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My work is a sort of reflection of myself, says Lekha Washington

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Lekha Washington is multi-tasking — with a new Social project, installations, and a lunar-inspired artwork that she is planning to cycle with at the Burning Man festival in August

Behind the wooden doors of an ancestral property in Bandra’s quaint Ranwar village, Lekha Washington’s design space, The Upstairs Studio, is buzzing with activity. As I head to the upper storey, I find the actor-designer-entrepreneur in the middle of several works in progress. Keeping her cool in a casual-chic grey robe and strappy silver Steve Maddens, she explains that she and her team, grouped across the room, are grappling with several projects — from an upcoming test run at Bandstand, of the installation she is showcasing at this year’s Burning Man festival, to four new designs (including a moon light) for her company, Ajji. Meanwhile, Shanto, the pet cat, snoozes, curled up in one of her signature Squair chairs.

Chatting about the neighbourhood, now home for the past five years, gives me a fair idea of her easy familiarity with the people and the culture of the place. And also the fact that while Washington may not be acting at the moment, the frenetic pace of her life has not calmed in any way. “I am a dissatisfied soul. I’ll finish a great project and then feel the need to do something big in a totally different field. I need to be constantly evolving,” she says. Just this year, she teamed up with luxury vodka brand Belvedere for their artistic endeavour, Studio B — creating A drop of the universe, an artwork speckled with tiny white dots, that is at once like a disco ball apt for a launch party and an enigmatic spatial body reflective of her current style of work. She is also working on a breath installation she hopes to showcase at the Kochi Biennale (“I have not had the bandwidth to contact them yet”), and her first interior design project, Riyaaz Amlani’s soon-to-open Social in Bengaluru.

Riding in the desert

The Chennai girl, who now calls Ranwar’s hipster neighbourhood home, is no stranger to community living and alternate cultures. Washington is the only Indian artist to be given the honoraria grant for Burning Man (won after an elaborate two-step, year-long selection process) this year. Held annually in Nevada, in the middle of the Black Rock Desert, Burners (as the 70,000 attendees are known) create what the fête’s website describes as a “temporary metropolis dedicated to art and community”.

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It isn’t  lunacy
  • The moon — larger than life but universally relatable — is a recurring motif in Washington’s art. Explaining her interest, she says, “It doesn’t belong to anybody, yet belongs to all of us, and it symbolises a lot: notions of the continual cycles of things, inherent change, lunacy, etc.” Interestingly, in keeping with the concept of change, her work, This too shall pass, has also gone trough multiple iterations since she first created it (and exhibited it at a collateral at the 2014 Kochi Biennale), the final version of which will light up the sky at Burning Man between August 26 – September 3. A self-confessed geek, technology also informs much of her work. “There is so much to explore. I feel technology is the next level when it comes to art — to make it intuitive, real, and not a gimmick, that is fascinating for me.”

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The designer, who is returning for a third time, describes how it is a unique art festival in terms of its non-commercial culture. In what looks like a set straight out of the post-apocalyptic world of Mad Max: Fury Road, the vibe is quite the opposite — one of freedom of expression, free love and creativity. The week-long fair sees people from the world over, living as a community, being part of this alternate shared experience. And all this while braving the extreme weather and figuring out their own means for survival. “It’s a sort of gifting culture, outside of the capitalist system we’ve all been indoctrinated with. It’s why I like it so much; it’s incredibly refreshing to engage with a new system,” she shares.

The focus, she says, is on interactive public art that holds immediacy — reflective of life’s ephemerality — in high regard. Works, often as large as 40 feet high, are set up on location, with the help of teammates and Burners. Incidentally, it was a photograph from Black Rock City — “of an installation of a series of balloons, one tied to the other, very basic in its concept” — that inspired Washington’s moon artwork. “So, for me, it’s coming full circle to show them here,” she says. Her excitement though, is tinged with anxiety. Her helium work from last year did not fare too well in the harsh climate, where the intense dust storms ended up “sandpapering” the work.

This year, she is introducing a newer iteration, This too shall pass – Moondancer— a ginormous 12-foot helium globe modelled on the moon, designed to rotate on its axis, reflecting the changing phases of the lunar cycle. While last year saw her clambering up a stationary plane to hoist her five balloons, this year the single globe will be pivoted on a tricycle that she and two others will ride around the grounds each night, while the shape-shifting ball waxes and wanes against the desert sky.

