Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Annus Horribilus for Magazines

In a press release issued recently, the following really sad news was reported:

"In 2009, 275 new magazines were launched while 428 ceased publication, according to MediaFinder.com. Regional magazines topped the list of new launches with 21 new titles, such as Maine Magazine and B-metro Birmingham, while it also topped the list of ceased publications (34), with titles such Atlanta Life and Denver Living.

The next largest category for new magazine launches in 2009 was Health, with 15 new titles, including Scottsdale Health and Natural Awakenings (Port Charlotte, FL). Another top category for new magazine launches was Food, with 14 new magazines such as Food Network Magazine, Edible Queens, and Sandra Lee Semi-Homemade."

And here's the bright side:

"'Despite the difficult year for the magazine industry, more than 275 magazines launched in 2009 – showing there is still strength in the regional, health, and food categories, with Food Network Magazine reporting more than 1 million readers,' said Trish Hagood, President of Oxbridge Communications, publishers of MediaFinder.com.

'Yet, at the same time, Gourmet Magazine, with a circulation of 977,000, founded in 1941, folded. And, sadly, many magazines were forced to abandon their print products, including Blender, Vibe, Purpose Driven Connection, and Giant.'

MediaFinder also reported the top categories for ceased publications in 2009. In addition to regional magazines, business magazines lead the list of ceased publications, with 16 publications including BusinessWeek Small Biz, Conde Nast Portfolio, and Fortune Small Business. Other large categories for ceased magazines include lifestyle and real estate magazines, with 14 ceased titles. The Home magazine category also experienced a decline with Country Home, Southern Accents, and Metropolitan Home folding in 2009."

In case you're wondering, MediaFinder.com is the largest online database of U.S. and Canadian periodicals, with information on 75,000 magazines, journals, newspapers, newsletters, directories, and catalogs.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Finally, there is a doctor in the house

http://medicallessons.wordpress.com/


Last year Elaine Schattner, a highly qualified medical doctor, completed her masters degree in journalism at Columbia's Graduate School of Journalism in order to tackle your medical questions and concerns in writing and trawl through and explain new research so that the rest of can have a clue. Check out her blog. I'd bookmark this one...

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Decorative Art

Remember when Christo and Jeanne-Claude wrapped Sydney's Little Bay in 1969? Me either, but apparently that was the first Kaldor Project. This year Sydney celebrates the 19th project of its kind with Tatzu Nishi's War and Peace and In Between 2009, a major intervention outside the New South Wales Gallery. Nishi takes two well-known public sculptures by the English sculptor Gilbert Bayes and builds rooms around them -- a bedroom and a living room, to be exact. The sculpture are each equestrian in nature -- a horse and its rider. In the bedroom, Nishi turns the everyday on its head making the horse step up onto a double bed. In the living room, a giant horses head is hidden in the TV cabinet and the rider's head sits on the coffee table. Walk back down the ramp and view the installation from afar to notice the bodies of horse and rider beneath the structure. Out of place, out of scale and pure genius. Catch it up until February 14, 2010 at Sydney's New South Wales Gallery.

Sensual Suprise at the Australian Centre for Photography

The Australian Centre for Photography is currently hosting a highly stylized, decadent, titillating show by Canadian-born, Sydney-based photographers Denis Montalbetti and Gay Campbell (you may remember them as the photographer team responsible for the photo of the X-Files'Mulder and Scully together in bed). The Sensualists sees beautiful bodies seemingly from the 18th and 19th centuries in various poses of wanton desire. Robert Cook, Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Photography and Design at the Art Gallery of Western Australia calls it, "Eros at work, eros at play" and ads that there's is an art that "Marie Antoinette would dig, or at least Sofia Coppola's version of her." Stylist Cassandra Scott-Finn, a former fashion editor of iLove and Ego magazines is the talent behind the over-the-top set design, make-up and hair direction. www.acp.org.au

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Monochrome Moment

If you're visiting Sydney between now and April 11 next year, throw on your most colorful frock and head off to Olafur Eliasson's Room for One Color at the Museum of Contemporary Art. Monochromatic bulbs emit light that turns all shades to black and white. Freaky -- in the best way.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Life Cycle of a Marigold Flower





In India lemon yellow and burnt orange chains of Marigold flowers are used for everything from a welcome wreath to a religious offering.

