Showing posts with label Tagore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tagore. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Tributes to Rabindranath Tagore…

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Today is death anniversary of of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore ( 7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941), the greatest poet of our country . This  post is a philatelic tribute to Gurudev  the “ Pride of India “   !!

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Rabindranath Tagore :  Author of Gitanjali and its "profoundly sensitive, fresh and beautiful verse", he became the first non-European to win the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. In translation his poetry was viewed as spiritual and mercurial; his seemingly mesmeric personality, flowing hair, and other-worldly dress earned him a prophet-like reputation in the West. His "elegant prose and magical poetry" remain largely unknown outside Bengal. Tagore introduced new prose and verse forms and the use of colloquial language into Bengali literature, thereby freeing it from traditional models based on classical Sanskrit. He was highly influential in introducing the best of Indian culture to the West and vice versa, and he is generally regarded as the outstanding creative artist of modern India.

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A Brahmin from Calcutta, Tagore wrote poetry as an eight-year-old. At age sixteen, he released his first substantial poems under the pseudonym Bhānusiṃha ("Sun Lion"), which were seized upon by literary authorities as long-lost classics. He graduated to his first short stories and dramas—and the aegis of his birth name—by 1877. As a humanist, universalist internationalist, and strident anti-nationalist he denounced the Raj and advocated independence from Britain. As an exponent of the Bengal Renaissance, he advanced a vast canon that comprised paintings, sketches and doodles, hundreds of texts, and some two thousand songs; his legacy endures also in the institution he founded, Visva-Bharati University.

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Tagore modernised Bengali art by spurning rigid classical forms and resisting linguistic strictures. His novels, stories, songs, dance-dramas, and essays spoke to topics political and personal. Gitanjali (Song Offerings), Gora (Fair-Faced), and Ghare-Baire (The Home and the World) are his best-known works, and his verse, short stories, and novels were acclaimed—or panned—for their lyricism, colloquialism, naturalism, and unnatural contemplation. His compositions were chosen by two nations as national anthems: the Republic of India's Jana Gana Mana and Bangladesh's Amar Shonar Bangla. The composer of Sri Lanka's national anthem: Sri Lanka Matha was a student of Tagore, and the song is inspired by Tagore's style.

 

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Thursday, May 10, 2012

Club News

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Coins on Tagore

To commemorate 150th Birth anniversary of Tagore, Kolkata Mint recently issued a 5 Rupees PROOF coin in a nice black presentation pack.

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courtesy : Shrikant Parikh – Ahmedabad

 

REVIVING PHILATELY

( AT GRASS ROOT LEVEL )

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C.R.Andhare and Naresh Agrawal talking to children

In Indian Philatelic scenario, there has been tremendous decline in birth and growth of new philatelists only because of less interest among the school children in stamp collection. The reason being pressure of studies, development in communication systems leading to intensive use of mobile phones and e-mails and also growth of private courier service. A strong need of introducing and inculcating the hobby of stamp collection among the school children is felt today as future of philately lies in these children only.

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To move a step in this direction to take the children in to the world of stamps, Adharshila Vidya Mandir School at Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh organized a philatelic workshop on 06.05.2012 during its 15 days summer camp which saw various different creative activities. Mr. C.R. Andhare and Mr. Naresh Agrawal philatelists of international repute from Bilaspur introduced students of class II to class Xth. During this workshop students were introduced to the postal stamp, its feature and its importance as a collectable and educational item. They were taught how to collect, preserve, arrange and organize stamps. There were different thematic exhibits on display and PPt. presentation. The workshop was well attended and created interest amongst many of children. Stamps and covers were distributed amongst the children. Local print media also wrote high of this activity.

- Naresh Agarwal, Bilaspur

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Tributes to the greatest Indian Poet - Tagore

 

 

Pride of India

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7 May – Birth Anniversary of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore

Today is Birth Anniversary of  Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore. This post is a tribute to the greatest poet of all time and  Pride of India . The post is dedicated to all those who love and admire the works of Tagore !!  Tagore has been honoured on postage stamps issued  by many postal administrations of the world .