A fine balance

Washington’s work, though large scale, has a simple idea at its core. “We’ve been trying to create work that positively affects people’s lives in terms of art,” she tells me, leading the way across the wooden floorboards to a smaller room. With Theheraav, a work in progress, one needs to lie down under a sonar sensor placed within a spangle of lights, which picks up one’s micro-movements. The light bulbs grow brighter or dimmer in reaction to levels of stress or calm and, in the process, one is forced to focus on one’s breathing

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Currently the centrepiece at the studio is the 18-foot Whirling Dervish, a touch sensitive art piece being readied for Amlani’s co-working space. Both the artwork and the space are designed by Washington, who strays from the norm with a clean, whitewashed look instead of the usual brick-exposed grunge feel of most Socials. It will also include several other artworks, from textile and paintings to 3D, neo-pixel and sound interactive work — the idea being that the space resembles an artist’s incomplete studio, one that is messy and alive, quite like her own. “It is set to open next week. There will be art supplies, each table will have calligraphy pens, and we will have a library of art books and local zines,” adds the designer, who is inspired by artist Salvador Dali and architect Zaha Hadid.

This would not be the first time that Washington’s personal and professional worlds collide. She believes her work, be it art or acting, revolves “around ideas and creativity”, and hence is actually all the same thing. “My work is a sort of reflection of myself”, even when the “nature of the medium” is slightly different.

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Lights, camera, action

For someone who walked away from an acting career in an industry that reeks of “patriarchy and nepotism”, she has seen herself grow alongside her company. “The change for me has been much more personal. I’m very comfortable in my own skin and I now have the financial wherewithal to have a freedom of choice: I’m creating exactly what I want to create.” Her studio, she thinks, is an extension of her need to nurture creative expression of all kinds. So it hosts poetry readings, film screenings and experimental plays. “Educationally, creativity is not very nurtured. Academics is, industry is, but thinking out of the box is not. This is what I’m trying to do with this space.” Of course, the access to her space is conditional and open to only “those I like”, she mentions as an afterthought.

Washington is also making a return to cinema, and she hopes the industry post her sabbatical of half a decade is “less insular”, thanks to corporatisation and the influx of online platforms like Netflix or Amazon. This time, in addition to acting (and penning lyrics for Vishal Bhradwaj for Rangoon), she is collaborating on a script.

Taking a stand

Straddling multiple careers has proven to be quite an uphill task, though. She often finds herself in conflict with things beyond her control. From non-existent patenting laws to a basic lack of confidence in one’s talent, she feels India is living in a “design shadow”. As proof, she narrates an incident where her chair, The Pink Sink, was replicated by a German artist just six months after she showed it at the 2014 International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York. The artist in question ended up winning a Red Dot award! Earlier this year, she also spotted an iteration of The Dot chair at the Salone del Mobile Milano. “The Indian design community needs to come together and make an impact. In isolation, individual designers can’t fight it,” she says.

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Burning Man checklist
  • Dust goggles: Because it is “extremely hot and dusty”
  • Spirit of adventure: “You must be willing to say yes to anything that comes your way”
  • Minimal yet outlandish clothing:“It’s all about radical self expression. I get to be as ridiculous as possible and there’s no one to judge me,” says Washington, who will also be carrying a red gown to wear while riding the tricycle.
  • Food and water: She will be putting together enough for a team of 20-odd people, friends from various parts of the world, who will be joining her as co-campers. “I will also be carrying tiny bottles of Old Monk rum to gift people, because it is a gifting culture.”

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Her plate full, she is not exactly complaining. But she is always open to collaborations — earlier ones include works with couture embroiderer Jean-François Lesage and designer Pinakin Patel. “I like the variety, hence the performance, the writing, the art. I just need to find people who are also pushing boundaries,” says Washington, who takes this joie de vivre into her travels, too — deep sea diving, sky diving and “engaging with life” everywhere. And along the way, if she claims to look a tad frazzled, one can nod in (false) agreement. Meanwhile, Shanto, now awake, disappears beneath the dervish, even as her team bustles around.

