Categories
Deal with it

This artist is taking art to the public

Artist and painter Manoj Maurya recently introduced visually challenged students to art and taught them to create their own paintings.
by The Editors | editor@themetrognome.in

This is the sort of sunshine initiative each of us must undertake in our own small way: imagine introducing a visually challenged person to paint and canvas.

In a first of its kind initiative towards making art accessible for masses, artist and painter Manoj Maurya recently invited visually challenged students from the city’s blind schools and made them ‘see’ paintings. Manoj described and discussed paintings with the students and also took an interactive workshop where he taught them how to create paintings. The initiative to connect art with the masses is titled ‘ReBORN series’.

Manoj_Mauryaa_ReBORN-_Blind_Students-5He even made a painting with the students which he later gifted them with. Manoj explained, “I want to make even the visually challenged capable for expressing their thoughts through the medium of visual arts and paintings. The reactions and questions that these students asked me on my paintings were as insightful as those asked by art connoisseurs. After understanding the ReBORN series, one student asked me what I thought was the colour of the soul. Another asked me the colour of birth and death. They grasped my paintings and the thought behind them.”

The ReBORN Exhibition by Manoj seeks to establish a missing connect between art and the general masses. Manoj says, “Paintings as a form of art should increase their reach and be more relevant and productive for the society. In my own way, I am trying to achieve this [objective], so I have already invited underprivileged children and taught them the finer nuances of paintings. Before this, I have also  invited autorickshaw drivers to explore and understand the importance of art. While helping them acknowledge their creative potential, I think that educating autorickshaw drivers about art would go a long way in keeping our clean and beautiful.”

The ReBORN exhibition concluded recently at the Nehru Centre Art Gallery.

Categories
Learn

Read: Maha CM’s letter appealing against Bhabha house auction

The letter was sent by Maharashtra CM Prithviraj Chavan to PM Narendra Modi a few days before the auction took place.
by The Editors | editor@themetrognome.in

On Wednesday, June 18, 2014, the iconic bungalow belonging to scientist Homi Bhabha was sold for Rs 372 crore by the NCPA, which is a trustee of the property. Even as the auction was announced a few days ago, scientists had been opposing the auction and asking for the bungalow to be preserved as a museum.

CM's Letter to PMThe Chief Minister of Maharashtra, Prithviraj Chavan, had also written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, appealing for the Centre to step into the matter and stop the auction, instead declaring the house as a national monument. In this letter, (see it on the left), CM Chavan writes, “Homi Bhabha’s residence should be a national monument as it would be a source of inspiration for the people of India, and especially to the scientific community and the youth of this country.”

The bungalow, Mehrangir, is on Little Gibbs Road and Homi Bhabha was a part owner of it. After his death, the bungalow was in the care of his brother, Jamshed, who in his will, bequeathed it to the National Centre for Performing Arts (NCPA). The proceeds from the auction will go towards modernisation of theatres and upgradation of equipment.

(Prithviraj Chavan’s letter sourced from CMO, Maharashtra. Featured image courtesy thehindu.com)

Categories
Beauty

Maintain your beauty this rainy season

Follow simple steps to ensure the health and vitality of your skin as the season changes and the rain pours.

It is the dream of any individual to have their beauty preserved forever. However, pollution and seasonal changes play havoc with those dreams. To prevent seasons like the monsoos from ruining your beauty, follow a few simple beauty tips that you can implement easily without any major fuss.

The secret is to not overdo make up. The rains have the potential to dry your skin and ruin your makeup, which is bad for you in the long run. So what steps can you take to protect and enhance your beauty?

Beauty care during the monsoons:

Cotton is king. Wearing the right clothes is very important during the monsoons. It is recommended that you wear cotton clothes to keep your skin fresh and cool. Avoid sticky clothes that make you uncomfortable.

