
Lauren Gottlieb on being married: I'm spicy, high energy and Tobias gets me
Multiple events in Delhi on June 25, 2025: Korean film screening, lecture on conscience network, Sufi night with Master Saleem, NSD theatre festival, art exhibition, Bharatanatyam performance, and comedy show by Gaurav Kapoor at various venues across the city.

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India Today
37 minutes ago
- India Today
Uorfi Javed criticises The Traitors co-star Sufi Motiwala for abusing her sister Dolly
The controversies around 'The Traitors' don't seem to end anytime soon. This time around, contestants Uorfi Javed and Sufi Motiwala have locked horns on social media over playing the victim Uorfi accused Sufi of being hypocritical and dragging her sister Dolly into their fight, Sufi said she was targeting the youngest member on the reality show, streaming on Prime her latest story, Uorfi even said Sufi should not have come on the show if his age was less. "...Bhaiya agar itni hi age kam hai to kyu aaye aap show pe?. I only called him a traitor, which was the game. Why did you target Raftaar then, based on what? Because that was the game. Itne victim card hai is aadme ke paas, sorry bacche ke paas (sic)," she wrote on earlier said in her story that while she does not stand for people abusing Sufi for his sexual preference, he is a hypocrite as he abused her a look at Uorfi Javed stories:Sufi, on the other hand, had earlier uploaded a story on his Instagram page. He wrote, "Uorfi Javed, i'm sick of you and your stupid narrative and your bs of always thinking you're some wisdomous mother Teresa. (sic)"advertisementHe shared his experience of being cornered on 'The Traitors' and said, "You started targeting the youngest cast member based on a feeling and convinced the whole house to vote for me just for vibes. Firstly, imagine the mental turmoil when, in a house of 20, no one is interested in talking to you because Uorfi Javed hates you (sic)."Have a look at Sufi Motiwala's story:The Karan Johar-hosted reality show, 'The Traitors', is currently streaming on Prime Video. Six episodes have been released and the rest of the episodes will be released on Thursday (June 26).- EndsMust Watch


The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Gieve Patel: A canvas of camaraderie
When a deeply loved and admired artist passes away, it is the city left behind and the vast pastiche of friendships made and sustained in it, that offer the best possible summation of a working life in the arts. When that artist is poet, playwright and painter Gieve Patel (1940-2023) and the city as capacious as Mumbai, the unusual can be expected. A Show of Hands: In Memorium, the recently concluded exhibition, curated by poet and critic Ranjit Hoskote was held at the Jehangir Nicholson Arts Foundation Gallery (NGAF) in the (Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sanghralaya (CSMVS), Mumbai. The exhibition, supported by Vadehra Art Gallery, featured works by artists Aditi Singh, Anju Dodiya, Atul Dodiya, Areez Katki, Biraaj Dodiya, Gulammohammed Sheikh, Jitish Kallat, Mahesh Baliga, Nilima Sheikh, Ranbir Kaleka, Ratheesh T. and Sudhir Patwardhan and Sujith S.N. — many of whom were friends and colleagues of Gieve. The show also included younger artists whose works Gieve was interested in and those who were inspired by his work. This might have become a sombre occasion; instead it was a joyous, tender and unfussy act of remembering a friend in the midst of works of art, that had some sort of connection with Gieve. Locating the exhibition in the JNAF gallery also unambiguously alluded to a steady, solid philanthropic tradition, which had contributed to the making of a rich, varied, public-spirited and free-thinking arts ecosystem in Mumbai. The gallery's core collection is from Jehangir Nicholson (1915-2001) one of the early patrons and collectors of modern and contemporary art practices and as much a Bombay institution as Gieve. Defying labels As friends narrated one story after another amidst laughter and even gossip, it was clear that Gieve was an artist with wide-ranging interests. He was often seen at poetry readings at the NCPA lawns or the Sassoon Library, or silently watching a Bharatanatyam programme or reading out his translations of the medieval Gujarati poet Akho, whose six stanza form of chappas he had worked on for decades. Attempting to draw a simplistic correlation with the man and his artistic selves or trying to slot him definitively in a particular movement in the arts is simply unworkable. He had the ability to be precise, specific but also in service to certain principles that he could not be dissuaded from such as the enduring value of the classical arts, not a popular position to take today. Here he is speaking to his friend Sudhir Patwardhan in Art India (volume 5, 2000) 'I am indeed a sucker for permanent values in art, and for the landmarks of the past. An artist will ignore them at his peril. Identifying with this 'eternal' stream gives one a strong conviction about what is significant and what is not. But also, I have a sense of being continually nurtured by the work and the presence of other artists on the scene. I think this scene has happened because we are talking to each other a lot — through our work, exchanging ideas, and yes of course through very lively gossip! What we are all doing is trying to zero in on to some very essential notions — in our different and even conflicting ways.' As friend and senior artist Nilima Sheikh pointed out, Gieve's acuity of observation was quite remarkable. 'As artists when we speak to each other we expect to be understood. But Gieve, because he was also a writer could enter an artistic work with sharpness and empathy. He had a way of cutting through the superfluous', she says. Memories of Marine Drive Pointing to the unusual laughter on the day of the opening, Sudhir Patwardhan simply says any meeting with Gieve always brought lots of laughter. Sudhir, who moved to Mumbai straight out of Medical College in Pune, to be in a city where exhibitions and meetings with fellow artists were likely to be more frequent, met Gieve, also a young doctor. His painting as a tribute to his friend is titled 'Marine Drive' and shows two friends sitting by the sea late and having a free-wheeling chat. Sudhir says they would meet at Marine Drive for some quiet time after Gieve closed his GP clinic on Lamington Road for the day, while Sudhir came in from Thane before taking the last train back from VT station. Atul Dodiya chose to share his series of paintings on the 'Nayanars' made for the scholar David Shulman, whom he met through Gieve. But it was the painting titled 'Laughter', which used one half of a human skull and another of Gieve's laughing face that opens up many stories. Dodiya points to Gieve's well-known fascination with death and the decaying of the human body. 'He is probably the only painter who has painted 'Death' in so many ways,' says Dodiya. Among Gieve's works at the exhibition were his ink sketches of the 'Dead Politicians Series'. 'You might say that as a doctor he was drawn to the idea of death, but I think it was more of a very insistent philosophical questioning and seeking that drove him,' he says. This was also evident in his famed series of paintings on 'Wells' in which the self and reflection are examined. As a young student at J.J. School of Art, Dodiya says, he had taken to dropping into his clinic in the evenings. A decade later later, when he approached the senior artist to write a note for his first solo exhibition at Chemould, he agreed setting off another cycle of artistic friendships and possibilities in the city.


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
ITC Maurya: A gourmet destination that continues to delight diners over the decades
Multiple events in Delhi on June 25, 2025: Korean film screening, lecture on conscience network, Sufi night with Master Saleem, NSD theatre festival, art exhibition, Bharatanatyam performance, and comedy show by Gaurav Kapoor at various venues across the city.