— With inputs from Surya Praphulla Kumar

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Life & Style / by Tejal Pandey with input from Surya Praphulla Kumar / June 08th, 2018

Book recounts the success story of TTK Group

T.T. Jaganathan, Chairman of TTK Group signing the book ‘Disrupt and Conquer: How TTK Prestige Became a Billion-Dollar Company’ at IIT Madras on Thursday. Co-author Sandhya Mendonca is also in the picture. | Photo Credit: R_Ragu
T.T. Jaganathan, Chairman of TTK Group signing the book ‘Disrupt and Conquer: How TTK Prestige Became a Billion-Dollar Company’ at IIT Madras on Thursday. Co-author Sandhya Mendonca is also in the picture. | Photo Credit: R_Ragu

Times are changing dramatically where world will be owned only by people who innovate, said T.T. Jaganathan, chairman, TTK Group.

He was speaking at the launch of the book ‘Disrupt and Conquer: How TTK Prestige Became a Billion-Dollar Company’ held on the IIT-Madras campus on Thursday.

The book dwells into the success of the TTK group which at one point was failing in its business before rising like a phoenix after the liberalisation of the economy in 1991.

The book has been written by Mr. Jaganathan and Sandhya Mendonca, a journalist-turned-media entrepreneur. Mr. Jaganathan said that his aim was to become an academician and reluctantly entered into the family business. “I still miss the IIT campus and the labs,” he said.

Mr. Jaganthan is an alumnus of IIT-Madras and holds a gold medal in Mechanical Engineering. He also has a Master’s in Operations Research from Cornell University, USA.

The TTK Group, started in 1928, is the second largest manufacturer of pressure cooker in the world and according to Mr. Jaganathan, the company has business plans to become the world’s largest by 2022.

Recounting the time when smart cooker failed and the group staring at bankruptcy, he attributed the success thereafter to the family members particularly his mother Padma Narasimhan.

Ms. Sandhya, co-author of the book, said normally the story of the TTK Group needs to be taken to the people for gaining business skills. She said the information for the book has been collected through personal interviews with family members and friends, and materials taken from other sources.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Staff Reporter / Chennai – June 08th, 2018

Korean Chamber of Commerce opened

Industries Minister M.C. Sampath on Monday told a delegation of Korean companies that the State would continue to offer attractive incentives if they wanted to invest here.

Offer of incentives

“Post Goods and Services Tax (GST) also, the State is willing to offer attractive incentives. We also invite more Korean firms to participate in the upcoming Global Investors’ Meet and increase Korean investments in the State” he said, while delivering his address at the inauguration of the Korean Chamber of Commerce & Industry in Southern India.

Industries Secretary K. Gnanadesikan said that the State was restructuring incentives to industries post-GST on a case-by-case basis.

Kwi Ho Shin, Chairman, Korean Chamber of Commerce & Industry in Southern India, said the idea behind opening a Chamber of Commerce in south India was to bring together all the Korean firms in this region. “There are 350 Korean firms in Tamil Nadu,” he said.

According to statistics released by the Chamber, there are 450 Korean firms in south India and 6,000 Koreans in this region. The prime objective of the chamber is to promote the rights of Korean companies and create jobs for the young Koreans. The chamber has also indicated that with this the relationship between Korea and Tamil Nadu will be strengthened further.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Staff Reporter / Chennai – June 05th, 2018

Chennai developer reimagines the calculator, wins Apple design award

WWDC 2018: Calzy, an elegantly designed calculator app, by Chennai-based developer Raja Vijayaram won the Apple Design Award.

Apple WWDC 2018: Chennai-based developer Raja Vijayaram won the Apple Design Award for his app
Apple WWDC 2018: Chennai-based developer Raja Vijayaram won the Apple Design Award for his app

It was a surprise Raja Vijayaram will never forget. When he packed his bags for Apple WWDC from Chennai, Raja has no idea he would be on stage receiving an Apple Design Award on Day 1 of the developer conference. His app Calzy, an elegantly designed calculator app, had been picked up by Apple for the awards and Raja had been flown in to San Jose without being told that he was a winner. So there Raja was on stage in his Rajnikanth T-shirt with the world watching his reimagining of the calculator.

“I had no idea. I thought I would be meeting people at WWDC,” says the unassuming man from Chennai. In fact, Raja’s story is a fascinating one. A mechanical engineer from Theni, he switched over to VFX a few years on and moved to Chennai where he worked on a few movies, even some starring Rajinikanth  himself. “That’s when I bought my first iPhone and used apps. I taught myself about apps and even learnt to code,” says Raja, who is not sure if his time as a graphics artist is helping with his design thinking.