Use skin toner. Skin toner does the vital job of making the skin texture robust, and thus it is able to withstand grime and dirt. Using the right toner is very important to avoid any side effects. Take care to use organic toner that is made of green leaves, honey and olive oil. For the right skin toner mix, consult your dermatologist.

hot bath during monsoonMinimum soap. Use as less soap as possible to avoid the action of artificial irritants on the skin. Instead, opt for natural cleansers that clean and clear your skin. You can get rid of all the impurities in the skin, if you regularly use organic face cleansers.

Hair protection. It is preferable not to keep your hair open during the monsoons to protect your hair from getting drenched. Too much wetness can drain the moisture content in the hair, thus leading to dry hair. You can tie your hair up in a bun. You can also tie your hair up in braids for added style. For more hair protection, you can consult your dermatology doctor who will give you expert tips and suggestions.

Hot bath. Studies have shown that you will get a good night’s sleep if you take a hot bath before going to bed. During rainy season, the weather becomes cooler, which may not be suitable for everyone. Taking a hot bath helps to keep you safe from the flu. It is also beneficial for the skin, in that it keeps the texture, clear, and retains the water content in the skin.

Dry fruits. Eat lots of dry fruits for maintaining your level of beauty. Dry fruits, though small, pack in a lot of nutrients in them. These nutrients help in enhancing the skin texture and providing vital vitamins to the skin cells. To know which dry fruits you should eat more, you should get in touch with an expert dermatologist.

The above steps will help you protect, maintain and enhance your beauty during this rainy season.

(Pictures courtesy www.perfectskincareforyou.com, archives.deccanchronicle.com)

Categories
Tech

Review: Samsung Galaxy S5

Samsung is going great guns in the phone market. We review what their new flagship phone, Galaxy S5, is about.
by Manik Kakra | @Manik_K on Twitter

Looking at the phones people are using, I am quite sure a lot of phones would be made by one phone giant – Samsung. Samsung’s success, especially with the Android platform in place, has only matured over the last two years or so. Millions of Galaxy units have already been sold out, and the series continues to reach newer heights for the Korean giant.

So, Samsung’s Galaxy S5 comes at an interesting time. Many other manufacturers, just like previous years, have released their flagship device, but this time, it seems, Samsung may require more steam to reach new consumers than it has ever in these last two to three years. Without further ado, let’s check what really this new Samsung water-resistant, dust-resistant flagship is about.

Hardware and performance

Samsung’s Galaxy S5 (SM-G900H) packs pretty much the latest when it comes to its internals. As far as design and materials are concerned, it doesn’t inspire this time.

The first time you hold it, you realise the dotted, textured back is better for grip than the S4’s hyper-glossy rear. The front, dominated by the 5-inch full HD screen, with a slightly new button layout below it – Multi-app view, Home (which also equips the fingerprint scanner), and Back button – doesn’t appear very different from the S4’s.

On the screen’s top, you get the usual LED light, Samsung logo in the middle, front camera on its other side and several sensors hidden. The rear, boasting a 16 MP camera with the heart rate monitor (and the LED flash) right below it, also has the loudspeakers, which actually make the whole bottom half of the phone vibrate when playing some music or game at high volumes.

The top has the 3.5mm headset jack; microUS3.0 port (supports 2.0, too) sits at the bottom under a plastic flap; and volume rockers and Power/ Lock button on left and right side panels, respectively. If you try them a few times, you’ll soon notice the clickety sound these physical buttons – volume and Home – produce. Some people may not like this, especially the Home button, given how frequently you’re going to use it.

Coming to the phone’s 5.1-inch full HD S AMOLED screen, it is, as expected from Samsung, a fantastic panel. The AMOLED technology is now mature enough to stand with LCDs when it comes to rich colours that are not black or white. Black levels are just as good as we have been seeing on AMOLED panels, and viewing angles are not bad, either. Full HD videos look really nice on the phone’s bright screen, and this is definitely one of the best things about this Galaxy device. You’re not going to be let down by it. Oh, and if you want, you can choose from different screen modes, whichever colour gamut you prefer on the phone.

