India’s biggest art deal ever

MFHusain.jpg A Bombay businessman has commissioned Indian painter Maqbool Fida Husain to create 100 paintings for $21M (Rs. 1 billion).

The buyer, Guru Swarup Srivasava, is described as a low-profile Bombay (Mumbai) businessman who was not an art collector. He says he believes it is a good investment.

What’s Husain doing with the money? He’s going to Bollyland!

Husain plans to splash a major portion of his fee – $20m – on a mega Bollywood film. “I will… cast all the big names in the industry – Amitabh Bachchan, Shah Rukh Khan, everyone,” he said.

Unless dissuaded by saner men, Husain would blow double the budget of Devdas, India’s most expensive film ever.

Here are a few of Husain’s highly stylized paintings.

Posted in Art

Delhi shopping hours extended

Delhi extends its shopping hours from 7 to 11pm to please its consumption-conscious citizens. But no government should restrict shopping hours in the first place. It smacks of the labor protectionism of France and Germany, where shopping hours are inconvenient.

Separately, Delhi has a late-night crime problem:

[T]here are others who think extending shopping hours in a city which remains extremely unsafe for women is an unwise move… “We have decided that women will work till 2000 hours and then the men will take over. We will not force our women to work late… But if we can make arrangements for them to travel late, and they want to work late, we’ll welcome it.”

800-MANGLE

Trying to get a Manhattan theater to tell me which Bollywood flick they were showing:

She struggled through something that sounded like the wonka-wonka teacher in a Charlie Brown special… ?What?s that first word again?? ?Dill. As in pickle.? Ah, dil. It?s a clue, Watson. Unfortunately, it?s also the first word in 17 million other Hindi film titles which mix-and-match dil, kya, main, nahin, and pyar. Like the housing developments of Seattle (timber, wood, lake, lawn), no other words are allowed.

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The American Raj

Firangpolicypundit Fareed Zakaria notes that the American strategy of playing off Shia vs. Sunni in Iraq resembles that of British India (via Amardeep Singh):

The intractable security problems in Sunni areas coupled with some success in Shia ones might lead the Iraqi government (and Washington) toward a “Shia strategy” in Iraq… In many of its colonies the British would often favor a single group as a quick means of gaining stability. Almost always the results were ruinous—a trail of civil war and bloodshed.

Globalization Saves Lives…

Muy interesante – India-made scooters help bring down Lanka suicide rate : HindustanTimes.com.

Three wheelers made in India have played a silent but a very critical role in bringing down the appallingly high suicide rate in Sri Lanka, experts say.
But this has steadily come down over the years, with 2002 recording 23.8 suicides per 100,000 people, the lowest so far.
“Almost every fair sized habitation in Sri Lanka now has four or five Bajaj three wheelers which enable quick and timely transfer of the suicide cases to the nearest hospital,” said Manisha Wickramanayake, a staffer at the suicide prevention organisation Sumithrayo.

Unintended consequences rule. Continue reading

Et tu, Smithsonian?

NMAI.jpg The name of a new museum in Washington, D.C. perpetuates a historical mistake. In the 21st century, the Smithsonian still saw fit to call it the National Museum of the American Indian. In a farcical juxtaposition, even the hometown paper calls them Native Americans throughout the very same story.

Researching desis in the U.S. has always been a pain because the injection of American Indian in search results forces you to use ever more tortured qualifiers like East Indian (which really means Bengali, Bihari, Oriya, Assamese…), Asian Indian, Indian-American, South Asian and South Asian American. This museum’s name just makes it worse. (I suppose it’s too late to ask the West Indies to choose a new moniker.)

The sexy, curvy new museum sits on the National Mall between the Capitol and the spectacular aerospace museum.

Old White Male Cultural Establishment Discovers Desi’s

One of my favorite culture blogs – 2Blowhards – throws a nice hat tip in the direction of Sepia Mutiny – 2blowhards.com: Desiblogs.

I’m getting used to the term “Desi,” which — if I understand it right — is a term for anyone of South Asian descent. Pakistanis, Indians, Bangladeshis — they’re all Desis. Corrections appreciated if I’ve got this wrong, of course, as long as everyone understands that I’m just a passe old man who’s doing his valiant best to keep up with a bewildering new world.

Make sure you check out the comments left by various folks including a couple of the mutineers. Continue reading

The outmarriage rate

Razib plugs common desi names into Wedding Channel and comes up with a 38% outmarriage rate for second-gen desis, which he says confirms his belief that:

the first Asian Indian generations are in the same statistical ball-park as Japanese who have been resident in the United States for 100 years!

A 38% outmarriage estimate strikes me as inaccurately high due to least two forms of sampling bias. One is obvious, online wedding registries disproportionately draw from people of higher socioeconomic status. The other is less so: it samples outmarriage from age groups at the leading edge of population cohort and subculture formation.

Californian Sikhs in the early 1900s outmarried at a near-100% rate because they were barred from bringing over Sikh wives. Similarly, older second-gen desis met fewer desis in college and grad school because there weren’t many others in their cohort. And they didn’t have as thriving a popular subculture and identity within the U.S. to play with, as Vinod ably demonstrated:

We were at the bleeding edge of the Desi demographic wedge — the children of the first wave of Indian professional parents… demography has provided a critical mass of other Desi’s… The turning point here was somewhere around my senior year in college (1995)… 5-10 years of additional Desi penetration into America has made all the difference and provides them with a college experience quite distinct from mine… Desi is now a “3rd culture” that’s neither mainstream American nor FOB Indian.

The outmarriage rate will most likely follow a trinomial path where it reverses twice: high in the beginning, sharply lower as cohort size increases, and then gradually increasing as assimilation progresses. Razib notes but then glosses over this argument:

there are likely to be more South Asian partners on the market than there were for the children of the late 60s to early 80s…

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file under: “duh.”

going to graduate school in DC with a bunch of students FROM india destroyed most of my preconceived notions about the motherland. this article put them right back 😉 :

Most Indian men expect their wives to be virgins before marriage and would refuse to wed a woman who admits to having had premarital sex, said an opinion poll in a weekly news magazine on Saturday.
About 72 per cent of 2,499 men surveyed in 11 Indian cities expected their wives to be virgins before marriage, the poll published in the latest edition of India Today magazine said.
An overwhelming 77 per cent of those surveyed in the country, known for its sexually conservative culture, said they would reject women who admitted to having had premarital sex.

my favourite line of the article:

…According to the magazine, “Virginity continues to be confused with chastity (by the Indian male).”

my least favourite line in the article:

In what could set alarm bells ringing for AIDS prevention groups, only 38 per cent of men felt condoms were “a must use” while 24 per cent said, they “spoiled” sexual pleasure.

i think people are lying about whether they want to do Ash:

Six per cent of the men voted former Miss World and Bollywood star Aishwarya Rai their fantasy woman while 16 per cent idolised acquaintances and others.

like they’d turn down someone in a victoria’s secret runway outfit. pshaw:

Fifty-four per cent of respondents said their favourite attire for women was the traditional Indian dress, the sari, with 38 per cent voting for the salwar-kameez or long shirt and pyjamas. Just eight per cent voted for Western attire -bikinis, skirts and trousers.

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