Either way, it is the out-of-the-box design concept behind Calzy that is blowing everyone away. In fact, Raja’s calculator is as simple as a calculator can be and there is nothing there that does not need to be there. So he removed the memory functions and created his own flow for the same with drag and drop. He’s also added an expression view, where you can see all the steps you are following. There is a scientific calculator too, but hidden away behind settings which is pulled up using 3D touch.
The Calzy 3 app is priced Rs 159 and is available only on iOS, but across works across all Apple devices from the Mac to Apple Watch. In fact, the app from Raja’s WapleStuff works as a Today Widget and even an iMessage extension.

Another interesting feature is the bookmark option for earlier calculations you might have done, along with the ability to put those behind a password. Also, everything about the app is customisable and you can even set a button to calculate a specific tax on the amount.

Raja’s Calzy app was launched in 2014.
Raja’s Calzy app was launched in 2014.

Raja is a one-an army and does everything himself. Calzy was first launched in 2014 and the latest version is a full revamp of the earlier one. Though flooded by requests for more features, Raja is certain he wants to keep it as simple as possible. This calculation is clearly working for Calzy.

Disclaimer: The writer is in San Jose attending WWDC 2018 at the invite of Apple India

source: http://www.indianexpress.com / The Indian Express / Home> Technology> Social / by Nandagopal Rajan / June 06th, 2018

Award for Collector, SP

Cleaning of Kasturiba Colony at Kandal in Udhagamandalam began on Tuesday.
Cleaning of Kasturiba Colony at Kandal in Udhagamandalam began on Tuesday.

The director of the Nilgiri Documentation Center presented the Nilgiri Conservation Award to the District Collector, Innocent Divya and to the former superintendent of police, Murali Rambha, on the occasion of World Environment Day here on Tuesday.

They were selected for the award for their teamwork to successfully organise the Summer Festival 2018, coinciding with the bicentenary of modern Nilgiris, in an innovative , participative and orderly manner, said Mr. Venugopal Dharmalingam, the director of the NDC.

As Mr. Rambha was unable to be present for the function, Ms. Divya accepted the award from Mr. Venugopal.

The award was instituted to recognise individuals and institutions who significantly contributed to the protection and preservation of the Nilgiris.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Staff Reporter / Udhagamandalam – June 05th, 2018

Coimbatore youth gets National Gopal Ratna award

A. Dhiraj Ram Krishna (second right) receiving the National Gopal Ratna award from Union Minister for Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare Radha Mohan Singh (second left) in New Delhi on Sunday in the presence of Minister of State Krishna Raj (left). | Photo Credit: HANDOUT_E_MAIL
A. Dhiraj Ram Krishna (second right) receiving the National Gopal Ratna award from Union Minister for Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare Radha Mohan Singh (second left) in New Delhi on Sunday in the presence of Minister of State Krishna Raj (left). | Photo Credit: HANDOUT_E_MAIL

The engineering graduate received the award for upkeep of best dairy animals of indigenous breeds

A young engineer from Coimbatore has won an award from the Central Government on June 2 for cattle rearing and dairying.

A. Dhiraj Ram Krishna received the ‘National Gopal Ratna’ award from Union Minister of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare Radha Mohan Singh in New Delhi for ‘upkeep of the best dairy animals of indigenous breeds’.

The 24-year-old award winner, who holds a B.E. in Production Engineering, ventured full time into dairy business soon after he completed his studies in 2017. “When I wanted to do business, I set sight on dairy. It was a natural choice as cattle has been at home since birth.”

He had stepped into dairy business even when he was pursuing his second year of engineering. It was in a small way, selling milk.

The Periyanaickenpalayam resident says he started with 10 cattle and now has 50, including 10 Gir cows and bulls and 40 cross-bred varieties. The cows give around 250 litres milk a day and he buys another 200 litres to sell to residents in and around the area.

When he started, there was not much opposition from parents, says Mr. Krishna. “Parents only asked me to think twice before venturing into the business. And, when I told them that I’ve made up my mind, they were very supportive.”

He says he did not undergo a course or workshop but learnt dairying on the job. “When it is driven by passion, you tend to learn it and that is how it has been for me.”

He has set up a processing plant to process milk and engages 15 to 20 people on part and full-time basis.

Under the ‘Ganga Milk’ brand, Mr. Krishna also sells curd, ghee and paneer, which he says are distributed throughout Coimbatore.

He has set up a few collection centres in and around Periyanaickenpalayam for farmers to sell their milk and plans to set up a few more in the neighbourhood as he aims to sell at least 1,000 litres milk a day by the December 2018.

