Monday, April 23, 2012

Lyrids

It's not the first time I have accidentally witnessed a meteor in the sky. And I'm sure it's not the last... Last night, just before I slept on the terrace, I saw a bright streak in the sky lasting just about a second rushing from the north eastern sky to the south western. Perfect axis.
I knew what I had seen.
I was told that that night of the 22nd of april was the peak period for the Lyrid showers, and I was lucky to have witnessed it.

And I remembered that December morning back in 2007 when I saw the most beautiful astral sigh ever - the Geminid meteor showers. About 50 meteors and 4 fireballs.
Again- accidentally.
I had stayed awake the previous night waiting for the showers, but I was destined to witness it the next morning with a new friend. It was magical.

I think I am very lucky to have witnessed such wonders of nature. Not once, not twice, but every now and then... Just when I feel low, a sight like this cheers me up, and I think... I am still rich... 

Sunday, April 22, 2012

A pen is mightier than a sword... but does it have to be an expensive pen?

It's weird calling myself a comic artist because:
1. I'm no good at drawing
2. I don't read most of the cult comics stuff. 
3. I don't have much of a comic style
4. I don't have many great script ideas
And most importantly,
5. I don't have an expensive pen.

But what does having an expensive pen got to do with comic art? I would never know, since I never owned or used an expensive pen to draw, right? 
Except when I studied architecture and we had to draw using Isograph pens and ink. But those were architectural design drawings. And most of my isograph pens were hand me downs. 
I could never really afford high end and expensive equipment, although I wanted to buy all that once I started earning. But I didn't when I did. 
And I was never even gifted an expensive pen.
I think it's the commie in me that prevents me from buying an expensive pen. (thats being a hypocrite of the highest order... )
But I've been drawing and I have been writing. Mostly for myself... and I like it like that. 

I don't need an expensive pen.
Or do i?


PS: a 'pen' encompasses more than just the 'pen' in the above article, you can read it as 'a complete set of tools and equipments required for a so called graphic artist'

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Tales from the construction site... and beyond... I

Client during the pooja
Before evert new construction starts, the owners and contractors usually perform a little Bhoomi Pooja. So on one such construction site of a project I am designing for, I clicked some photos of the client performing it. One of the rituals is cracking open a coconut on a stone or pavement. The Roofing contractor had two coconuts to crack: one for the machinery and another for the construction material. The client cracked the coconut for the machinery, and I was asked to do the same for the material stock. 
I clicked some photos of the client cracking open the coconut in one go... And the contractor clicked some of mine, while I was having a go at the other coconut.

As I showed these photos to my folks individually, all of them had the same question to ask me:

"Did you manage to break open the coconut?"

All three of them... it was crazy!




I managed to crack the coconut open with the second blow... 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Up and Coming!

Recent photos from an ongoing residential project at Sonala village in Wada, Thane District.
The site is located within the Warli heartlands. It's a load bearing structure with a foundation and retaining wall in black trap stone and superstructure using local brick. The structure will be kept exposed from outside with recessed pointing for the brick and stone masonry.


The ridge level of the sloping steel roof is at 18' from the floor. As warm air rises up from the ground level, it flows out from the brick ventilators above the windows, thus ensuring constant air circulation from the windows at lower level.








These beams are cantilevered on the other side for a wooden deck facing a splendid view of fields and the Sonala village beyond.


The roof is being made using structural steel tubes and traditional Mangalore clay tiles. 

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The wonderful feeling...

When on a cool winter afternoon you wear sun warmed socks...
That, ladies and gentlemen - Is bliss

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Mansion of who's Gods?


??? Really?

India- they say, needs 500 new cities: "villes nouvelles"
I found the similarity between Caesar's ridiculous (albeit fictitious) Mansion of the gods and the equally ridiculous disaster that is Lavasa.


PS: I love the Asterix comic: Mansions of the gods. It's the best of the Asterix volumes.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Monday, December 12, 2011