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Rabindranath Tagore (7 May 1861 – 7 August 1941), also known by the sobriquet Gurudev, was a Bengali mystic, Brahmo poet, visual artist, playwright, novelist, and composer whose works reshaped Bengali literature and music in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He became Asia's first Nobel laureate when he won the 1913 Nobel Prize in Literature.

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The government of Sri Lanka released on May 7 2011, a postal stamp  on Rabindranath Tagore, on the occasion of his 150th birth anniversary celebrations.


A Pirali Brahmin from Calcutta Tagore first wrote poems at the age of eight. At the age of sixteen, he published his first substantial poetry under the pseudonym Bhanushingho ("Sun Lion") and wrote his first short stories and dramas in 1877. In later life Tagore protested strongly against the British Raj and gave his support to the Indian Independence Movement. Tagore's life work endures, in the form of his poetry and the institution he founded, Visva-Bharati University.

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Tagore wrote novels, short stories, songs, dance-dramas, and essays on political and personal topics. Gitanjali (Song Offerings), Gora (Fair-Faced), and Ghare-Baire (The Home and the World) are among his best-known works. His verse, short stories, and novels, which often exhibited rhythmic lyricism, colloquial language, meditative naturalism, and philosophical contemplation, received worldwide acclaim.

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Tagore was also a cultural reformer and polymath who modernised Bengali art by rejecting strictures binding it to classical Indian forms. Two songs from his canon are now the national anthems of Bangladesh and India: the Amar Shonar Bangla and the Jana Gana Mana respectively.

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Farewell My Friend...

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Farewell My Friend
It was beautiful as long as it lasted
The journey of my life.
I have no regrets whatsoever
save the pain I'll leave behind.
Those dear hearts who love and care...
And the strings pulling at the heart and soul...
The strong arms that held me up
When my own strength let me down.
At every turning of my life I came across good friends,
Friends who stood by me,
Even when the time raced me by.
Farewell, farewell my friends
I smile and bid you goodbye.
No, shed no tears for I need them not
All I need is your smile.
If you feel sad do think of me
for that's what I'll like when you live in the hearts
of those you love, remember then
you never die.

~ Rabindranath Tagore

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Cairo's Philatelic exhibition on Rabindranath Tagore…

 

 

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Here is an interesting article published in the Al-Ahram weekly, Cairo. 

Contemplating the contemplator

Cairo's Maulana Azad Centre for Indian Culture staged a exhibition to commemorate Rabindranath Tagore. Gamal Nkrumah feasts his eyes on India's Philatelic treasures….

Cairo's Philatelic exhibition on Rabindranath Tagore may provoke a connoisseurial smirk or a knowing sneer to the uninitiated in the art of stamps issued by the postal departments of around 20 countries from across the globe. Satirists look at life's conventional scenes and see panoplies of penetration and discernment. The most resonant images portrayed in the philatelic objects on display are the sensational portraits of the first Asian Nobel Laureate himself. "The progress of our soul is like a perfect poem. It has an infinite idea which once realised makes al movement full of meaning and joy," so reflected Tagore on encountering Einstein. It was the proverbial meeting of the minds.

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Tagore exerts a hypnotic grip on his Egyptian audience. His spectacular posturing offers a tableau of an extraordinary sensualist and a subtle hint of sensationalism.

In a rousing address before the visitors to this exceptionally moving exhibition, His Excellency Ambassador R Swaminathan of India paid special homage to the Rabindranath Tagore Centre, Indian Council for Cultural Relations, Kolkata.

Sekhar Chakrabarti whose rare philatelic objects from his private collection were borrowed specifically for this unique Cairo exhibition best expressed the mood of the moment.

Magically, the exhibition was staged masterfully at a defining moment in Egypt's history. Tagore would have been delighted, one suspects, at the spirit that Egypt's 25 January Revolution exuded. "Tagore was a universal thinker even though he was also a symbol and beacon of contemporary Bengali culture," Sekhar Chakrabarti mused.