Camera

Moving to the 16 MP (fast AF) f/2.2 rear camera, Samsung seems to have put in a lot of effort to improve its camera app and also give better images from the S4, which was already a good camera phone. There are some pretty neat tricks in the camera app. Apart from the usual HDR and Burst mode shots, you can choose to switch on Selective Focus (HTC calls its own trick as UFocus) in the camera app, which allows you to change the focus subject in your image later. It defocuses according to your need, and that’s why mostly works in good lighting conditions.

Under low light, it may not capture or the option to start Selective Focus might not even show up because of low light. As far as image result goes, this is great performer. You can view a few sample images here.

The camera is capable of capturing good detailed shots, and is decent under low light conditions. You can even shoot 4K videos or HD videos at 120 FPS.

Sound

Talking about the phone’s sound quality, due to the thin rear cover, whenever you play something on higher volumes, it sort of vibrates the lower half of the phone’s body. Other than that, the phone is quite loud, clear, and in-ear box headphones are a decent pair. Call quality on the phone is top notch, and there was no issue regarding network reception during the usage period.

The S5 is IP67 certified, meaning it is dust resistant, and it can hold well when put into water up to a metre for about half an hour. Every time you switch on the phone, you are prompted to check if the back cover has been put on properly, and similarly, after you remove the charger, the phone notifies to check if there flap has been properly put or not. Just be a bit careful with that flap, it seems very delicate and might just come of the body after a few weeks.

Software and performance

The Samsung Galaxy S5 runs on Android 4.4.2 out of the box, along with Samsung’s own TouchWiz Nature UX 3.0 on top. Credit to Samsung for not shipping the phone with a previous Android OS version and providing KitKat from the start.

Samsung was quite vocal during its Galaxy S5 has got a much better, tweaked version of TouchWiz, and it shows that the whole software has gone a few changes as soon as you start using the smartphone. While the basic Home screen setup remains same, there are now a lot of new and improved looking icons. Even under Settings, Gallery, etc., there are a few minor changes and those are welcome.

However, the more you use it, you will see there hasn’t been much done for making the whole experience smoother or less confusing. More on this in a bit. The leftward-most screen gives you a personalised magazine where you can add you news, content as per your liking. For App launcher, again, it appears a little changed and for better. You now have to drag an app icon upwards and then to your desired Home screen, in order to make a shortcut. Folders, with your desired name and colour, can be made in the app launcher as well as Home screens. As for S features are concerned, there are loads of them, just like the S4.

The battery backup of the device was about 20 hours on an average. Samsung has added Ultra Power saving mode, which basically makes your smartphone a dumb-phone as you can only make and receive calls and text messages or set an alarm. It could be quite handy in times of emergency, giving a seriously long time of battery juice.

Moving to the S5’s much-talked about fingerprint scanner, it can be used to unlock the device. You have swipe your finger or thumb over it, or you could also opt to use an alternative password in case it the screen needs to be unlocked. When I tried to use the fingerprint scanner with my finger, it was a hit and miss case; worked about half of the times, but when I used my thumb, it worked, liked, 8 out of 10 times. The thing is, it probably doesn’t recognize various angles.

All in all, Samsung has done a good job with the Galaxy S5. If you’re looking for a new smartphone at the high-end range, this is good time to be in the market. If you’ve used a Samsung flagship in the last two years, you know the good and bad, but coming from another manufacturer, the transition might not be that smooth. The S5’s price hasn’t held too well in the market so far, and this might well be a reason to check it when doing your phone search.

Categories
Event

Seniors march for elder abuse awareness

As reports of abuse against elders in India surface, a walkathon organised in Borivali helps spread awareness about the issue.
by The Editors | editor@themetrognome.in

A recent report by HelpAge India painted an extremely grim picture of the state of senior citizens in the country – at an age when they should be enjoying their autumn years, as many as 50 per cent seniors (of those surveyed) complained of abuse from their families. A surprising finding was that apart from daughters-in-law and sons being perpetrators of abuse, even daughters were found to inflict mental and physical abuse on the elderly.

