July 2008

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Architecture

February 23, 2008

ARTS: Bhutanese art exhibit in Honolulu

Tenzinrabgye_2 The Honolulu Academy of Arts in Hawaii has put together a three month-long exhibition - "The Dragon's Gift: The Sacred Arts of Bhutan" - where over 100 sacred items from Bhutan (which are on loan to the Academy by Bhutanese government) will be put on display.

From the exhibition website:

Visual expressions of Buddhism from Bhutan on view in the exhibition include painted and textile thangkas, sculptures, and ritual items. Works of art date from the 8th century to the 20th century, with especially strong examples of painting and sculpture from the 17th through the 19th centuries, a golden age in the Buddhist art of Bhutan. Works in The Dragon’s Gift were selected for outstanding aesthetic accomplishment and wide iconographic scope. Nearly all of the items in the exhibition required conservation. The Academy-led conservation program has already restored hundreds of works of art and is training a new generation of conservators, primarily monks charged with the responsibility of caring for sacred objects.

Here is an article from the Honolulu Star-Bulletin about the exhibition, which will include some of the oldest masterpieces from Bhutan's old Buddhist monasteries.

"Because the art of Bhutan is so poorly published, ours is the first attempt at presenting the kingdom's art history," says Stephen Little, director of the Honolulu Academy of Arts, which organized the exhibit over a five-year period beginning in 2003. "When we started, we didn't know what would be in the show. We didn't know what was there. We were starting from scratch."

The exhibition is also planned for New York, San Francisco and couple of other international cities.

For more information on the gallery, exhibition and Buddhist art, click here.

January 09, 2008

BUSINESS: American Dollars "No Good" at the Taj Mahal

Tajmahal_copy There was a time when historical and architectural venues in South Asia worshipped the American dollar. But not anymore.

The Taj Mahal and several other tourist sites in India will not be accepting dollars anymore.

From the International Herald Tribune:

"For years tourists visiting most sites in India were charged either $5, or 250 rupees.

After falling 11 percent in 2007, hitting nine-year lows to hoover around 39 rupees, the dollar is out.

Charging only rupees now seems more practical and will save tourists money because "the dollar was weaker against the rupee," Tourism Minister Ambika Soni told the CNN-IBN news channel."

Bloomberg writes that this is another insult to the once mighty greenback.

The dollar, which has been snubbed by everybody from government officials in Kuwait and South Korea to top-earning Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bundchen, may not recover its luster. Economists say the currency, which has declined in five of the past six years against the euro, is caught in a downdraft as investors pour into Asia, prompting a tectonic shift in economic power from the U.S.

The value of Indian rupees has surged by 13 per cent against the dollar in the past year. Imagine rapper Fifty Cent renaming himself Fifty Paisa. See how most news websites and blogs are covering this story.

Last November, supermodel Giselle Bundchen refused to be paid in dollars anymore. She wanted euros instead. And it isn't just foreign supermodels and tourist attractions denouncing the dollar. In his new video "Blue Magic, "America's very own Jay-Z , shows a briefcase full of 500 euro notes.

Along the same lines, Kiplinger suggests earning more on your savings by investing in foreign currencies.

What do you think? Please post your comments below.

Earlier on SAJAforum:

July 09, 2007

FOLLOW UP: Taj Mahal Makes It To List of "7 New Wonders"

We wrote in March about a worldwide poll to select the "New 7 Wonders of the World." The Taj Mahal was among 21 sites in the running. While this contest made only minor waves in the US, when I  was in India, there was nonstop coverage about it and news channels were running items on their "crawls" several times a day asking viewers to vote via text message.

So with millions of Indians voting, when the announcement of the winners came out of 07.07.07, it was no surprise that the Taj made the list. See the list below (click to magnify) and at New7Wonders.com. Post your comments below.

7wonders

EARLIER ON SAJAforum.org:

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