Thursday, 19 December 2024

Decadal Reminiscence of “Deconstructed Innings: A Tribute to Sachin Tendulkar” exhibition









Ten years ago, on 18 December 2014, an interesting art exhibition entitled “Deconstructed Innings: A Tribute to Sachin Tendulkar” was opened to the public at the National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai. On the previous evening,17 December, Sachin Tendulkar, accompanied by his family, inaugurated this exhibition at the NGMA Mumbai in the presence of many dignitaries and an unprecedented number of journalists, including photojournalists. I was privileged to be a part of this event in my capacity as the Director of NGMA Mumbai, a position I held from Feb 2013 to October 2018. 

I had forgotten about this exhibition, but then today I was reminded of the exhibition and its inauguration, a historic moment for me when I had the honour to share a dais with the legendary Sachin Tendulkar and speak to him and share the Cricket Connects: India – South Africa exhibition with him. This decadal reminiscence of this historic moment has prompted me to write this blog post. 

A couple of days ago, there was a debate on the Indian Constitution, which will be celebrating its seventy-five years in 2026, in the temple of the Indian democracy, the Parliament. Notwithstanding the vituperative debate in the parliament, what stands out from the debate is the vibrancy of the Indian democracy, which stands as an exemplar of its diversity. The trademark of, multi-religious, multi-lingual, multicultural, argumentative Indians is our resolute unity in our diversity. And such unity is exemplified on many occasions including in collectively complementing the accomplishments of great achievers who bring glory to the nation. One such achiever is Bharat Ratna Sachin Tendulkar, who is hailed across the country and the reverence that the nation has for him was evidenced in this historic moment when the ‘God of Cricket’, Sachin Tendulkar, walked back to the pavilion, after playing yet another memorable innings, for one last time at the Wankhede Stadium, and bidding adieu to Cricket after 25 long years. Just a year before the exhibition at NGMA Mumbai, Sachin Tendulkar played his last Test match at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai on November 14, 2013, against the West Indies. Tendulkar scored 74 runs in his final innings and gave an emotional farewell speech after the match as he bid goodbye to Cricket. 

Incidentally, just a month before the opening of the Deconstructed Innings exhibition, the autobiography of Sachin “Playing It My Way” was released in November 2014 and it was also the year that won Sachin Tendulkar a befitting ‘Bharat Ratna’, the highest civilian Award. While his autobiography book provided an insight into his cricketing life, the exhibition “Deconstructed Innings: A Tribute to Sachin Tendulkar” provided an altogether new perspective and an artistic insight into the legend's life. This exhibition was innovatively and painstakingly created by ten artists, who joined hands to artistically “deconstruct the innings of Sachin Tendulkar - the sporting legend of India, by collaborating with the legend himself. These ten artists, Remen Chopra, Vibha Galhotra, Sunil Gawde, R Iranna, Manjunath Kamat, Shreyas Karle, Riyas Komu, Jagannath Panda, Anand Trilochan, and Hema Upadhyay, artistically deconstructed the innings of the legend into an understanding of the notion of a legend and the perfection associated with creation alongside the existence of personal ideologies and histories. 

 ‘Deconstructed Innings’, where art and sports intersect, is patronage to both sport and art. The aim was to create an interdisciplinary understanding of the notion of an icon, a legend, and the perfection associated with creation alongside the existence of personal ideologies and histories.  It takes the meaning of the word ‘play’ beyond recreation and into the sector of performance, ideas, and collaborations. The works created through a collaborative effort with ten contemporary artists and Sachin Tendulkar is exploratory in nature and interdisciplinary in definition. These creations through the convergence of art and sport elevate beyond the notion of memorabilia to imbibe unique and personal narratives within elements of their own individualistic creative language with a cricket legend. Art like sport can also inspire a nation and connect to the thousands of Indians who live and breathe sport.


The “Deconstructed Innings” exhibition featured paintings, sculptures, videos, drawings, and sound works, which collectively narrated experiences that we all identify with the cricketing life of Sachin Tendulkar. All these artworks were created by the ten artists – Sachin’s jersey number – after prolonged interaction with the legend himself. The outcome was the works of art featured in the exhibition that had the power to deconstruct the cricketing career of the legend in works of art that had the power to communicate messages, empower meaning, and connect with the people in a manner that crosses all language barriers, which the game of cricket symbolizes in our cricket adoring nation.

 

The works included in the exhibition were created by the ten chosen artists through a collaborative effort with interaction with Sachin and these works were exploratory in nature and interdisciplinary in definition. These creations, through the convergence of art and sport, elevated the experience of the visitors beyond the notion of memorabilia with each artist collaborating to create something unique with Sachin Tendulkar to include his personal anecdotal narratives and elements into their individualistic creative language. This exhibition, conceptualized by Mr. Kiran Desai and curated by Ms. Veerangana Kumari Solanki, presented a range of creative artworks, aesthetically shaped by the ten artists who explored divergent themes of art to deconstruct the legend’s life. It is a befitting tribute that the art-loving community of Aamchi Mumbai could pay to the legend, the ‘God of Cricket’. NGMA, Mumbai was justly privileged to host this exhibition, which was befittingly opened by the legend himself, who also posed for a photo op with all the ten artists who painstakingly created works of art with creativity, love, and passion. No wonder the exhibition was a major success and attracted overwhelming media coverage. The success of the exhibition also prompted NGMA Bangalore, to host this exhibition which was opened by another cricketing legend, Anil Kumble in Feb 2025. 

