MIND SPACES
Several
forums have emerged over the past few years encouraging the public to engage
with issues of culture and urban living
In a large hall in an old textile
mill in Parel on the evening of June 27, nearly 100 artistes, businessman and
Mumbai-based foreigners sat enrapt before a screen as a series of Dutch
architects, designers and entrepreneurs presented innovative ideas for urban
planning and sustainable living.
KALPAK PATHAK/HT
The event was the screening of seven
TEDx talks — ideas conferences organised in association with the US-based TED
(Technology, Entertainment and Design) foundation — held in the Netherlands
earlier that month; the venue in the old mill was the Dutch Design Workspace, a
suave, high-ceilinged office space that was launched in February by the
government of the Netherlands to promote collaborations between Dutch and
Indian designers by organising public lectures and discussions on design,
architecture and urban space.
It is one of many new cultural
spaces that have mushroomed in Mumbai over the past few years, offering free,
non-academic, public forums for intellectual engagement between citizens. These
spaces are also hubs for the growing interest in researching Mumbai as a city.
“Cultural and intellectual spaces
enhance the quality of life and contribute to the city’s social fabric and
cultural diversity through collaborative networks,” says Prashant Parikh,
managing trustee of the Mohile Parikh Center at Kala Ghoda, the first such
space to open in the city back in 1990. “The presence of various new
organisations in Mumbai is an indicator of the growth of the arts and culture
sector, enabling a flow and sharing of different ideas to possibly imagine new
futures.”
Researching Mumbai, by the Urban Aspirations in Global
Cities Project
A public lecture series held at TISS
LAUNCHED IN: June 2012 Urban
Aspirations was started in 2010 by NGO Pukar, the Tata Institute of Social
Sciences, and Germany’s Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and
Ethnic Diversity. The forum has started two monthly lecture series: Researching
Mumbai and City Conversations, in which urban researchers discuss their work.
The lecture series can offer diverse perspectives about issues in a city that
is in transition.
Arbour: Research Initiatives in Architecture
A Fort-based forum for conversations
around architecture and visual practices
LAUNCHED IN: December 2010 A
non-profit organisation, Arbour is funded by the city-based Priyanath Banerjee
Memorial Trust. It organises curated discussions on the practice of
architecture and the visual arts and on related books. The audience usually
consists of architects, artists, photographers and filmmakers. Arbour brings
people from different fields of art to the same platform. Since there is no
formal institution to do this, such a space becomes very important.
Jnanapravaha
An organisation in Fort that aims to
facilitate critical thinking within the arts
LAUNCHED IN: July 2007 Run by a
Varanasi-based familyfunded trust, JnanaPravaha organises about 36 public
lectures, seminars and conversations a year, involving researchers, authors,
musicians, filmmakers and other artistes with the aim of making the arts more
participatory. Jnanapravaha events feature speakers from around the world
discussing a wide range of topics. The space allows for intellectual
stimulation and a strong exchange of ideas.
Studio X
A research space for exploring the
city
LAUNCHED IN: February 2011 Studio X in
Fort, funded by the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture,
Planning and Preservation, is part of Columbia’s Studio-X Global Network
Initiative. It organises workshops, discussions and interactive exhibitions to
promote dialogue about architecture, urban planning, aesthetics, sustainability
and public art. Studio X has created space for intellectual conversations in
the city. The space is not intimidating and allows like-minded people to meet
and talk.
Pukar (Partners for Urban Knowledge, Action & Research)
An independent research collectiveLAUNCHED IN: 2002 Founded by anthropologists Arjun Appadurai and Carol Breckenridge, Pukar’s flagship project is its annual, year-long Youth Fellowship Programme, which guides youngsters from different backgrounds across the city to do research and study issues in their communities. As a Pukar Youth Fellow, I learnt how question things around me.
A Johari HT 120715
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