The ‘National Gopal Ratna’ award has encouraged him to achieve the target and given ₹ 5 lakh, which he plans to invest for expanding the business.

His father P.R.G. Arunkumar is the Member of Legislative Assembly from Coimbatore North and an AIADMK district secretary as well.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Karthik Madhavan / Coimbatore – June 04th, 2018

At 90, Lifco keeps the press busy

A welcome address being read out in Sanskrit when Kanchi Acharya visited Lifco on March 30, 1958.
A welcome address being read out in Sanskrit when Kanchi Acharya visited Lifco on March 30, 1958.

Pre-Independent publishing firm continues to roll off useful, affordable books

In the 1920s when literacy levels were not high, a man hailing from a conservative family in Cuddalore with encouragement from his school principal printed books and supplied them widely. Thus was born The Little Flower Company or Lifco, which is 90 now and still publishing books that delight readers.

“My grandfather V. Krishnaswamy Sarma would print books in presses that were under British control at night and take out slim volumes on learning English on his bicycle. The books were priced very low and if people could not afford them, he would give them for free. His lone aim was to educate people and not make money out of it. When he was in Secunderabad in government service and fell ill, he and my grandmother decided they have to do something for the public,” explained T.N.C.Vijayasarathy, Chairman of Lifco.

“After Independence, he started his own printing press and in 1950 he decided to bring out the English-English-Tamil and released it. It was just ₹2 then. Subsequently, he brought out dictionaries in other regional languages. We keep the price of publications as low as possible. The basic dictionary today is just ₹60,” he added. After the dictionary, there was a spate of books, including their still popular Great Little Books (pocket-sized publications on grammar, speaking and communication) that used to cost 1 anna each and are now priced only ₹10 each. There were books on how to repair and maintenance your bicycle, your homes, the typewriter and even one on how to bring up a child! He brought out easy reference guides for school and college students.

After publishing 728 titles, including 10 varieties of dictionaries, and despite increasing paper cost, Lifco wants to continue serving readers.

“We are heading towards digitisation. We plan to open stores where people can walk in, read a book and if they want buy one. My grandfather always wanted his customers to read books. We are working on a grand dictionary, two volumes of it,” Mr. Vijayasarathy said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Chennai / by Deepa H. Ramakrishnan / Chennai – June 02nd, 2018

Historians elated over return of icons

The idol of Raja Raja Chola-I
The idol of Raja Raja Chola-I

The homecoming of the ancient bronze icons of royal couple Raja Raja Chola I and his regal consort Lokamadevi is an incredible development and marks a watershed development in the sustained efforts to retrieve the priceless stolen treasure, according to art enthusiasts of Thanjavur. They say it is important to sustain the momentum and bring back as many stolen artefacts and idols and as early as possible.

“The return of the priceless icons of Raja Raja Chola I and Lokamadevi to Tamil Nadu is akin to consecrating the Sri Brihadeswarar temple afresh. I feel as if the emperor himself is returning home,” an elated Kudavayil Balasubramanian, Chola historian and epigraphist, told The Hindu on Wednesday.

The two bronze artefacts assume enormous socio-cultural and historical significance, as they are the only icons of the royal couple cast and stamped with the regal authority during the emperor’s own lifetime, said Dr. Balasubramanian, whose magnum opus Rajarajecharam is rich in scholarly research inputs.

Art enthusiasts and Chola historians are happy with the development and hope that the momentum that has gathered steam now would be sustained to retrieve more Thanjavur treasures that were lost. Dr. Balasubramanian’s role in identifying, recording and bringing back the two icons, spread over almost two decades, is acknowledged as ‘enormous.’

Ex-Minister’s petition

Tracing the background, sources at the Idol Wing said a petition by former Minister V.V. Swaminathan prompted the Madras High Court to direct the Idol Wing to look into the case of missing ancient bronze idols, especially that of Raja Raja Chola I and Lokamadevi, from the icon safe at the Thanjavur Big Temple.

After a through field study aided by inputs from experts in Chola history and iconography, it was found that the ancient bronze icons, donated to the Big Temple during the 29th regnal year of Emperor Raja Raja I, had “somehow been stolen” and finally found their way to the Calico Museum of Textiles and the Sarabhai Foundation Galleries, Ahmedabad.