Gurudev, literally "Teacher" as Tagore was endearingly called, promoted rural reconstruction including traditional arts and crafts.

Equally disparaging was the attitudes of the rich towards the poor. The immense income differentials and social inequalities, disparities in social prestige and economic wellbeing between castes and classes were the hallmarks of Indian society under British rule. That crisis touched him deeply.

Tagore was born into a life of privilege and wealth. Yet abject poverty was all around him. Human suffering was an inescapable facet of everyday life in rural Bengal.

All art aspires to the condition of creation. And, Tagore understood that truism all too well. His lessons cannot get lost in the cornucopia of kantha. What humans the world over find innately inspiring and touching has changed little over time. Therefore we can today emphasize with images made more than a century ago even when their original contexts have faded.

The common themes are catharsis and the remaking of an individual's and a nation's vision.

The time for geopolitical caution is past. Tagore was received rapturously by Egyptians when he visited the country in 1926, and especially the cultural and political elite.

Bengal's celebrated bard spoke to a packed two houses of parliament and he had a memorable encounter with the foremost Egyptian poet Ahmed Shawki. It metamorphosed into a story of a friendship between two men of letters but who are from different worlds, but share common concerns.

Tagore encounter with Shawki was touching without going gooey, though. India and Egypt were unsuited for the role in which modern history had cast them -- colonies of Britain. Both countries were haunted by their great past and ancient glories and yet were bedeviled by the fear of a failed future. Yet, there was hope of redemption, of emancipation from colonial oppression and a yearning for a return to a golden age of freedom.

By many standards Tagore is one of the titans of modern India. His correspondence is of great importance both in the historical and literary sense. Few other poets can match his elegant, lapidary style and this shines through in his letters. "Receiving letters was an important impetus for collecting stamps in the past. Now everyone uses social networking and the Internet as the main means of communication."

In many ways this exhibition, of course, is perfectly timed. The lustre of the personal correspondence of Tagore has not been tarnished by the seismic events that engulfed South Asia like a tsunami. Bengal was divided in two, India was partitioned, and then Bangladesh seceded from Pakistan.

A constant menace in Tagore's long life was the peril of bereavement that was grotesquely inextricably intertwined with beauty. The beautiful ones passed away in the very apogee of youthful vivaciousness. When you read Tagore, you do have to contemplate the contemplator, sharing with him his loss and pain and the subsequent overcoming of anguish. His poems alone are captivating capturing the serene miraculousness of being.

Tagore was not merely a starry-eyed poet. His sister-in-law Kadambari Devi committed suicide in 1884, a year after Tagore himself was betrothed to his beloved Mrinalini Devi.
Mrinalini Devi breathed her last in 1902, only to be succeeded by the passing of Tagore's second daughter Renuka in 1903. The death of his father followed in 1905 and then his youngest son Samindranath died in 1907. But his finest works were yet to be produced. Few thinkers of the past three centuries have crafted literature more pertinent than Tagore.

In Egypt we bury our dead. In India things are different. This cultural discrepancy manifests itself in all sorts of ways. Yet Tagore's magic was universal. He was, after all, the first non-Westerner as well as the first Asian to be bestowed the Nobel Prize.

Tagore did not see the tormented turn on the tormentor. In 19010 his magnum opus Gitanjili was published to international acclaim. This was the chef d'oeuvre that earned him the Nobel Prize. Tagore wrote a poem on Africa entitled Africa, the Sleeping Giant. His visionary insight was matched by his epic sweep.

Patriotic postcards of Tagore, like his prose and poetry, struck a chord with people all over the world. The suffering appalled him, the humiliating indignities of a subject people. He was sickened by the inexplicable inequalities.

A mood of catharsis prevailed. Tagore espoused a universalistic spirit and he was by nature an internationalist. The Bengal's historical rich cultural heritage became, paradoxically, more entrenched in the poet as he became more conscious of the common concerns of humanity.

Heart-rendingly, Tagore wrote about life and death, suffering and enjoyment, beauty and ugliness -- life in all its kaleidoscopic facets.

