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June 26, 2009

MM Road, East Ground









The slogans on the walls of the maidan next to the Bangalore East station reflect the spirit of competition at the football tournament held here each year. The prize money can go up to Rs. 50,000 and the best player even wins what's called the Golden Boot. On holidays, the maidan is packed with different set of friends and teams, of all ages, playing tennis ball cricket and football but on a Friday morning, it's the playground of the local Madrassa.
For more pictures of playgrounds of Bangalore, click here.

June 25, 2009

Sankey Road



Name: Hanumanthappa
From: Yadgir, Gulbarga Dist.
In Benglur for a week. 

It's easy to recognise a person who is new to the city. It's the clothes a person wears and these days you will see a lot of people dressed like Hanumanthappa near construction sites across the city. The men usually wear simple, sweat-soaking, collarless, cotton shirt with a bright coloured band with a simple stitched pattern on the shirt pocket. They are yet to acquire clothes stitched in the city.  

According to Hanumanthappa, it doesn't rain enough in his village, called Pulioor in the almost-arid Yadgir Taluk of Gulbarga District. So he's come to Benglur where he has a few family members who work as construction labourers. The 'Biradari' has allowed him to get a job at a construction site, on arrival. And daily wages, which is something agriculture cannot provide. Once he settles down, he plans to go back and bring his wife and son.








June 24, 2009

Dr. Ambedkar Veedi





For Priyank: This is a monsoon shot for you from Bangalore. I think, the winds clear the air off dust and make the sky extra blue. Bangalore has the best skies in June. 


June 23, 2009

Off Marigowda Road, Arekempanahalli




The water cycle
Long before the biblical David slew Goliath with a stone, our ancestors are said to have walked across continents with their blunt stone implements and flint stones, burning and killing 'mega fauna'. However, we don't need such old fashioned tools anymore, we just have to use Thomas Crapper's useful invention to kill what remains. 
I found this wall in a studio that's housed in a scrapyard, which like all other scrapyards is situated on the banks of a Nullah. This one, the drain that starts from Lalbagh and flows east. 

June 22, 2009

Tank Bund Road, Subashnagar










Outside the Kempegowda Bus Station is this Tamilian with an interesting hairstyle. He's originally from near Kollegal and sells toys, perfumes and other things that travellers pick up on their way back home after a trip to Benglur. 

June 20, 2009

Hanumanthappa Road, Gandhinagar

People beginning to gather for the snake show outside Sam Fashions. This happens every Friday morning.  







Here are some earlier pictures of this Friday ritual (the day of Sandalwood movie release) when the snake charmer hadn't allowed me to take pictures of the snake : Character Artists Around Namma Theatres.



June 19, 2009

June 18, 2009

Dickenson Road


There are said to be 330,000,000 Hindu Gods. Adding 2 more from the Levant will not make much of a difference. However, I'm not so sure if the Pope would approve of the Virgin Mother(in a saree) and her Infant son (in a frock) and the mandatory dots on their foreheads adorning the wall of the roadside Ganapathy Shrine opposite RBANM School on Dickenson Road. 

June 16, 2009

Church Street




By Toutatis! I have a caste mark on my forehead. 
Found it outside a store selling new and second hand books.

June 12, 2009

NR Road + Pottery Road


Translation: "Excess love is injurious to life/health"







Translation: "Pray for Karnataka"





June 11, 2009

Susheela Road, Chickamavalli




Oora Habba, Chickamavalli. 
The people of Chickamavalli, that borders Lalbagh, near the West Gate, prefer to retain the social structure of the village that it has been for centuries. They have a small and well-knit community surrounded by the urban jungle called Bangalore. And this week, they are celebrating their togetherness with The Chickamavalli Oora Habba or the Chickamavalli Village Festival. 
All the men have taken the day off from work to lend a hand in arranging the festivities. To cook, to manage the various pujas, decorations and crowd at the little shrines that dot the clean, narrow lanes of the 'village'. The children have skipped school and are waiting to play on the swing next to the main shrine. The women have pulled out their best clothes and are doing the rounds of the different shrines with thaali-full of offerings. And more than a few women are parading their daughter-in-laws wrapped in silk sarees and covered in gold, while policemen on duty snore in their patrol vans.  
Each Galli in the village seems to have its own character. The Grama Devate Road (Village Goddess Street) is cordoned off with pandals and spicy chicken curry is being prepared. The Venkataswamy lane is where the rice and the vegetable dishes are being cooked. And at the central Susheela Road, the tables have been laid out for the big lunch where the entire village will be served.
The most popular shrine seems to be the one dedicated to Bisilu (Sunshine) Maramma that's on the main road, opposite the Kempe Gowda statue. And can there be a better time than now to have the habba, now that summer is over? 
 
 
 

Chicken being prepared for the feast.





Dressed in fresh flowers, silk, gold and stones, the Bisilu Maramma on her chariot.




The protectors.


June 10, 2009

2nd Main, Gandhinagar





It costs Rs 40 to watch a performance by the Sri KBR Drama Company of Davanagere that’s currently performing at the Rangamandira in Gandhinagar. Within 10 minutes the theatre is more than half full. It’s a decent crowd. The average age is just above 35 and all male. Most of them look like Government employees on their way back home or small traders in Benglur for business.
The drama itself is a collection of comedy performances that you see during award functions on any South Indian channel, interspersed with songs where the hero and heroine do some half-hearted dancing around the two microphones on the stage. A loose thread connects them to form a story and you will not miss much if you walk in half-way or step out before the performance is over. It’s more a group standup comedy act than a drama. Completing the performance is a digital drum set/synthesiser just below the stage drumming up the laughter. Adding to the effect is the man seated next to him controlling the lights.
The quality of the jokes is only slightly better than what you would see on the average TV award show. They were full of double-meanings, about sex and female body parts, and extracted whistles and claps from the audience. When they were not, there were a few good jokes about the current state of Kannada films. Luckily, the Bombay-Karnataka accent has a charm that can make even the dirtiest jokes sound nice.
The hero looked and dressed like Suresh Heblikar from Aalemane. He seemed to have much more in him and maybe, a solo stand up comedy show by him would be big hit with the masses.



 See the full Drama Series here.

June 9, 2009

Ranasinghpet


The Patli Galli.


Like Bangalore Autodrivers I can only take you to places I like to go.

Photographs: By date

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