 On this occasion, I am honored to share a link to a blog where I have paid my 49th birthday tribute to the legend under the title “Happy Birth Day Sachin - God of Cricket, for the leisure reading of those who it may interest.
https://khened.blogspot.com/2022/04/happy-birthday-24-april-sachin.html 

 Images: Courtesy NGMA Mumbai







For those who are interested in knowing details of the artists and the works of art they created which were displayed in the exhibition, here is the list with a brief on the works

1.  ANAND TRILOCHAND

 

A. [Sculpture]

Title: Treasure Box

Medium: wooden bat, coins, video animation

Size: Actual Bat Size

Year: 2014

 

B [Bat]

Title: Run Machine

Medium: oil on wood

Size: Actual Bat Size

Year: 2014

 

 

2. G. R. IRANNA

 

A [Painting]

Title: The Many Lives of Tendulkar

Medium: acrylic on canvas

Size: 54 x 132 inches

Year: 2014

 

B [Sculpture]

Title: Not Out

Medium: wooden bat and cricket balls

Size: Actual Bat Size

Year: 2014

 

C [Sculpture]

Title: Dashavatara

Medium: wooden bat and bronze

Size: 84 x 6 x 8 inches

Year: 2014

 

D. [Bat]

Title: Blind bat

Medium: acrylic on wood

Size: Actual Bat Size

Year: 2014


3. HEMA UPADHYAY

 

A. Title: Completion of oneself through the other

Year: 2014

Size: Variable (site-specific) (6 x 8 inches each)

Medium:  motion lenticular prints

  

B. [Bat]

Title: Untitled

Medium: paper cut images on wood

Size: Actual Bat Size


4. JAGANNATH PANDA

 

A. Title: "... And a billion memories we lived with your dream"

Medium: acrylic, fabric and glue on canvas

Size: 101 X 66 inches

Year: 2014

 

B. "The infinite memories of spectacle"

Medium: acrylic, canvas, mirror, enamel paint, oil

Size:  61 x 49 inches

Year: 2014

 

C. Title: "A memory being lived with a hero"

Medium: wood cut, oil and acrylic

Size: 24 x 22.5 inches

Year: 2014

 

D [BAT]

Title: Memories of Sachin

Medium – acrylic on wooden bat

Size: 33.5 x 4 x 2.5 inches (Actual Bat Size)

Year: 2014


 

5. MANJUNATH KAMATH


A Title: “Arrival of a Cricket God”

Medium: digital print on archival paper

Size: 60 x 168 inches

Year: 2014

 

B. Bat –

Title: Artist with Bat

Medium: acrylic on wood

Size: Actual Bat Size

Year: 2014



6. REMEN CHOPRA

 

A Title: City of Dreams

Medium: wood, digital print on paper

Size: 96 x 204 inches; 144 x 108 inches [Site Specific]

Year: 2014

 

B. Title: Dream Chaser

Medium: wood, acrylic

Size:

Year: 2014

 


7. RIYAS KOMU

 

A. Title: Legacy Beyond Centuries

Medium: fibre-glass cast, wood, acrylic paint

Size:  variable [100 pieces]

Year: 2014

 

B. Bat:

Title: A Legacy Beyond Centuries

Medium: engraving on wood

Size:

Year: 2014

A legend travels beyond the structure of time and into the stories carried forward by generations to create ‘A Legacy Beyond Centuries’.


8. SHREYAS KARLE

 

A. Title: Notes from a Terrace – The Kachha Nimbu observatory archives

Medium: series of drawings and carbon print on paper

Size: variable

Year: 2014

  

B. [image reference of 2 drawings for catalogue details below]:

In case of rubber change use grip cone*

8 x 6 “

Drawing and carbon print on paper

2014

  

 C. Out (box cricket series)

6.6 x 10.6 “

Drawing and carbon print on paper

2014

 

D.  [Bat work]

title- Dhokebaaz

medium- oil paint

size- life size bat.

 

9. SUNIL GAWDE


A. Title: Untitled

Medium: wood, paint, LED screens, video animation and sound

Size: variable (site-specific)

Year: 2014

  B. Bat –

Title: knock out

Medium: Readymade wooden bat, painted fibreglass

Size: 34 x 7 x 12.5 inches

Year: 2014

 

10. VIBHA GALHOTRA

A Title: Reflection

Medium: metal, wood and text

Size: installation size variable (plate – 20 x 14 inches each)

Year: 2014

  

B. [Bat]

Title: Reflection

Medium: wood and metal

Size:

Year: 2014

 

 ________________________________________________________________________________ 



Monday, 2 December 2024

3 December 2024 : 40th Anniversary of the Bhopal MIC Gas Tragedy

 



The night of December 2 and the early hours of December 3, 1984, remain etched in the annals of history as a grim reminder of industrial negligence. A major leakage of toxic gases, buried in stainless steel tank, in which forty-two tonnes of liquid methyl isocyanate (MIC) had been stored - from October, 1984 - took place on the night of 2/3 December, 1984 at the Union Carbide Factory in Bhopal. This leak resulted in the Union Carbide pesticide plant in Bhopal, infamously becoming the epicentre of one of the world's worst industrial disasters. The leak of 40 tons of methyl isocyanate (MIC) gas resulted in thousands of deaths and many more untold injuries, disabilities, damages and suffering for many thousands of people whose impact has transcended generations. Death and damages also occurred to animals and plants surrounding the plant.

Amidst the horror of this MIC gas tragedy, one man – Dr S Varadarajan - and his team risked their lives to avert an even greater catastrophe. The plant had a further quantity of MIC in a second buried tank, which presented a serious hazard. Based on an appreciation of the chemical reactivity and properties of MIC, a number of measures were adopted to minimize the recurrence of another leakage and to contain the effects of such an eventuality. A risk management system was established and the material in the tank and in other containers was processed safely during 16th to 22nd December, 1984 under an operation aptly named Operation Faith. This mission was accomplished by a dedicated team of scientists and experts under the leadership of Dr S Varadarajan, who was then the Secretary of DST, Government of India. One shedders to imagine what the consequences of the second tank leaking an equal quantity of MIC would have been had these scientists not risked their lives and safety to carry out this mission.

