Sunday, January 13, 2013

ATIT Reheated - Pune, Maharashtra: the Aga Khan's palace/Gandhi's prison where he lost his best friend and wife, but left behind his sandals and a half-pipe

By Jack Brummet, India Travel Editor



The Aga Khan Palace - click all pictures to enlarge

It was here, in the Aga Kahn's palace in Pune where Kasturba Gandhi and Mahatma Gandhi's long time aide (whom he thought of as a son), Mahadeobhai Desai died. The palace that once belonged to the Aga Khan (whose son became the President of the League of Nations), served as lodging for the imprisonment of Gandhi and his wife Kasturba as British rule in India drew to a close. The Gandhi exhibits housed there are very homey and casual, and yet it is a thoughtful and moving collection. Seeing Gandhi's artifacts made him and that era resonate--we saw his cooking pots, letters and books, his sandals, photos, his Bhagavad Gita, even his bathtub, and a memorial with his ashes, in the garden near where his wife and friend's ashes are buried.

This is something to see if you're ever in Pune. This 1892 palace was built by Imam Sultan Muhammad Shah Agakhan III and was donated to India in 1969 by Aga Khan IV. It became the Gandhi Memorial.

I loved this place. It was a funky and moving tribute to, as Lord Buckley called him, "The Hip Gann." The Mahatma's presence and vibes reverberated in the palace and grounds like a celestial choir.



A pretty moving story about Gandhi's close aide dying
within a week of their imprisonment. Click to enlarge.



A memorial where at least some of Gandhi's ashes
rest.





The curved brick wall we began calling Gandhi's half-pipe




A folky painting, kind of in the Soviet tractor style of propaganda art






The sandals Gandhi wore in prison

detail from a painting of Gandhi and his wife
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Drawing: The Orgy

By Jack Brummet

click to enlarge
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Saturday, January 12, 2013

Faces No. 353 - The finance department

By Jack Brummet

[drawing on india ink scratchboard and scanned and digitally reversed] 




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Friday, January 11, 2013

JFK has a tea party with his daughter Caroline

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Poem: The Creek

By Jack Brummet




The creek alongside me
Carries raindrops, tears, sweat, and snow
That may once have landed

In Johannesburg, Soho,
Bucerias, Constantinople,
Athens, Ketchikan, or Saskatoon.

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Gov. Crass Crusty, R. (NJ)

by Jack Brummet

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Marginalia in a Harvard University copy of Ezra Pound's cantos

By Jack Brummet, Poetry Editor

Ezra Pound, who made all the famous cuts and marginal comments in T.S. Eliot's Waste Land, gets the sama marginalia treatment from the undergrad and grad students at Harvard.  This is a shot of one of the circulating copies of the book in their library.  This is really appropos of nothing at all; I just love marginalia, corrected proofs and manuscripts, and in general, the now soon to be lost analog methods of interacting with text.


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Wednesday, January 09, 2013

Matt Drudge hits a new low (how is this even possible?)

By Pablo Fanque, National Affairs Editor

Thanks Jeff Clinton for passing this along...

To add to the Alex Jones hysteria, Matt Drudge decides to jump the shark, and this is a new low for even him. . . He clearly does not understand the history or scope of executive orders, or recognize the fact that BHO--despite the gun and ammo buying hysteria that accompanied his election--has never been particularly anti-gun/2nd amendment. It's been a long time since Drudge broke anything important. His descent into total irrelevancy is now complete.

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The Sous Chef - detail from large painting "Dan White Is Dead"

By Jack Brummet

[detail from 3'x4' acrylic on canvas


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Faces No. 351 - The Mondays

By Jack Brummet


click to enlarge
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