Elder abuse day walkathonThe report was released to coincide with the World Elder Abuse Awareness Day, which is observed on June 15 every year. To mark the occasion in their own small way, Silver Innings Foundation organised a walkathon comprising both seniors and youth at Borivali. The walkathon was flagged off from Dada Dadi Park in Veer Savarkar Udyan, near St Anne’s School.

“On the eve of the 9th Annual World Elder Abuse Awareness Day (WEAAD) on June 15, 2014 , Silver Innings  Helpline, a project of Silver Innings, in association with INPEA and Pushpa Maa Foundation, organised  a walkathon observing Elder Abuse Awareness Day on June 14,” said Sailesh Mishra, founder President of Silver Innings. “Around 230 senior citizens and 30 youngsters participated for the 20-minute walkathon with banners and placards,” he added. The programme also included the singing of inspirational songs and the tying of purple bands among the youth and seniors.
(Pictures courtesy Sailesh Mishra)
Categories
Enough said

Another ‘victim’, another time

This is the story of Jyotirmaya Sharma, a professor attacked by Right Wing goons in 1993 because he ‘looked Muslim’.
by Humra Quraishi

Mohsin ShaikhAs the details of the daylight murder of the Pune-based techie Mohsin Shaikh (in pic on left) by a Right Wing brigade came in, I was reminded of another such incident that had taken place in Mumbai earlier – only it ended with the victim surviving death.

The victim, professor Jyotirmaya Sharma (in pic above), had been brutally attacked, allegedly by a group of Shiv Sainiks, simply because he ‘looked like a Muslim’!

Jyotirmaya had told me about the incident on a previous occasion, but after Mohsin’s killing in Pune, I got in touch with him again to know all the details. He is a well-known academic and author, the Professor of Political Science at the University of Hyderabad and has authored three books on Hindutva, the RSS and the making of a Hindu rashtra.

This is what Jyotirmaya had to say: “I had returned from London and had joined the New Delhi-based CSDS as a Research Fellow. Though the rest of my bags and suitcases had arrived, those containing my books were stuck at the shipping company’s office in Mumbai. So I had to travel from Delhi to Mumbai to get them back.

“I landed in Mumbai and hired a taxi to reach the shipping company’s office. It was on January 10, 1993, and riots were erupting in Mumbai. Soon, my taxi was stopped by a bunch of Shiv Sainiks. While the taxi driver fled, these goons caught hold of me – because of my beard, they thought I was a Muslim. I kept telling them my name and showing them my passport, but they kept beating me, saying my passport was fake and so was my name.

“They were so certain I was a Muslim…when I told them I could recite the Gayatri Mantra, they said even Muslims had learnt the Mantra. Finally, one of them told me to recite the Gita. I did and they let me off. By then, I was badly thrashed and my shoulder was dislocated.”

He never complained to the cops, even as the city burned and a Canadian Sikh was killed on the street because somebody thought he was a Muslim. But Jyotirmaya continues to keep his beard to this day. “One can’t give in,” he says. One has to keep on resisting. You cannot be bullied by these Right Wing fanatics. Today they say, ‘Don’t look like a Muslim’. Tomorrow they will say, ‘Wear only saffron robes’. Where will this end?” he asks.

I have been to Mumbai just once, in the winter of 2006. While commuting in the city, I saw several young women, many of them college students, moving about in hijabs or burqas. I asked some of them if it was okay for them to ‘stand out’ as Muslims. One girl, Hasina Khan, said, “I am without a veil, but my college going sister insists on wearing a hijab. She says wearing a hijab makes her feel protected…”

I also learnt that more middle class Muslim women in Mumbai wear veils and burqas. As Rehana Mubeen Khan and Safia Khatoon Abdul Khaliq told me, they cover their heads because they feel it’s the way a dignified woman ought to look. “What’s wrong in us showing our identity? We keep to ourselves, to our own community people. It’s safer that way,” they said.

Humra Quraishi is a senior political journalist based in Gurgaon. She is the author of Kashmir: The Untold Story and co-author of Simply Khushwant.

(Pictures courtesy timesofap.com, www.cbc.ca)

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