Having had the honour of working with Dr. Varadarajan, I have personally witnessed his humility, brilliance, and unwavering commitment to science. My tribute to him, published in Science Reporter, delves deeper into his unparalleled contributions to averting a second leak during the Bhopal tragedy. You can read an abridged version of this article published in Science Reporter, on my blog whose link is given below. The blog also covers his role in the Operation Faith.

https://khened.blogspot.com/2022/05/dr.html

What is most shocking about this incident, one of the worst industrial disasters across the globe, is that the CEO of the Union Carbide, Mr Anderson, who was charged with culpable homicide charges, remained untouched and escaped out of the country, believed to be aided by the government machinery.

The Bhopal police had registered a case against Union Carbide on the MIC gas leakage Hanuman Ganj police station on December 3 evening. As expected in such industrial disasters, the head of the Union Carbide Corporation from US who held a major share in their Indian Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, Mr Anderson was scheduled to visit the Bhopal plant to take stock of the happenings. The news of the CEO of Union Carbide, which owned 50.9 percent of the company that operated the Union Carbide Bhopal factory, Mr Anderson coming to India was ascertained by the media. According to information, Anderson along with some of his colleagues reached Bhopal on December 7 at 9.30 AM by an Indian Airlines flight from Mumbai (then Bombay). An anecdotal reference indicates that Anderson was pleasantly surprised to see large contingent of police at the Bhopal airport, which he mistook had assembled to facilitate his safe visit to the factory.

Among the people who had assembled at the Bhopal airport to “receive” Anderson were Swaraj Puri the then SP of Bhopal and Mr Moti Singh, The District Magistrate, who received Anderson at the airport and whisked him from the media persons to the Union Carbide’s rest house. Mr Anderson was informed that he was being taken into custody for a culpable homicide. Interestingly, within few hours of the arrest of Anderson, a bail was arranged for him and by afternoon the then Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh, Mr Arjun Singh ordered his immediate release.

At around 3.30 PM, Mr. Puri the SP of Bhopal, who along with the DM had arrested him briefly, drove Anderson straight to the State Hanger, where a chartered flight of the state of Madhya Pradesh was waiting to fly him to Delhi. Mr Anderson was allowed to flee the country from Delhi and return back to the US with the aid and abetment of the state machineries. Mr Moti Singh, the then DM of Bhopal, who was personal witness to the events that unfolded, later in his book, has written that he was instructed by the Union Home Ministry to release Anderson. What were the circumstances under which Anderson got this unprecedented reprieve and a special VIP treatment which led him safely escaping from India - with state patronage - have remained a mystery despite inquiry commission inquiring into the issue.  

Anderson and Union Carbide, were put through scores of civil lawsuits filed in the United States, which were consolidated in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Unfortunately, all the cases filed against Anderson and his company were dismissed by Judge John Keenan, in deference to efforts by the Indian government to represent victims in litigation against Union Carbide in India. In the year 1989, the litigation case against the Union Carbide in Indian courts resulted in a settlement deal, as per which the Union Carbide was ordered to pay the Indian government $470 million. The Supreme Court of India ratified the agreement in 1991. But it also ordered a criminal prosecution of Union Carbide, Anderson, and other former employees to proceed in Bhopal district court. Unfortunately, since Anderson had fled the country, none of the defendants showed up for any proceedings, and in 1992 the district court declared Anderson and others “absconders” from justice and ordered the confiscation of Union Carbide’s remaining assets in India. However, Mr Anderson remained untouched and was not brought to justice and he passed away in US leaving behind a tale of mystery of his escape from India, which will continue to remain a mystery.

Today as we commemorate with sorrow the fortieth anniversary of the Bhopal Gas Tragedy, this catastrophic manmade disaster must serve as a sombre reminder of the need for vigilance, accountability, and preparedness in industrial operations. As we remember those thousands of lives lost, and many more lives maimed for life for generations, we must also honour those who worked tirelessly to prevent an even greater calamity. Heroes like Dr. Varadarajan and many others who worked under trying circumstances to minimise the impact of the disaster remind us of the power of science and leadership in the face of unimaginable adversity.

Let us hope and pray that there will be no more such tragedies.

Images : Courtesy Wikipaedia 

Sunday, 24 November 2024

165th Anniversary of Charles Darwin’s Monumental Publication : On the Origin of Species.






This day, 24th November 2024, we commemorate the 165th anniversary of Charles Darwin’s monumental publication, On the Origin of Species, which was published on 24 April, 1859, based on his ground breaking research following a five year expedition on board the HMS Beagle five year voyage between 1831 to 36, the experience and findings of which Darwin used to publish his book under the title On the Origin of Species. Darwin was fifty when he published his findings. Darwin was precocious child with an extraordinary interest for reading and desire for exploration. He briefly studied medicine and then theology, before charting a path for himself to be as a geologist, naturalist and a scientist par excellence whose findings on the origin of species by natural selection has etched his name eternally in history. 

 Charles Darwin was born on 12 February 1809 in Shrewsbury, England. His interest in exploration motivated him to take up a challenging job as an unpaid naturalist on a science expedition on board the HMS Beagle. To his luck, the Beagle expedition was headed by captain, Robert FitzRoy, who wanted an enthusiastic and well-trained gentleman naturalist to join him on the Beagle’s second surveying expedition. Incidentally, Captain FritzRoy, had just completed a brief voyage on HMS Beagle and was back.

 HNS Beagle was commissioned to serve as a survey ship that was tasked ‘to survey Magellan’s Streights’. It took to the seas in May 1826 until returning back to the base on October 1830. Unfortunately, the Ships original Captain who had set sail in 1826, died by suicide on the seas in 1828 and therefore a new Captain of the Ship, Captain Robert FitzRoy, was appointed to command the ship, which was left headless. Notwithstanding the death of the commander of the Ship, the voyage and the survey continued under the command of its new captain until returning back to the base in 1830. 

 The success of the first edition of exploration by HNS Beagle helped it to undertake even more serious and challenging task, with necessary refitting of the ship. In 1831 HNS Beagle set sail on its most famous voyage to survey the South American coast and the Galapagos Islands. This expedition was to last for five years before returning back to England via New Zealand in 1836. It was on this voyage that Darwin set foot on the voyage as a young naturalist who would work under the command of Captain of the Ship FitzRoy.