Excuses

Being dumped by the love of your life is a terrible experience to go through. Unfortunately, I've been through it twice. But the difference between the first one and second one was the way I dealt with it.
The first unceremonious dumping made me wander around the city aimlessly with my notebook and camera by bus and on two feet. During the second (equally unceremonious, if not less)- I had my bike and would go riding away on a drizzly afternoons on the outer roads of Pune alone, listening to music which I stopped listening to soon after that phase. One fine drizzly afternoon, after having partially recovered from flu, I decided to push my luck and try to somehow be at Senapati Bapat road near Chaturshrungi at 6.15 PM. I left home quite early, thus giving me about an hour to kill. So my plan was this:
To call up my unsuspecting friend staying at Baner asking if I could visit him for some time. This way I could go around the longer route from (Pune's) Chandni Chowk to Baner, visit my friend, kill time and then be at Chaturshrungi at the above mentioned time.
As I left, it started raining. I took shelter under a tree and it stopped raining. Then it started raining again as I started and I took shelter under a tree twenty meters from the first one. The i wore my rain jacket and rode off regardless of the rain. Climbing up chandni chowk was taxing considering i was still weak from three days of flu. As I rode down the hill towards baner, I felt calm. Like I had a plan in my mind and I knew what I was doing whereas in reality, I had no plan. I was just taking a chance and timing myself.
I met my friend at his house but not before crossing gigantic slush patches before his society entrance. I had to walk the cycle here. Oh the horror!
My friend made coffee for me. We spoke and I transferred some of my flu virus to him and he fell sick after that, but that is another story.
And then soon enough, my mind told me it was time to go. After all, I had to reach Chaturshrungi by 6.15 PM. I rode out towards senapati bapat road with a sudden rush and a sense of something just about to happen... 6:15 PM and I had just reached the University signal. I was late. What if I missed it? What if something happened which I didn't take into consideration?
But I persisted.
I rode up to Chaturshrungi.
I rode beyond Chaturshrungi
And sure enough, I saw him.
Mission accomplished? Well, not really. I said hi, we walked home, ate burgers on the way and went home. But things just went downhill from there. In a fit of sweet hysteria, I admitted that I had feelings for him, but you see- he saw through me better than i saw through myself. I was a fool. Things were better later as the situation between us grew into an initially awkward, but later comfortable friendship.
But keeping stuff at the back of your mind is not the best thing to do. And the human mind is made up of all kinds of memories. And it went further downhill as memories kept creeping up at the wrong time and wrong place.
I don't know whom to blame for this, and I don't want to. But my only hope is that years from now, if we ever remember this, we can laugh at it.

Friday, June 10, 2011

How will he ever die?

At the age of 14, I got the opportunity to meet this great old man. Someone who i'd just read of in the papers and seen on the news. Someone who i knew was the most famous painter and liked to paint women from the movies.
I saw him walk barefoot on the grass of the little hillock at Surajkund. Apparently, I heard - he was always barefoot. He was to paint on a wall. A small crowd had gathered to watch him at work. What I saw was a bony old man with a white beard, white hair and a beret covering it walking slowly with a smile on his face. As if he was about to play a prank on his unsuspecting audience.
With one look at the wall, he picked up a huge brush which was kept near the bottles of paint neatly arranged on a table, ready for him to use. With one stroke he drew a semi circle on the wall and a stick figure within it which resembled a veiled woman. Or so I thought.
The man with him enthusiastically started clapping signifying the end of the process of painting that wall. He egged us on to applaud for him and we happily obliged.
Another youngish man came forward to clean the paint off the old man's trousers who then sat with a few other important looking people sipping tea.
He seemed unfazed by them and was quite happy to oblige the crowd with autographs and handshakes. I still have his autograph. And somewhere stashed away, a photograph with him. His smile never lessened. He didn't talk much, but was happy to be there, I think.
He had played his prank.
One of the most visionary artists from our land, whose work needs no introduction, played the prank that his genius mind conjured up. We might take years to understand and decipher his complex thoughts and visuals.
But that fine February day MF Hussain influence me to try to understand visual arts. I am just one amongst many whose lives he touched. So how will he ever die?

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Have you ever seen... Epicfail

A couple of years ago, I posted this particular post. For me, the words were carved in stone. No one would ever see these spectacular sights!

But just recently, exactly two years later, John Abraham appeared in an advertisement riding a bicycle through a forest looking all happy.

I was impressed! But just as I was about to applaud his efforts, he stopped and lifted the edge of his t shirt sleeves (muscles ripping and all...), looked right in the camera (gaze meant to melt the heart of all the Ladies and a few men, and make them go 'awwwww...') and showed how tanned he gets and how he needs a fairness cream made specifically for men to keep their tough skin fair all the time.

A few months ago, I read these terms used on twitter and I loved them. Just describes perfectly what I felt at that time: Epicfail and Facepalm.

Mr. Abraham... please cover yourself in all the leather jackets and protective pads and helmets, and go ride a Motorbike instead.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Midnight adventures


Presenting: The delectable five minute Mulberry cake in a cup!

Many years ago... (fifteen, to be precise) I lived in srinagar for a couple of years. Beautiful place, weather and flowers and fruits. Then there was spring... the season of mulberries. I would carry a bag to collect mulberries growing on trees. Those trees seemed to be just randomly sprinkled all over the place.
Mulberries are nice little things to eat. Especially the dark sweet ones. I had just learned how to bake cakes, and I decided to try making a mulberry cake. It turned out delicious and grey in colour.
I never made another mulberry cake till yesterday when I baked the 5 minute cake in a cup version of the same. It was delicious and blue-grey in colour!

DR

DR by shutterbugpooja
DR, a photo by shutterbugpooja on Flickr.

Yes, it looks quite cute. That was before I cut off my braid. I don't have it anymore. Clicked by Pooja. Don't know when and where, but it's cute, nonetheless.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

In other news...

A few things happened in the last few days. I bought a new bike, India won the cricket world cup 2011, and I got featured in a this nice online Independent magazine called Start.
Anna Hazare begun his fast unto death demanding greater public role in the Anti-Corruption Bill and Dhoni Shaved his hair. Well lots more, but this much is enough for now.