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    You are at:Home»Features»Cinema»IAAC – The Big Indian Tamasha Comes to NY

    IAAC – The Big Indian Tamasha Comes to NY

    6
    By Lavina Melwani on November 8, 2013 Cinema, The Buzz

    Chy Ajay Kumar, Ap Ny, Erika Born and 52 others like this on FB’s Lassi with Lavina page.

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    Four power women at IAAC - Madhur Jaffrey, Aroon Shivdasani, Sarita Choudhury & Deepa Mehta
    Four power women at IAAC – Madhur Jaffrey, Aroon Shivdasani, Sarita Choudhury & Deepa Mehta

               

    IAAC –  Spunk and Ambition

    Where would you get to rub shoulders  with Salman Rushdie, Shabana Azmi, Danny Boyle, Shashi Tharoor, M.F. Husain, Mira Nair, Deepa Mehta, Madhur Jaffrey – and the late, great Ismail Merchant? Well, I met all these topnotch names  in New York, all thanks to a small, spunky organization which has survived and thrived by sheer chutzpah. It’s brought a mix of Indian cinema, art, theater  and dance to barren city streets, making them all a natural part of American life.

    Indeed,  if you’re talking about Indian art and culture in the city, you can hardly go a few sentences without mentioning Indo American Arts Council or its creator, Aroon Shivdasani. This year IAAC celebrates its 15th tumble and toss year, and so here’s the story of the little engine that said I think I can, I think I can, against all odds.

    Most years with  little funding and a gang of enthusiastic volunteers, IAAC has become one of the leading organizations promoting Indian arts in the US.  On November 21st it celebrates its 15th anniversary with a bang  – with the Oscar winning duo of singer/songwriter/composer Paul Williams and pianist/ composer Kenneth Ascher – and a fashion show with the surreal collection of Manish Arora. In this grand evening at the Orensanz Foundation for Contemporary Art,   IAAC will also recognize three leading Indian-Americans from different spheres – Salman Rushdie, Mira Nair, and Dr. Manjula Bansal.

     

    Suneil Anand, son of Dev Anand, and filmmaker Shyam Benegal at the 2012 New York Indian Film Festival
    Suneil Anand and Shyam Benegal
    NyIFF - A scene from Gangs of Wasseypur
    NYIFF – A scene from Gangs of Wasseypur
    NY actors Manu Narayan, Samrat Chakrabarti, Sarita Choudhury and Ajay Naidu at the NYIFF
    NY actors Manu Narayan, Samrat Chakrabarti, Sarita Choudhury and Ajay Naidu at the NYIFF
    Aroon Shivdasani of IAAC with Bedabrata Pain of 'Chittagong' at NYIFF
    Aroon Shivdasani of IAAC with Bedabrata Pain of ‘Chittagong’ at NYIFF
    Shorr, which premiered at MIAAC, is made by Ekta Kapoor's Alt Entertainment and stars Sendhil Ramamurthy & Tusshar Kapoor
    Shorr, which premiered at MIAAC, is made by Ekta Kapoor’s Alt Entertainment and stars Sendhil Ramamurthy & Tusshar Kapoor
    Aasif Mandvi with the Best actor award at the MIAAC Festival
    2010 MIAAC Film Festival showcases 'Bhumika' - the films of Smita Patil
    Smita Patil in ‘In Search of Famine’ at the MIAAC Film Festival
    Bollywood and art film directors, actors and crew gather with film curators and volunteers and MIAAC director Aroon Shivdasani at the conclusion of the MIAAC film festival
    Bollywood & art film directors, actors & crew with film curators, volunteers & MIAAC director Aroon Shivdasani at the MIAAC film festival
    Tusshar and Ekta Kapoor at the premiere of 'Shorr' at MIAAC
    Tusshar and Ekta Kapoor at the premiere of ‘Shorr’ at MIAAC

     

    “The IAAC has done invaluable work in creating a showcase for Indian Americans in many art forms,” says Rushdie. ” I’m delighted to have been a supporter from the earliest days.” As for Mira Nair, she puts it even more succinctly: “Love and Salaams to the dynamic Aroon and IAAC for bringing us our cinema. 15 Years, Woo Hoo!”