 Captain FitzRoy, assigned the task of exploring the inland to his young naturalist, Darwin, so that this could help in understanding the geological changes that had happened over millennia. It helped Darwin to explore the Islands, even as the Beagle continued to survey the coasts. Darwin used this opportunity to study various plants and animals, collecting specimens for further analysis. In South America, Darwin found fossils of extinct animals that were similar to modern species. It was on the Galapagos Island that Darwin observed many variations of plants and animals that were similar to those he found in South America, suggesting that species adapted over time and to their environment. He collected plants, animals, and fossils, taking diligent field notes on many of his observations. His examination of finches on the Galápagos Islands (off the coast of Ecuador) led him to develop his ideas on evolution by natural selection.

 This experience and his findings and collection of samples and his own well documented drawings in his note books would later help him in the development of his theory of evolution by natural selection, which he finally published in 1859 as a book under the titled “On the Origin of Species”. His findings helped in the understanding of evolution and how species evolve over long period of time, which he later described as natural selection in his revised edition of the book published under the title “ On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection. Incidentally, in the Hall of Evolution, an exhibition at the Nehru Science Centre, Mumbai, there is a large exhibit with the scaled down replica model of HNS Beagle and a virtual book of Darwin, whose pages can be flipped by the visitor. There are also models of the finches of the birds which the visitor can feel and so also the drawings and sketches of Darwin from his nite books. This gallery was developed in 2016, when I served as the Director of this centre. 

 Darwin’s works reshaped our understanding of the diversity of life on Earth. However, within the brilliance of Darwin's ideas, a notable controversy emerged on his erroneous assumption of blended inheritance, which was later proved to be a blunder in the journey of evolutionary biology. The key contributions of Darwin’s book included his thesis which proposed the concept of natural selection as the driving force behind the gradual change in species over time. This laid the groundwork for the theory of evolution, challenging prevailing beliefs about the fixity of species. Darwin’s book explains how species evolve through the differential survival and reproduction of individuals with advantageous traits, leading to the adaptation of populations to their environments. Darwin presented compelling evidence from the fossil records and biogeography, supporting his theory by demonstrating the gradual changes in species over geological time and the distribution of species across different regions.

 "On the Origin of Species" sparked intense debates, not only within the scientific community but also in wider society. It influenced fields beyond biology, including philosophy, theology, and ethics, challenging prevailing worldview. 

 While Darwin's contributions to evolutionary theory are monumental, his assumption of blended inheritance reflects the limitations of scientific knowledge in his time. Darwin's assumption of blended inheritance was a logical extension of the scientific understanding of heredity in the mid-19th century. However, subsequent advancements in genetics, particularly the works of Gregor Mendel - which Darwin did not have an opportunity to read and understand - revealed the flaw in the assumptions of Darwin. The scientific logic behind genetic inheritance was first discovered by Gregor Mendel in the 1850s before the publication of the works of Darwin. Mendel experimented on pea plants and recorded how traits get passed down from generation to generation. He noticed that offspring weren’t simply a “blend” of their two parents, as falsely assumed by Darwin. 

 Darwin's failure or oversight in assuming blended inheritance does not diminish the overall significance of his work. It underscores the reality that failures are an integral part of everyone's lives including Darwin and this must be strongly communicated to our youngsters. Darwin's "On the Origin of Species" remains a foundational text in evolutionary biology, challenging and reshaping our understanding of life's diversity. While one can now say in hindsight that Darwin failed by falsely assuming blended inheritance, however, his mistake must serve as a reminder that failures are an integral part of our lives and we must teach our youngsters that failures are inevitable and that we only need course corrections as we move on with life and not be afraid of such failures. 

 Charles Darwin was not the first to propose a theory of evolution but his work had a great impact on society at the time. While other thinkers used his research to support their various (often opposing) views and ideas, Darwin avoided talking about the theological and sociological aspects of his work. He continued to write on botany, geology and zoology until his death on 19 April 1882. He is buried in Westminster Abbey, London. 

 Images : Courtesy Wikipedia

Saturday, 16 November 2024

TMM 2025 Fund Raising Target : Recollections of a Nostalgic Memory.

 



This post is courtesy of an Instagram post by the United Way Mumbai under the caption “Meet our Change Runners and Young Leaders” for the Tata Mumbai Marathon (TMM 2025), under which yours truly has also been featured. Although I have an Instagram account, I don’t use it but then this post by United Way Mumbai, which was shared with me by Ajay Mehta, a Trustee of Adhar, an NGO which I am supporting under the aegis of TMM 2025, has tempted me not only to revive my Instagram post but also to pen this article, whose caption may appear rather confusing.

The Instagram post, while coming as a pleasant surprise, also came in with a challenge, which perhaps was an ‘incentive’ - government type - for achieving a target of Rs 5 Lacs ( Five hundred thousand) that was set for me to raise, through crowdfunding, for Adhar, using the platform of TMM 2025. Adhar (An Association of Parents of Mentally Challenged Adults) an NGO that is working in a rather difficult area of addressing the challenges that parents and guardians of mentally challenged adults face. One of the main worries for these parents is a question that haunts them all - what happens to their special children after their demise? This question struck a chord with the visionary founder of Adhar (www.adhar.org) late Shri Madhav Rao Gore, who founded Adhar with a mission to take lifetime care of such special adults even after their parents and guardians breathe their last.  Passing through trials and tribulations Adhar has now established itself as a leading institute in providing lifetime care for special adults and has developed and is operating three Adhar units in Badlapur, Nashik, and Satara, Maharashtra, which take care of 350 plus special children, including 70 plus women, who require lifetime support and care. Adhar will need a separate write-up to describe their noble work, therefore, I am confining this post to the title of my article.