His works were written for eternity, for his words speak directly to every age. They were told to perfection.

As in so many areas of Indian life, the art of kantha reflects a down-to-earth culture. It is of the daughters and sons of the soil.

What is so special about Tagore's secularist philosophy is the moral legitimacy lent mankind.

Whether it will benefit Egypt at this particular historical moment is more doubtful. Now and then one is struck by the antediluvian quality of inter-faith relations in India, or South Asia if you will. "Progressive intellectuals" and the powers that be often endorse the confrontational rhetoric of religious zealots, and those who advocate and espouse confessionalism and sectarianism. So can Egyptians learn something from Tagore? Ironically, the religious strife that is ripping the country apart has intensified since the Tagore exhibition was staged in Cairo. There were few things that made the great Bengali sage feel grimmer than religious-instigated violence.

The vitriol had a xenophobic edge. It is not just the interim post-25 January Revolution government that detects an organising hand behind the unrest in contemporary Egypt.

What makes this so jarring is that the legendary bard foresaw the division of his homeland, and tasted the bitter partition of his beloved Bengal. How could he deliver exuberance, vivacity and even euphoria in such a morbid setting?

Tagore stayed out of the political squabbles of his time. However, he was anything but apolitical.

Tagore was for emancipation, liberation of mankind and that certainly included womankind. "Rabindranath's role in the liberation of Bengali women was a seminal one," declares Kathleen O'Connell who conducts courses on South Asia at New College, University of Toronto, Canada. "Initially, he exposed the plight of women and argued for their autonomy through his letters, short stories and essays. Through his novels he was able to construct new and vital female role models to inspire a new generation of Bengali women. Later, by his act of admitting females into his Santiniketan school, he became an innovator pioneer in co-education," O'Connell concludes.

So why not keep going? Women are often fettered by the confines of tradition. Tagore championed the free mixing of the sexes and abhorred the Bengali practice of confining women to purdah. "It is only natural that men and women should seek amusement together. Women are a part of the human race and God has created them as part of society. To consider the enjoyment of free mixing between people to be a

cardinal sin, to be unsociable and to turn it into a sensational matter is not only abnormal, it is unsocial and therefore in a sense uncivilised," wrote Tagore so insightfully observed.

The muse of the moving image of Tagore's characters fill the kantha scenes. Do not expect old postcards and faded pictures of purists popping out of ashrams with sad and saucy lines from poets other than Tagore.

Tagore had no political axe to grind. It was in Bengal that the latent resentments and religious tensions that manifested themselves most bitterly.

Bangladesh fought a bitter war with Pakistan to attain its own independence and the quest for Bangladeshi emancipation and political liberation was inspired by the country's pride in its national language.

Kazi Najrul Islam, born in West Bangal, but widely considered the national poet of Bangladesh, considered Tagore his guru. He developed a highly stylized form of nationalistic, revolutionary poem -- songs to inspire the people. Ironically, his wife was Hindu.

People must be prepared for this possibility in Egypt as surely as in Bengal. Perhaps even more challenging is the refreshing of the traditional mindset in both Egypt and Bengal in a contemporary setting.

And, kantha just as surely as song inspires the Bengali people. Kantha work uses the "running stitch" to create beautiful motifs on fabric. Bengali women traditionally make quilts from old, worn out saris.

Tagore passed away in 1941, but his literary achievement is there for posterity, for generations to come. This is an issue that India knows well. And, this year Egypt was invited to share something of this understanding.


The orignial  article may be found in the link http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1069/cu4.htm

courtesy : Sekhar Chakrabarti

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Stamp Booklets on Tagore

 

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Kolkata Philatelic Club issued Stamp Booklets celebrating 150th Birth anniversary celebration of Rabibindranath Tagore during  Painting and stamp exhibition on  Tagore held in the month of May this year. These Booklets have been designed by noted philatelist  and artist of Kolkata, Shri Dipok Dey. The booklets contain recent stamps on Tagore  issued by India Post. The booklets feature Tagore’s association with Argentina, Music, cinema and world personalities. Nobel Laureate Tagore’s literary and art  work  is  admired all over the world.

