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Sunday, November 22, 2009

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Madhu Jain
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Madhu Jain has written on culture, society, the arts, and politics for three decades now. She has held senior positions at two of India's foremost newsmagazines, Sunday and India Today, where she was responsible for the coverage of arts and culture.

Jain was also an editorial consultant with Outlook magazine for two years. She has chronicled crucial twists and turns in India's social history. She was the Delhi correspondent of leading French daily La Croix for several years, for which she wrote extensively on Indian politics and culture.

Jain began her career in journalism with The Statesman, prior to which she was a student of literature at the Sorbonne. She also studied art history in Paris. She went to school and college (Connecticut College) in the United States.

Jain is currently an independent curator and columnist. She has curated two major art exhibitions: the award-winning Kitsch Kitsch Hota Hai (Visual Arts Gallery, New Delhi, 2001) and an exhibition of Paris-based painter Viswanadhan (Visual Arts Gallery, 2003). She is now working on two major exhibitions on contemporary Indian art.

Jain lives in New Delhi. She has written extensively on contemporary art for magazines, catalogues, and books. Her book on Indian cinema, The Kapoors: The First Family Of Indian Cinema, was published in 2005 by Viking/Penguin. She has contributed chapters to many books, including The Millennium Book On New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2001; Delhi: Improbable City, An anthology of writing on New Delhi edited by Khushwant Singh for Penguin, 2001; Bollywood, published by Dakini Publishers, UK, 2001; and The First 50 Years, London and Edinburgh Publishing.

Currently, Jain is working on another book for Penguin. She works in Delhi, where she lives with her husband, a physicist. They have two children.

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Having a ball with the canvas

There hasn’t been an evening this week, make that some of last week as well, that hasn’t seen the opening of an art exhibition.
April 23, 2009

Postcards from the American edge

All this talk and persistent bemoaning about economies going belly-up, recession and unemployment is too abstract for me.
April 9, 2009

Through the cracks come the demons

However, this column is not about Facebook. It’s about what I found was exercising some of the younger minds I had connected to perchance, out there in the friendly ether.
March 26, 2009

Back to the future in these trying times

Starry-eyed migrants streaming into Mumbai to make it big in Bollywood has become a tired cliche.
March 12, 2009

Lonely death for a trailblazer

We live in an era when history is not too much more than fifteen minutes in the past. Yesterday is so, well, yesterday.
February 26, 2009

In search of an Obama for India

And then it strikes me that she is the third person who has in the last few days talked of Obama as a beacon of hope, if not a saviour.
February 12, 2009

The sexiness quotient of today’s writers

Sexy is not quite the adjective I would have tagged writers with. However, after five days at the Jaipur Literature Festival, sexy and writers didn’t seem oxymoronic.
January 29, 2009

Cinematic gems sold as junk

Mass, e-mailed New Year’s greetings can be, to put it mildly, rather treacle-sweet, mundane. But this one has me sit up, with a start.
January 15, 2009

In the fog of fear on New Year’s Eve

This morning while I did my round of wishing people I asked my friends how they were going to ring in 2009. Almost all of them planned to stay home.
January 1, 2009

Doppelgangers in the art scene

It is as bad as it gets. The reviewer of The Independent did not mince any words while giving a thumbs down to an exhibition on Indian contemporary visual arts.
December 18, 2008

Bollywood-tinged live coverage

I was going to write about something totally different from what’s just happened in Mumbai. After an ocean of newsprint and images what more could I say.
December 5, 2008

Art world feels money crunch

Wasn’t it just yesterday that the nabobs of the art world were going about with their noses in the air, dropping names of obscure and avant-garde artists
November 20, 2008

In India, it’s still about colour

It wasn’t quite the best day to fly out of the US.
November 6, 2008
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