After reaching the target of Rs Five Lacs, assigned to me by one of the go-getter Trustees of Adhar who spearheads Adhar participation in TMM 2025, I thought I could relax in the glory of meeting my target. But then – surprise, surprise! – just as I crossed the finish line – the target of Rs 5 Lacs -, my target was doubled to Rs. 10 Lacs! The reward for success is… well, more target! A mantra that most successful senior government officials follow. This twist in the upward revision of the target as a reward for achieving one’s target brought back memories of my early days as Director at the National Science Centre, Delhi, where a similar situation had unfolded much to my annoyance and argument with my bosses, at a cost of course.

 In the middle of March 2007, I assumed the charge of Director of the National Science Centre, Delhi (NSCD). In one of those meetings of the heads of science centres, which decide the targets for science museums and centres, the then DG of NCSM, which governs all science centres and museums that function under the Ministry of Culture, Government of India, assigned visitor and revenue targets for each of the heads of the four zones, under which the NCSM science centres function. As the Director of the NSCD, my responsibility was the three science centres in the north zone – NSCD, RSC Lucknow, and KPSC Kurukshetra. I was assigned a visitor target of 2 Lac visitors for the year 2007-08 for NSCD. Although during the preceding couple of years, the visitors to NSCD had hovered around 1.4 to 1.6 Lacs, I did accept the target. Fuelled by an unending enthusiasm, I rallied my team, setting an ambitious internal target of 3 Lacs. We pulled together and brainstormed and evolved ideas and strategies that could help us reach this stiff target of 3 Lac visitors to NSCD, a target which was almost 50% higher than the highest ever achieved by NSCD, barring when the Dinosaur Alive Exhibition was presented. We had a series of follow-up meetings to monitor our set goals, and by December 2007, my team achieved a visitor figure of 3 Lacs, and we still had another three months to go before the financial year 2007-08 ended. My team, who spearheaded this initiative for which I was incidental as the head of the institute, did not rest and kept the momentum and when the financial year ended on 31st March 2008, they had clocked an impressive 4,26,000 visitors, with a 50% revenue increase to boot! Here comes the twist to the tale.

During a meeting of heads of science museums to fix the targets for the next financial year (2008-09), the then DG, rather than going by established norms to increase the target by 10% of the previous year's target, strangely and much to my annoyance and heated argument used a yardstick completely unscientific to assign target for NSCD, which was an increase of 10% on our extraordinary achievement for previous year which was more than 100% of our assigned target. The target assigned was 4.70 Lacs. All my pleas and heated arguments had gone in vain while assigning a target for NSCD.

Now, here is another extraordinary twist to the tale: Another national-level museum, the Birla Industrial and Technological Museum (BITM), Kolkata, a much older museum, which too was assigned a target of 2 Lac visitors for the financial year 2007-08, had ended up achieving a paltry 1.30 Lacs visitors when the year ended. Since NSCD was assigned 4.70 Lacs visitors and a corresponding revenue for the year 2008-09, I expected that a similar target would be given to BITM, which too was headed by a new Director, my contemporary. But then, the adage “all are equal some are more equal” kicked in, and the DG based on his so-called discussion with the Director, BITM assigned a 1.7 Lac visitor target to BITM, and lo and behold, justified it by stating that he had increased the target by 20% over what BITM had achieved.

Notwithstanding the fact that any discussion on this matter with the DG, even with rational thoughts, would only result in vituperative arguments and perhaps would also adversely impact my career prospects, I could not hold back. At the end of the heated argument with the DG, I ended my argument by saying his decision has only disincentivized NSCD and its extraordinary achievement of more than doubling its target and incentivized BITM, Kolkata the unit which had fallen much short of the assigned target. It is another matter that all my arguments fell on deaf ears and perhaps may also have had an impact on my career.

The TMM 2025 target of Rs 10 Lacs has brought back those old memories, which I thought would be an interesting read for my friends. Interestingly, most senior officers in the government work with the same principle and assign more work and higher targets for those who work sincerely to achieve their targets and the ones who don’t, remain untouched, rather incentivized, which it was in our case.

This case is not unique or specific to NCSM, I am sure this cuts across government institutions. One can witness people who are problem creators are never targeted, and mostly kept at arm’s length, and no coercive action or otherwise taken against them, while those who work sincerely are rewarded with more work with no incentives to motivate them. It is this quagmire that, unfortunately, breeds inefficiency in government and no one wants to dive deep into solving this problem. Although things have improved, an introspection will reveal there is a lot that needs to improve. There is an unwritten belief that the more one works there is that much more chance of going wrong and even if one comes out successful with ten and fails in one, the concerned will have to answer for that one failure, while in another case if an officer has achieved nothing, but the fact that nothing wrong has happened will get him scot-free. It is time for these changes and those who achieve must be incentivized and those who don’t must be disincentivized. Will this happen? A million-dollar question for sure.

Be that as it may, let me also take this opportunity to once again appeal to you all to please help me achieve the revised fundraising target of Rs 10 Lacs for TMM 2025 for Adhar by your kind donation using the link below.

https://www.unitedwaymumbai.org/fundraiser/23375



Tuesday, 5 November 2024

The Tango of Science (Brownian Motion) and Art (Virar Fast - Art Installation of Valay Shinde): A Personal Experience Working with Science and Art Museums.

 








After my retirement from service as the Director of Nehru Science Centre, Mumbai after a brief stint in Delhi and a break, I joined the CSMVS, Mumbai, as an Advisor. Contrasting experience of working with the science museums for 35 years and now - for nearly three years - with the CSMVS has been quite enriching and educative. It is this tango of science and art that has come my way and motivated me to pen this article, differently!

One of the many new exhibitions that the CSMVS has completed and thrown open to the public is the Mumbai Gallery, which was opened on 14 October 2024. This gallery is dedicated to the city of Mumbai. It features historical artefacts that narrate the story of the people of Mumbai who have made this city the economic capital of India and a cosmopolitan city, which is also a dream city and a city of opportunity, for those who wish to dream. One of the significant artefacts in the Mumbai gallery is the “Virar Fast” art installation created by Valay Shende, which is prominently displayed at the entrance to the Mumbai gallery.