1. A stall of Marigold chains at a local market in Delhi
2. A stand of wreaths awaits guests' arrival at a hotel in Jaipur
3. At Srinath, where the Buddha gave his first sermon after reaching enlightenment, wreaths are placed in front of statues of deities.
4. A cow in Varanasi gets a floral snack when the Marigold chains have served their purpose for the day.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Don't Miss Deogarh



It's name means "Abode of the Gods," it was built in the 17th Century and turned into a heritage hotel in the last decade. You can walk around with an audio tour where British author William Dalrymple interviews the Rawat Nahar Singh ji II about his family's history in the place, plus you'll find one of the charming villages in Rajasthan that spreads out from the stairs of the palace and winds down the hill.

For more info www.deogarhmahal.com

Friday, December 18, 2009

Holy Rats!



Thirty miles south of Bikaner, in a tiny town called Deshnoke, you'll find what can only be described as spiritual fear factor. At the Karni Mata Temple, built by Maharaja Ganga Singh in the early 20th century, rats rule -- in their hundreds. Worshipers come to pay their respects to Karni Mata, a mystic who is considered an incarnation of Durga. When Mata's marriage dissolved, when she was 27, she devoted her life to service of the poor (it was not fun to become a widow in 15th century India). The rats (also called kabas) reside here and receive homage (and so much sugary white candies that they have developed diabetes) as their bodies are believed to house the souls of Karni Mata's departed devotees and it is believed that they will reincarnate and return as priests. My advice: Bring a pair of socks you won't be sorry to part with when it's all over.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Sati: Does it still happen?





The practice of Sati (Satee), where a recently widowed woman jumps, supposedly willingly, onto her husband's funeral pyre and is then considered to be a deity originated around 400AD. As you tour around Rajasthan, you might notice the set hands of royal Satis on the walls of forts. Legend has it that before a woman committed Sati she dipped her hand in red paint and then made an imprint of it on the wall. (The first two pictures above where taken at the entrance to the fort in Jodhpur).

The practice of Sati is outlawed in modern India.

The Commission of Sati (Prevention) Act of 1987 Part I, Section 2(c) defines Sati as:

"The burning or burying alive of – (i) any widow along with the body of her deceased husband or any other relative or with any article, object or thing associated with the husband or such relative; or (ii) any woman along with the body of any of her relatives, irrespective of whether such burning or burying is claimed to be voluntary on the part of the widow or the women or other-wise."

However it is still socially devastating to become widowed in India and some widows can still be in their teens if they were married off young. There have been cases of Sati in certain villages in the last few decades. William Dalrymple follows one case that happened in the 1990s in a village just outside of Jaipur in his book Age of Kali. The widow was just 18.

Weirdly, these days, if you do see red hand prints at the door to a house, it may also mean that a woman there has given birth (see pic above).

Saturday, December 12, 2009

7 Things to Know about Udaipur

1. It is spelt "Oodeypore" in Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book and is the birthplace of Bagheera the panther.
2. Indian sections of the James Bond film Octopussy were filmed in the city, the Lake Palace and the Monsoon Palace.
3. Roof terraces all over the city play reruns of Octopussy at 7pm every night. Take an auto-rickshaw down to the temples and you'll find one.
4. You might recognise the nearby desert in the dramatic scene where Bond rescues Octopussy (Maud Adams) from an aeroplane being flown by the Kamal Khan (Louis Jordan) and Gobinda (Kabir Bedi).
5. In Octopussy, Bond is sent to Delhi. The audience is never actually told that he is in Udaipur for virtually the entire movie giving the impression that Delhi is super-exotic.
6. It is a mini-Hollywood: Scenes from Darjeeling Limited, Opening Night, Heat and Dust and Gandhi were reportedly filmed there.
7. It is a mini-Bollywood too: Hindi movies have included Guide, Mera Saaya, Phool Bane Angaray, Kachche Dhagey and many more....


