Saturday, 16 January 2010

Garden and Cosmos Exhibition







We visited the Art Gallery NSW to see this exhibition. It was stunning. Indian Art is quite intricate and whatever the criticisms of technique is just washed away at the enjoyment of them.

This groundbreaking exhibition of newly discovered Indian paintings from the royal court collection of Marwar-Jodhpur (in the modern state of Rajasthan) has three sections devoted to the garden and cosmos leitmotifs, with an introductory gallery about the kingdom of Marwar-Jodhpur and the origins of its court painting traditions in the 17th century. Produced for the private enjoyment of the Marwar- Jodhpur maharajas, virtually none of the 60 works on view in “Garden and Cosmos” have ever been published or seen by scholars since their creation centuries ago. Strikingly innovative in their large scale, subject matter, and styles, they reveal both the conceptual sophistication of the royal atelier and the kingdom’s engagement with the changing political landscapes of early modern India.
Commentary by the Maharaja of Jodhpur, who lent many of the paintings, and Debra Diamond, the curator who organized the exhibition, is included on an audio guide available at the Garden and Cosmos entrance. [si]

Please click on each image to find references to the exhbition.

Thursday, 7 January 2010

Obituary : manto Tshabalala Msimang


Manto Tshabalala-Msimang obituary

South African minister of health notorious for her stance on Aids
Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, who has died aged 69 of complications arising from a liver transplant, was South Africa's most notorious cabinet minister since the apartheid era. "A drunkard and a thief" was how the Johannesburg Sunday Times described the former minister of health. The headline hardly did her justice, the "theft" having been a wristwatch taken from the arm of a comatose patient; the drunkenness being in anticipation of a transplant.

Under her leadership, life expectancy in South Africa fell to 49 years, thanks to Aids-related fatalities which – with 4.2 million infected by the virus – saw deaths nearly double between 1999 and 2005. The fury of Aids activists was compounded by her refusal to allow nevirapine to be administered to pregnant woman, although research proved it effective in preventing the transmission of the virus.

A disaster on strategic planning, Tshabalala-Msimang turned to her lifelong mentor, President Mbeki, and a never-ending procession of medical advisers abroad, whose views on treating HIV and Aids chimed with her own.

Feeble attempts were made to defend the government's position on Aids, with such arguments as the inability of South Africa to afford anti-retroviral drugs. But the lie was given to that in 2002, when Tshabalala-Msimang blocked US funding to assist in the distribution of anti-retrovirals in her homeland, KwaZulu-Natal. She owed her political survival to Mbeki, and only after his fall last year did she leave office. She was awaiting a second transplant when she died.

The Johannesburg Sunday Times gives a chilling epitaph on Tshabalala-Msimang: "Those who took the health minister at her word, died."

Mantombazana Edmie Tshabalala-Msimang, politician, born 9 October 1940; died 16 December 2009