Mumbai, a cosmopolitan city of hope and aspiration for millions is majorly dependent on the suburban electric local rail transport for commute. The Mumbai Suburban Rail (Central, Western, and Harbour line) on an average commute 7.24 million commuters daily and is inextricably linked to most Mumbaikars, for whom Rail is their lifeline. The crowded suburban trains in Mumbai are sites that Mumbaikars experience daily. Virar Fast local during peak hours, quintessentially represents this scene. This daily phenomenon, experienced by Mumbaikars has motivated artist Valay Shende to craft his beautiful art installation “Virar Fast” which now finds a pride of place in the Mumbai gallery at the CSMSV Museum. This installation, no wonder made it prominently to the headlines in the Times of India, which covered the Mumbai gallery. The concept note provided by the artist for his work “Virar Fast’ describes his work of art as a representation of the “essence of relentless battle faced by the working class in their daily grind (travel)”.

The EMU (Electric Multiple Unit) that is used to run the Mumbai suburban trains is a household name in Mumbai. Mumbai electric rail transport began almost a century ago, on February 3, 1925, when the Great Indian Peninsular Railway (GIPR) introduced the first electric run trains that ran between Bombay VT (now CSMT) and Kurla Harbour. Incidentally one of these earliest electric engines that ran the trains in Mumbai (Bombay then) is in the collections of the Nehru Science Centre, Mumbai, and this pride collection was restored to its pristine beauty during the COVID pandemic period.

The heading for this article - “The Tango of Science and Art” - comes from my experience from one of those typically crowded peak time travel days in the Virar Fast local (Western Railways) that I used for commuting to Church Gate from Andheri. Most rail commuters by the Virar Fast local, during the peak hours, are confronted with the challenge of searching for foot space in a train that does not even have an additional square inch of space left. Although it is a usual occurrence for daily commuters, however, for me who uses the Virar Fast rarely, something profound struck me while travelling in this crowded local. As I stood, barely able to move amidst the sea of passengers on the Virar Fast local - which I had boarded at Andheri for travelling to Church Gate - the familiar jostling, swaying, and chaotic shuffle of bodies, its indescribable odour, the sound, and noise, which I was experiencing, reminded me of something unexpectedly scientific: the Brownian motion.

For over 35 years, I worked with science museums, dedicated to science communication, immersed in the language of molecules, atoms, and scientific phenomena through my work with science museums across India. Creating exhibits to explain the microscopic world of science to the uninitiated visitor in science, almost always, makes a science museum curator rely on analogies. Brownian motion is one such scientific phenomenon, which was one of the first exhibits that I had developed as a young curator way back in 1988. I vividly remember having used a mechanical analogy to explain the complicated motions of molecules that constitute the Brownian motion. Post my retirement, I found myself stepping into a different realm - an art museum, the CSMVS Museum in Mumbai. At first, this transition was like moving to an entirely different universe. CP Snow’s essay on “The Two Cultures”—the stark divide between the world of sciences and that of the arts—suddenly made perfect sense to me. I felt the chasm between the analytical, data-driven logic of science and the subjective, emotional world of arts and literature. Yet, as the months passed, I began to realize that perhaps these two worlds weren't as distinct as they first appeared. Slowly, I started seeing how creativity was the common thread weaving them together, regardless of their different forms of expression or understanding.

But it wasn’t until that epiphanic moment in the Virar Fast Local train—a crowded, bustling, Mumbai local—that everything truly crystallized for me. The human movement in that compartment was not unlike the random motion of particles in Brownian motion, which Einstein predicted. In this seemingly chaotic environment, every jolt, every push, every nudge appeared to be dictated by some kind of an invisible force: the crowdedness of the train, the positioning of passengers, and their collective aim to reach their workplace – destination, in time. That instant of epiphany helped me see some kind of a parallel between the everyday scene of Mumbai peak time local travels and the microscopic world of science, Brownian motion.

Just like molecules in a substance, the crowd in the Virar Fast Local was densely packed, with passengers barely moving, constrained by those around them, pushing and shoving each other. This reminded me of how molecules in a solid vibrate but are confined to fixed positions, unable to move freely. As the density of the crowd decreased slightly at each station – with people alighting, it felt akin to the molecular behaviour in a liquid state—where the passengers (like molecules) could now flow past each other, with more freedom of movement, though still closely bound by the space limitations. Finally, as the train neared Churchgate, passing through intermittent stations at Bandra, Dadar, Mumbai Central, Grant Road, Churni Road, and Marine Line where more and more people alighted, few boarded, the compartment felt almost gaseous as it passed Charni Road, with passengers dispersed, with an ability to move freely and randomly in any direction, unlike what they could do earlier at Andheri, or Bandra and to some extent at Dadar. This experience helped me understand the Brownian motion as a fascinating and relatable way to conceptualize the movement of particles in different states of matter, described below

Solids and Packed Crowds: In peak hours, when the train is densely packed, people have minimal space to move, much like particles in a solid. Here, movement is constrained, and individuals can only shift slightly, often bouncing off each other within the confined space—analogous to the restricted vibrational motion of particles in a solid.

Liquids and Moderate Crowding: As more passengers alight at Bandra, Dadar, and Mumbai Central, and few board, there’s a slight increase in movement of people. The density of commuters is lower than in the packed train, providing a bit more freedom for the commuters to navigate within the coach. This state is comparable to the behaviour of particles in a liquid, where movement is still random but particles can flow past each other within a confined space.

Gases and Spacious Trains: As the train nears the destination (Church Gate) the number of passengers in the coach decreases, and people have ample space to move freely. This situation mirrors the random, high-energy movement of particles in a gas, where they occupy more space and move independently without frequent interactions.