Photographs: Nadine Rubin
Right: The elephants that welcome you onto Jag Mandir where Octopussy ran her harem of ambidextrous babes.
Left: The Monsoon Palace which appears in Octopussy as the home of Kamal Khan




Friday, December 11, 2009

Ganesh in the House


All over India you'll find images of Lord Ganesh, the multiple-limbed elephant God who removes obstacles at the doorway to a home. We spotted him at the Karma Sutra temples in Khujarao and on the walls of houses in Jaisalmer Fort with the date of the last wedding in the family inscribed beneath his image.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

India in Print



There's no better way to learn about the history, culture and quirks of a place than to read a mix of fiction, non-fiction and memoir.

I recommend:

1. A Princess Remembers by Gayatri Devi, especially if you'll be in Jaipur and other parts of Rajasthan.
2. Anything by William Dalrymple, but especially The Age of Kali
3. Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts. Yes it's close to 1000 pages, but the descriptions of Mumbai are unbeatable.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Don't Miss: Orchha






Orchha would resemble many small Indian villages in Madhya Pradesh if it weren't for the glorious medieval palaces and temple spires. According to mptourism.com, "Orchha was founded in the 16th century by the Bundela Rajput chieftain, Rudra Pratap, who chose this stretch of land along the Betwa river as an ideal site for his capital. Of the succeeding rulers, the most notable was Raja Bir Singh Ju Deo who built the exquisite Jehangir Mahal, a tiered palace crowned by graceful chhatris." Inside the palaces, along wall and ceiling are frescoes representing the Bundela school of painting. The only problem, as our guide regretfully pointed out, is that the government have no interest in restoring or protecting these treasures. Sad, when you consider that tourism is all that Orchha has going for it these days...

Monday, December 7, 2009

On Signage


Call me cheeky or even mean, but I can't help noticing funny signage or spelling errors that result in double entendres. Here are a few I spotted in India:




Sunday, December 6, 2009

Beyond Mouvember


Each year in Jaisalmer a competition is held to determine the owner of the longest mustache. You'll need more than the month of November to win this one.

Here, a regular contender and winner shows off his hirsute pride and joy.

Photograph: Nadine Rubin

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Bhang Bhang Club



Bhang (pronounced Buh-ng) is a derivative of marijuana. Is it legal in India? Nay. However, that didn't stop the owners of the Bhang Shop in Jaisalmer, India from declaring that they are "government authorized."

Photograph: Nadine Rubin

Friday, December 4, 2009

That Sinking Feeling

Imagine you are a tourist wanting to visit the Jaisalmer Fort, built in 1156 by the Bhati Rajput ruler Jaisal. This is Rajasthan's only "live-in" fort and about a quarter of the city's population still reside within the tall yellow sandstone walls. So you're paging through Lonely Planet India and...whoa!...what's this? The authors of the good book have taken a decision to not review any accommodation inside the fort itself. Instead, they ask that you, dear tourist, be eco-conscious and stay outside the fort to avoid putting additional pressure on the fort's archaic sewage system (it has been reported that three of the 99 bastions have already crumbled because of water seeping into the foundations). Residents inside the fort are allocated one hour a day within which to fill their tanks with water that needs to last them for showers, cooking and drinking. So, yes, taking two showers a day at your boutique Haveli-turned-hotel is a tad unconscious.


If you look closely at the wall in the below photograph you can see the rising water levels that are causing the fort to literally sink into the desert sand.




Photograph: Nadine Rubin

Thursday, December 3, 2009

The V.VIP Room

You'll know you've made it when you bypass the VIP Room and enter the V.VIP Room at the airport in Varanasi. We can only imagine the guest list: Maharajas, Bollywood stars and Graydon Carter.




Photograph: Paul Nathan

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Mahatma's Message, Alive and Well


I saw this sign on the side of the road in Jaipur, Rajasthan. India is a long way from the vision that Mahatma Gandhi had for the country after independence in 1947 and sadly never saw through due to his assassination one year later. Sadly these days his message is used for commercial purposes, but hey it is still a reminder for some of us...

Photograph: Nadine Rubin