan Dr. K.A. Ramachandran Dr. Gita Prakash Dr. Mohammad Qasim IIC Senior Staff Ms Omita Goyal, Chief Editor Mr. A.L. Rawal, Dy. General Manager Dr. S. Majumdar, Chief Librarian Mr. Vijay Kumar, Executive Chef Ms Premola Ghose, Chief, Programme Division Mr. Inder Butalia, Sr. Finance and Accounts Officer Mr. Arun Potdar, Chief, Maintenance Division Ms Hema Gusain, Purchase Officer Mr. Amod K. Dalela, Administration Officer Ms Seema Kohli, Membership Officer Annual Report 2013-2014 It is a privilege to present the 53rd Annual Report of the India International Centre for the period 1 February 2013 to 31 January 2014. The Board of Trustees reconstituted the Finance Committee for the two-year period April 2013 to March 2015 with Justice B.N. -
Nation and Imagination
CHAPTER 6 Nation and Imagination THIS CHAPTER moves out into three concentric circles. The innermost cir- cle tells the story of a certain literary debate in Bengal in the early part of the twentieth century. This was a debate about distinctions between prose, poetry, and the status of the real in either, and it centered on the writings of Rabindranath Tagore. Into these debatesÐand here is my second cir- cleÐI read a global history of the word ªimagination.º Benedict Ander- son's book Imagined Communities has made us all aware of how crucial the category ªimaginationº is to the analysis of nationalism.1 Yet, com- pared to the idea of community, imagination remains a curiously undis- cussed category in social science writings on nationalism. Anderson warns that the word should not be taken to mean ªfalse.º2 Beyond that, how- ever, its meaning is taken to be self-evident. One aim of this chapter is to open up the word for further interrogation and to make visible the heterogenous practices of seeing we often bring under the jurisdiction of this one European word, ªimagination.º My third and last move in the chapter is to build on this critique of the idea of imagination an argument regarding a nontotalizing conception of the political. To breathe heteroge- neity into the word ªimagination,º I suggest, is to allow for the possibility that the ®eld of the political is constitutively not singular. I begin, then, with the story of a literary debate. NATIONALISM AS WAYS OF SEEING It does not take much effort to see that a photographic realism or a dedi- cated naturalism could never answer all the needs of vision that modern nationalisms create. -
Testimony of Dr. Ajit Singh, Queens' College to the Devlin
Appendix A: Testimony of Dr. Ajit Singh, Queens’ College to the Devlin Enquiry on the Sit-In in Cambridge University in February 1972 3 June 1972. Lord Devlin, High Steward of Cambridge University “Report on the Sit-in in February 1972 and its Consequences”, Cambridge University Reporter Wednesday, 14 February 1973, Vol CIII, Special No. 12; 84p. Background facts. When, where, the meetings immediately prior and leading up to the sit-in Lord Devlin took evidence in hearings and submissions on 1, 2 and 3 June in Cambridge. NB: Day One was 1 June. On Day Two, 2 June, in Speech and Evidence, p.41, Lord Devlin says: “Tere is one other possible witness in connec- tion with that incident and that is Dr Singh. Dr Singh was a member of the Faculty Board and who made the initial speech. I think I might ask Mr Whittaker to write to him or to contact him and to ask him whether © Te Editor(s) (if applicable) and Te Author(s), under exclusive license 339 to Springer Nature Switzerland AG, part of Springer Nature 2019 A. Saith, Ajit Singh of Cambridge and Chandigarh, Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Tought, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12422-9 340 Appendix A: Testimony of Dr. Ajit Singh, Queens’ College … he may wish to give evidence or not, because he may be able to throw some light, again, on the connection between the two proceedings”. John Barnes and Robert Neild gave their testimonies on 3 June; Ajit comes later, #83, but overnight, Ajit seems to have prepared the detailed and complex document that follows — clearly something rubbed of from being around his father, the High Court judge.