The Virar Fast train ride became a living analogy for me—a vivid, real-life comparison to the randomized movement of particles in different states of matter. The random movements of people mirrored the Brownian motion described by Einstein in the Annus Mirabilis year, 1905, in one of his five acclaimed papers, which were published in that year. Although Brownian motion, had been observed before Albert Einstein’s time, what made Einstein’s 1905 paper "On the Movement of Small Particles Suspended in Stationary Liquids Required by the Molecular-Kinetic Theory of Heat," the third of his five papers written in May 1905, remarkable was that the paper provided a theoretical explanation and a mathematical framework for understanding the motion of the particles in the fluid. His paper was one of the five revolutionary papers in Einstein's annus mirabilis (1905). The Brownian Motion - the random movement of particles in fluids - was already identified by physicists before Einstein. However, Einstein used the knowledge of this phenomenon to prove the existence of atoms, through his paper.

My personal experience of the movement of passengers in the Virar Fast Local and the clarity it provided for the Brownian motion, wasn’t just about physics or the scientific explanation of the movement of molecules in fluid. It made me realize how science and art—two seemingly separate worlds—intersect in ways I hadn’t previously considered. The Virar Fast Local art installation of Valay Shinde, displayed in the Mumbai Gallery, perhaps, helped me look at the experience of Mumbai local travel differently. Art, with its focus on the human experience and creativity, can be found in the very randomness of the movement in that train. Science, with its focus on understanding phenomena, finds itself expressed in the chaotic yet measurable motions of people.

As someone who has spent years working in a science museum including a few years heading an art institution – NGMA Mumbai, and now working at the CSMVS, I now fully appreciate the delicate balance between the world of science and arts, two worlds. They are intertwined more intricately than CP Snow’s "Two Cultures" would suggest. Art and science, both expressions of human creativity, aren’t just complementary—they are essential to one another. My experience in science helped me understand the structure and patterns of the physical world, while my exposure to art at the CSMVS Museum opened my eyes to the beauty and meaning that lie within those structures.

Today, as I stand at the crossroads of science and arts, I see the power of interdisciplinary understanding. My epiphany on the crowded Mumbai local has given me a profound appreciation for how science and art come together, just as the motion of particles can be beautifully reflected in the movement of people in the everyday chaos of life. Through this lens, I can see how the randomness of life—whether in a crowded train or a scientific phenomenon—holds both scientific explanation and artistic beauty, as articulated by Valay Shinde in his art installation. And in that realization, I feel more connected to both fields than ever before.

Long live Sciences and Arts and their practitioners and may they come closer than ever before.

Images: Courtesy CSMVS, Mumbai and After my retirement from service as the Director of Nehru Science Centre, Mumbai after a brief stint in Delhi and a break, I joined the CSMVS, Mumbai, as an Advisor. Contrasting experience of working with the science museums for 35 years and now - for nearly three years - with the CSMVS has been quite enriching and educative. It is this tango of science and art that has come my way and motivated me to pen this article, differently!

One of the many new exhibitions that the CSMVS has completed and thrown open to the public is the Mumbai Gallery, which was opened on 14 October 2024. This gallery is dedicated to the city of Mumbai. It features historical artefacts that narrate the story of the people of Mumbai who have made this city the economic capital of India and a cosmopolitan city, which is also a dream city and a city of opportunity, for those who wish to dream. One of the significant artefacts in the Mumbai gallery is the “Virar Fast” art installation created by Valay Shende, which is prominently displayed at the entrance to the Mumbai gallery.

Mumbai, a cosmopolitan city of hope and aspiration for millions is majorly dependent on the suburban electric local rail transport for commute. The Mumbai Suburban Rail (Central, Western, and Harbour line) on an average commute 7.24 million commuters daily and is inextricably linked to most Mumbaikars, for whom Rail is their lifeline. The crowded suburban trains in Mumbai are sites that Mumbaikars experience daily. Virar Fast local during peak hours, quintessentially represents this scene. This daily phenomenon, experienced by Mumbaikars has motivated artist Valay Shende to craft his beautiful art installation “Virar Fast” which now finds a pride of place in the Mumbai gallery at the CSMSV Museum. This installation, no wonder made it prominently to the headlines in the Times of India, which covered the Mumbai gallery. The concept note provided by the artist for his work “Virar Fast’ describes his work of art as a representation of the “essence of relentless battle faced by the working class in their daily grind (travel)”.

The EMU (Electric Multiple Unit) that is used to run the Mumbai suburban trains is a household name in Mumbai. Mumbai electric rail transport began almost a century ago, on February 3, 1925, when the Great Indian Peninsular Railway (GIPR) introduced the first electric run trains that ran between Bombay VT (now CSMT) and Kurla Harbour. Incidentally one of these earliest electric engines that ran the trains in Mumbai (Bombay then) is in the collections of the Nehru Science Centre, Mumbai, and this pride collection was restored to its pristine beauty during the COVID pandemic period.

The heading for this article - “The Tango of Science and Art” - comes from my experience from one of those typically crowded peak time travel days in the Virar Fast local (Western Railways) that I used for commuting to Church Gate from Andheri. Most rail commuters by the Virar Fast local, during the peak hours, are confronted with the challenge of searching for foot space in a train that does not even have an additional square inch of space left. Although it is a usual occurrence for daily commuters, however, for me who uses the Virar Fast rarely, something profound struck me while travelling in this crowded local. As I stood, barely able to move amidst the sea of passengers on the Virar Fast local - which I had boarded at Andheri for travelling to Church Gate - the familiar jostling, swaying, and chaotic shuffle of bodies, its indescribable odour, the sound, and noise, which I was experiencing, reminded me of something unexpectedly scientific: the Brownian motion.