The two were part of the 13 bronze statues donated then and there is no word yet on the status of the other 11 idols. However, a complaint filed with the police on March 2 here also states that several other ancient valuable icons dating to the period of Raja Raja Chola I have been stolen from the Big Temple vault.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> States> Tamil Nadu / by L Renganathan / Thanjavur – May 31st, 2018

Award for village panchayat

N. Gopinath, Assistant Director of Rural Development (village panchayats) handing over the award to Rohini R. Bhajibhakare, District Collector, in Salem on Monday.
N. Gopinath, Assistant Director of Rural Development (village panchayats) handing over the award to Rohini R. Bhajibhakare, District Collector, in Salem on Monday.

The A. Pudur village panchayat in Magudanchavadi Panchayat Union has won the Nanaji Deshmukh Rashtriya Gaurav Gram Sabha Puraskar for 2016-17 for its effective implementation of various projects with people’s participation.

The award was given by the Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj.

A.Pudur is the only village panchayat in the State to win this prestigious award. N. Gopinath, Assistant Director of Rural Development (village panchayats), received the award on behalf of the District Collector at a function held in Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh recently.

The Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, presided over the function.

The Union Ministry of Panchayati Raj gives the award to village panchayats for their outstanding contribution to the socio-economic development by involving gram sabhas.

Mr. Gopinath handed over the award to Rohini R. Bhajibhakare, District Collector, at the Collectorate here on Monday.

R. Sukumar, District Revenue Officer; N. Arul Jothi Arasan, Project Director, District Rural Development Agency; Tamil Selvan, Block Development Officer, Magudanchavadi panchayat union; P. Muthu, secretary of the A. Pudur village panchayat; were present on the occasion.

The Collector called upon all the panchayats in the district to take effective steps for winning similar awards in the near future by effectively implementing government projects with public participation.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by Special Correspondent / Salem – May 28th, 2018

Acclaimed director, producer Muktha Srinivasan no more

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In a career spanning over six decades, he directed several memorable movies

Renowned director and producer Muktha V. Srinivasan died on Tuesday night in the city. He was 88 years old. The veteran film-maker directed his first film Mudhalaali in 1957. Starring S.S. Rajendran, the film won the national award for the best feature film in Tamil that year.

Through his career in films spanning over six decades, Srinivasan directed several memorable films, including PaanchaliNinaivil NindravalSuryagandhiSimla Special and Polladhavan and had worked with several notable actors including Sivaji Ganesan, Rajinikanth, Kamal Haasan and former Chief Minister Jayalalithaa.

Suryagandhi, which was released in 1973 starring R. Muthuraman and Jayalalithaa, was digitally re-mastered and re-released in 2016 and Srinivasan had spoken about how the former Chief Minister had given one of her best performances in the movie.

Srinivasan, who described himself as a ‘die-hard book lover’ to The Hindu back in 2009, had also authored several non-fiction and fictional works including novels, short story collections and essays.

‘A good orator’

Veteran script writer and playwright Chitralaya Gopu recalled the days when they used to meet regularly to exchange ideas. “We didn’t work together. But we often discussed cinema. He used to be called as Mudhalali Srinivasan during the 1950s after his debut film as a director. He planned his films well and released them on time,” said Mr. Gopu.

He founded the production house, Muktha Films, in 1961 and produced several films with his brother Muktha V. Ramaswamy, including the Kamal Haasan starrer Nayagan directed by Mani Rathnam. He has produced and directed nearly 50 films.

“He was a good orator and spoke fluently in English. I met him only two months ago when three of us, including film director C.V. Rajendran who too recently passed away, were honoured in a function,” recalled Mr. Gopu.

Srinivasan was also remembered by political colleagues as an “old Congressman” who remained a close friend of G.K. Moopanar.

Political stint

Srinivasan left the Congress to join Moopanar’s Tamil Maanila Congress. He was appointed general secretary and contested the 1999 general elections on the party’s ticket from the South Madras constituency, finishing third.

When Moopanar’s son G.K. Vasan merged the TMC with the Tamil Nadu Congress Committee, Srinivasan returned, and in 2002, was made a vice-president.

Interestingly, “BJP’s State headquarters in T. Nagar is located in a building once owned by Srinivasan,” recalled B.S. Gnanadesikan, senior vice-president of the TMC who was also a TNCC president.

Srinivasan had reportedly, on former Chief Minister and actor M.G. Ramachandran’s insistence, helped with the founding of the Tamil Film Producers Council.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Entertainment> Movies / by Special Correspondent / Chennai – May 30th, 2018