     

    Salman Rushdie, MF Husain & Aroon Shivdasani
    Salman Rushdie, MF Husain & Aroon Shivdasani

     

    IAAC – Filling a Void in New York

    To understand this enthusiasm, one has to realize that fifteen years back it was an arid landscape in America where Indian arts were concerned. Few mainstream organizations were showcasing Indian art or film or dance, and there were even fewer organizations which were catering to second generation Indian-Americans or giving them access to the arts of their heritage.

    Enter art impresario Aroon Shivdasani who has became a very vocal one-woman band for the cause of Indian arts and culture.

    “Arts is in my DNA because of my mother Dru,” she says.   “Fleeing her life of feudal aristocracy in Sindh to the newly partitioned India, she did her Ph.D, taught school, college and university, excelled in the performing arts, threw herself into social work, raised a family and gave of herself to all  –  academia, family, community.”

     

    Aroon Shivdasani  & Dru Gidwani
    A love of the arts: Aroon Shivdasani & Dru Gidwani

     

    Dru Gidwani, a former professor of English and drama at Bombay University, passed away last year at 94. An unabashed art lover and tireless cheerleader for IAAC, she was at every event, sitting in the front row to video the events when her eyes became too weak to  see from afar.

    This inborn passion for the arts has got passed on to Shivdasani, who through her growing up years in a boarding school in Sanawar, Simla right to pursuing a masters in English and drama to teaching in New York  has been immersed in all art forms. She says, “You became a complete individual. Even if you aren’t the king of it – you know it all.”

    Shivdasani, who came to the US via India and Canada, found that Americans were unfamiliar with the Indian arts which were mostly invisible in mainstream circles. She founded IAAC with Jonathan Hollander back in 1998 with some seed money from Gopal Raju of India Abroad, to give Indian artists exposure and to create a space for the arts. Her husband Indur, a successful entrepreneur, has supported IAAC through several financial ups and downs.

     

    A collage of art from diaspora artists
    The art of diaspora artists
    Artists of the South Asian Diaspora with Vijay Kumar & Aroon Shivdasani.
    Artists of the South Asian Diaspora with Vijay Kumar & Aroon Shivdasani. Photo: Shhivika Chauhan Photography
    Curator Vijay Kumar with artist Ranna Chaudry and guest
    Curator Vijay Kumar with artist Ranna Chaudry and guest

     

    A Passport to Indian Art

    One of her first ventures was Passport to Indian Art, in which visual passports were issued to guests which took them into a whole new world – the real live world of little-known Indian artists in New York, to see them in their natural habitat, working in their studios.  The Erasing Borders art festival has brought exposure and space to many emerging artists of the South Asian diaspora, and many have gone on to solo shows and representation by noted galleries. The Erasing Borders exhibition is now a traveling show which takes the art to different cities in the US.

    Since then, several firsts have followed for IAAC  – it pioneered the first Playwrights Theater in collaboration with Lark Playwrights. Audiences have got to see big names like Vijay Tendulkar, Girish Karnad and Mahesh Dattani, as well as emerging playwrights who bring their dreams and passion to the stage. Perhaps one of the most notable and exciting success stories is of Aasif Mandvi, now the big name on Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show. I recall first seeing him in ‘Sakina’s Restaurant’, a one-man show that he wrote and acted in, promoted by IAAC. At that time, few knew his name but his talent shone brightly.

    The annual Erasing Borders  Festival of Indian Dance has brought the many nuanced aspects of Indian dance to mainstream venues and also to city streets with an amazing free concert in the Wall Street area where bankers and hedge fund folks merge with art lovers, surrounded by traffic and tall buildings, as they check out everything from Kathak to bhangra and Bollywood moves.

     

    Mesma Belsare at Erasing Borders: Festival of Indian Dance
    Shipra Mehrotra at Erasing Borders: Festival of Indian Dance
    Navtej Johar at Erasing Borders: Festival of Indian Dance
    Jaikishore & Padmavani Mosalikanti at Erasing Borders Festival of Indian Dance

     

    NYIFF –  Cinema, Cinema!