For over 35 years, I worked with science museums, dedicated to science communication, immersed in the language of molecules, atoms, and scientific phenomena through my work with science museums across India. Creating exhibits to explain the microscopic world of science to the uninitiated visitor in science, almost always, makes a science museum curator rely on analogies. Brownian motion is one such scientific phenomenon, which was one of the first exhibits that I had developed as a young curator way back in 1988. I vividly remember having used a mechanical analogy to explain the complicated motions of molecules that constitute the Brownian motion. Post my retirement, I found myself stepping into a different realm - an art museum, the CSMVS Museum in Mumbai. At first, this transition was like moving to an entirely different universe. CP Snow’s essay on “The Two Cultures”—the stark divide between the world of sciences and that of the arts—suddenly made perfect sense to me. I felt the chasm between the analytical, data-driven logic of science and the subjective, emotional world of arts and literature. Yet, as the months passed, I began to realize that perhaps these two worlds weren't as distinct as they first appeared. Slowly, I started seeing how creativity was the common thread weaving them together, regardless of their different forms of expression or understanding.

But it wasn’t until that epiphanic moment in the Virar Fast Local train—a crowded, bustling, Mumbai local—that everything truly crystallized for me. The human movement in that compartment was not unlike the random motion of particles in Brownian motion, which Einstein predicted. In this seemingly chaotic environment, every jolt, every push, every nudge appeared to be dictated by some kind of an invisible force: the crowdedness of the train, the positioning of passengers, and their collective aim to reach their workplace – destination, in time. That instant of epiphany helped me see some kind of a parallel between the everyday scene of Mumbai peak time local travels and the microscopic world of science, Brownian motion.

Just like molecules in a substance, the crowd in the Virar Fast Local was densely packed, with passengers barely moving, constrained by those around them, pushing and shoving each other. This reminded me of how molecules in a solid vibrate but are confined to fixed positions, unable to move freely. As the density of the crowd decreased slightly at each station – with people alighting, it felt akin to the molecular behaviour in a liquid state—where the passengers (like molecules) could now flow past each other, with more freedom of movement, though still closely bound by the space limitations. Finally, as the train neared Churchgate, passing through intermittent stations at Bandra, Dadar, Mumbai Central, Grant Road, Churni Road, and Marine Line where more and more people alighted, few boarded, the compartment felt almost gaseous as it passed Charni Road, with passengers dispersed, with an ability to move freely and randomly in any direction, unlike what they could do earlier at Andheri, or Bandra and to some extent at Dadar. This experience helped me understand the Brownian motion as a fascinating and relatable way to conceptualize the movement of particles in different states of matter, described below

Solids and Packed Crowds: In peak hours, when the train is densely packed, people have minimal space to move, much like particles in a solid. Here, movement is constrained, and individuals can only shift slightly, often bouncing off each other within the confined space—analogous to the restricted vibrational motion of particles in a solid.

Liquids and Moderate Crowding: As more passengers alight at Bandra, Dadar, and Mumbai Central, and few board, there’s a slight increase in movement of people. The density of commuters is lower than in the packed train, providing a bit more freedom for the commuters to navigate within the coach. This state is comparable to the behaviour of particles in a liquid, where movement is still random but particles can flow past each other within a confined space.

Gases and Spacious Trains: As the train nears the destination (Church Gate) the number of passengers in the coach decreases, and people have ample space to move freely. This situation mirrors the random, high-energy movement of particles in a gas, where they occupy more space and move independently without frequent interactions.

The Virar Fast train ride became a living analogy for me—a vivid, real-life comparison to the randomized movement of particles in different states of matter. The random movements of people mirrored the Brownian motion described by Einstein in the Annus Mirabilis year, 1905, in one of his five acclaimed papers, which were published in that year. Although Brownian motion, had been observed before Albert Einstein’s time, what made Einstein’s 1905 paper "On the Movement of Small Particles Suspended in Stationary Liquids Required by the Molecular-Kinetic Theory of Heat," the third of his five papers written in May 1905, remarkable was that the paper provided a theoretical explanation and a mathematical framework for understanding the motion of the particles in the fluid. His paper was one of the five revolutionary papers in Einstein's annus mirabilis (1905). The Brownian Motion - the random movement of particles in fluids - was already identified by physicists before Einstein. However, Einstein used the knowledge of this phenomenon to prove the existence of atoms, through his paper.

My personal experience of the movement of passengers in the Virar Fast Local and the clarity it provided for the Brownian motion, wasn’t just about physics or the scientific explanation of the movement of molecules in fluid. It made me realize how science and art—two seemingly separate worlds—intersect in ways I hadn’t previously considered. The Virar Fast Local art installation of Valay Shinde, displayed in the Mumbai Gallery, perhaps, helped me look at the experience of Mumbai local travel differently. Art, with its focus on the human experience and creativity, can be found in the very randomness of the movement in that train. Science, with its focus on understanding phenomena, finds itself expressed in the chaotic yet measurable motions of people.

As someone who has spent years working in a science museum including a few years heading an art institution – NGMA Mumbai, and now working at the CSMVS, I now fully appreciate the delicate balance between the world of science and arts, two worlds. They are intertwined more intricately than CP Snow’s "Two Cultures" would suggest. Art and science, both expressions of human creativity, aren’t just complementary—they are essential to one another. My experience in science helped me understand the structure and patterns of the physical world, while my exposure to art at the CSMVS Museum opened my eyes to the beauty and meaning that lie within those structures.

Today, as I stand at the crossroads of science and arts, I see the power of interdisciplinary understanding. My epiphany on the crowded Mumbai local has given me a profound appreciation for how science and art come together, just as the motion of particles can be beautifully reflected in the movement of people in the everyday chaos of life. Through this lens, I can see how the randomness of life—whether in a crowded train or a scientific phenomenon—holds both scientific explanation and artistic beauty, as articulated by Valay Shinde in his art installation. And in that realization, I feel more connected to both fields than ever before.

Long live Sciences and Arts and their practitioners and may they come closer than ever before.edia


Decadal Reminiscence of “Deconstructed Innings: A Tribute to Sachin Tendulkar” exhibition

Ten years ago, on 18 December 2014, an interesting art exhibition entitled “Deconstructed Innings: A Tribute to Sachin Tendulkar” was open...