Tagore in Argentina….

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Rabindra Sangeet

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Tagore and World’s intellectuals

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Rabindranath and Cinema

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Stamp Booklets and Post Cards on Tagore – Sri Lanka edition

 

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Sri Lanka Buddhist Philatelic Society and Kolkata Philatelic Club jointly issued  stamp Booklets and Post cards, commemorating 150th Birth Centenary of Guru Rabindranath Tagore.These Booklets and Post cards have been designed by renowned artist and philatelist of Kolkata Shri Dipok Dey.

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Special Post cards on Tagore

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image  Dipok Dey is a renowned artist and philatelist of Kolkata . He has designed many special covers, Post cards Greeting cards, stamp booklets and philatelic souvenirs. He is the only Indian to design    stamp for United Nations Postal Administration in 1985. His specialized Thematic  collection on Cinema   has been displayed in several philatelic exhibitions. Mr Dipok Dey may be contacted at email : kaushikbabu01@gmail.com  facebook

Press Clippings

Stamp of the screen

SUDESHNA BANERJEE

 

 

 

 

Dipok Dey with Mrinal Sen at the exhibition; the Star War stamp sheet. Picture by Aranya Sen

Harry Potter, flanked by Hedwig, stands next to Frodo, while the Star Wars stars and the Narnians keep watch. This is no fairy tale collaboration among movie moghuls but a glimpse of the frames from Dipok Dey’s collection of stamps that celebrates cinema through philately.

The 71-year-old displayed his collection last weekend at the Indian Museum, in tribute to Indian cinema’s first lady Devika Rani’s birth centenary, which is this year.

“On behalf of Cine Central and Kolkata Utsav magazine, we had placed a proposal before the department of post to issue at least a special cover on the occasion. God knows why they turned it down,” the veteran philatelist and stamp designer laments.

Devika Rani may still be missing, but Dey’s store of stamps has many a doyen, from home and abroad. An Ingmar Bergman first day cover from Sweden, a sheet of Andrezej Wajda from Poland and a Kurosawa series from Japan would interest a lover of classics. Popular flicks turn the tiny pieces of paper into a riot of colours and expressions, issued around the globe. Top of the pops is Marilyn Monroe. Not just her homeland United States which boasts multiple Marilyn issues, the temptress has enchanted postal departments of countries like Congo, Marshall Islands, Mali, Tchad, Tanzania, Guyana and Montserat, to name a few.

Among men, high on the popularity scale — though nowhere near Marilyn — are Elvis Presley and Charlie Chaplin. Alfred Hitchcock has a full sheetlet, from Sierra Leone, treasuring nine of his masterpieces.

“But you know which stamp caused the most sweat to acquire?” Dey walks to a corner, pointing to a yellowing stamp. “That’s Sarah Bernhadt, who broke the barrier of women appearing on screen. France brought out that issue on her birth centenary in 1945.” Devika Rani could have found a place next to her.

The jewels — Sophia Loren and Doris Day issues with minutely engraved artwork — are personal stamps, designed and printed by the legendary Swedish engraver Czeslaw Slania, who once virtually monopolised his country’s stamp designs. “As editor of Stamps World, a magazine I started in 1979, I was in correspondence with him. He sent these rarities as a gift,” he said.

Dey’s collection is a lesson in the history of cinema too, with footnotes accompanying each stamp depicting evolution of the art, be it on the Lumiere brothers, the world’s first movie-makers, or on Georges Melies, who introduced trick photography.

Dey stands tall among philatelists for being the only Indian to have designed a stamp for the United Nations. “Their stamps are unique for having no link to any country. Mine was on child survival in 1984.” Dey is one of India’s best-known stamp designers, with one on Satyajit Ray to his credit.

The bearded art college graduate is dismissive of stamps that use actual photographs, like a recent Madhubala issue. “Anyone can do a copy-paste job on Photoshop,” is his terse take on technology-aided short cuts.

- The Telegraph  6 June 2008