    The star event of the IAAC roster is the annual film festival, which has undergone a few avatars and name changes – like any New Yorker! Currently known as the New York Indian Film Festival, it has become known for its energetic mix of independent films, documentaries and shorts as well as Bollywood offerings. Fans can not only get to meet major stars and emerging talent but also sink their teeth into thoughtful programming and discussions, as well as after-parties.

    All these big developments at IAAC have had their germ in personal connections and it was noted names like Mira Nair, Salman Rushdie, Shabana Azmi and  Madhur Jaffrey who have been supporters since the early days, and their presence has given credibility to the organization and achieved visibility for the new emerging talents.

    Besides opening up the doors to the best films, dance and music from India and the Diaspora, Shivdasani has been a nurturer of emerging talent in all these fields with play and book readings, art openings and salon gatherings of artists and writers. The organization has received critical acclaim in mainstream media like The New York Times and WSJ, as well as some grants from noted foundations.

     

    Deepa Mehta, Salman Rushdie and Shabana Azmi
    Deepa Mehta, Salman Rushdie and Shabana Azmi
    Shabana Azmi and Javed Akhtar
    Shabana Azmi and Javed Akhtar
    At the book launch of 'At Home with Madhur Jaffrey, Sunanda Tharoor, Aroon Shivdasani, Madhur Jaffrey and Shashi Tharoor
    At the book launch of ‘At Home with Madhur Jaffrey, Sunanda Tharoor, Aroon Shivdasani, Madhur Jaffrey and Shashi Tharoor
    Mira Nair and Sarita Choudhury

     

    A Home for Indian arts

    Funding for the arts, however,  continues to be a challenge, and IAAC has struggled with this for much of its existence. While corporations and institutions do support and fund arts organizations in the West, it has been more difficult getting this kind of support for IAAC. Nor are many Indian-Americans that engaged when it comes to supporting their own art and artistes.

    “I’m now 67 years old,” says Shivdasani. “People must know that I want IAAC to continue even without me, so artists know there’s a platform for them even without me. I want it to be a valid entity with staying power. We work very hard constantly 24/7 to get this out – and it would be fantastic if we had a space.”

    She envisages a home for the IAAC where artistes can meet each other, get visibility and accessibility – and be nourished. There would be readings and exhibits, a salon to celebrate the arts.

    In  this 15th year, Shivdasani hopes that people will lend a hand to this feisty organization which puts on the Big Indian Tamasha with very few resources. A shining White Knight from the corporate world would be wonderful, she says, a visionary who sees all the possibilities.

    Sometimes we do tend to take good things for granted – until we don’t have them anymore.

    Meanwhile, come celebrate and give a thumbs up to IAAC’s 15 years at a joyful bash.

    Details at www.iaac.us.  

     

    Lavina Melwani
    • Website

    Lavina Melwani is a New York-based journalist who writes for several international publications. Twitter@lavinamelwani & @lassiwithlavina Sign up for the free newsletter to get your dose of Lassi!

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    6 Comments

    1. Lavina Melwani on November 13, 2013 12:38 pm

      Kelly Tagore via Facebook

      Gorgeous!

    2. Lavina Melwani on November 13, 2013 12:37 pm

      Alka Bhargava via Facebook

      Aroon is an institution!

    3. Lavina Melwani on November 13, 2013 12:35 pm

      Sharmila Rao Thakkar via Facebook

      https://www.facebook.com/LassiwithLavina

      So miss it!!!

    4. Lavina Melwani on November 13, 2013 12:34 pm

      Chetna Singh via Facebook

      https://www.facebook.com/LassiwithLavina

      Thanks for this..I had no idea that this organization even existed, becoming a member!

    5. Lavina Melwani on November 13, 2013 12:32 pm

      Aroon, IAAC has been enriching the lives of New Yorkers – it deserves to be known and supported by more people!

    6. aroon shivdasani on November 13, 2013 1:08 am

      What a fabulous writer you are Lavina! Thank you for this article and for telling people about the IAAC.

    Leave A Reply

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