Chennai| For Madras Busking, it is all about conversations and memories

S. Poorvaja S. Poorvaja | 09-20 16:20

The normally sober, and quiet conference room at The Hindu office had a different aura last Saturday. The chairs were rearranged in a circle, and all along the walls were different tables for poets and artists, bearing typewriters and sketchbooks.  

As part of the Made of Chennai campaign, the second chapter of Madras Busking set up shop in an unlikely location — an indoor space. The setting however, was no deterrent to the experience, as around 250 people came to interact with poets, writers, and artists. 

Madras Busking co-founder Nirosha interacts with a participant | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

“Busking involves performing an artform in public. It is very common in Europe where one can see people play music in public spaces. We were keen on bringing something like this to Chennai, which brought together illustrators and writers. People can strike up a conversation, and get a poem written, or a doodle or sketch made,” said GS Sairam Santhosh, one of the founders of Madras Busking. The community of writers and artists aims to document life in the present for people who visit and interact with them, and are encouraged to take a piece of poetry or a sketch back: a time capsule they can revisit years later. 

His co-founder Nirosha Shanmugam, was seated with a typewriter, some flowers, and an assortment of papers on her table. “I talk to people and type out a poem, with the idea of covering our conversation properly. People share something significant from their daily lives, are sometimes vulnerable, or happy. This experience comes with the ability to connect and speak to a complete stranger about all of this, and take back a conversation, poem or sketch as a memory of the day,” she said. 

Not too far away from Nirosha, Urusha Maher and Rohan, were working on poetic illustrations. “I enjoy conversations, meeting people, getting to know their stories and putting my spin on it. We have a conversation, and I can come up with an illustrated piece of poetry, or even a doodle,” Urusha said. While lawyer KRB Dharanee was speaking to people and typing letters on her typewriter for them, heritage illustrator Aafreen Fathima, with an orange lamp on her table, sketched away while holding long conversations. 

People who came to participate in the centre, patiently waited their turn to speak to the buskers. Tamil poet Vignesh Gopalan, photographer Muthu Kumaran, and  design generalist Anthony Jackson were among the buskers as well. 

Published - September 20, 2024 01:20 pm IST

Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.


ALSO READ

Ola Electric responds to ARAI notice, says prices of S1 X 2 kWh scooter unchanged

Ola Electric provided an invoice dated October 6, showing a INR 5,000 discount given to customers, a...

Hyundai Motor IPO’s off to a slow start

Around 35% of the total shares in the offering are reserved for retail investors, while QIBs and NII...

Under fire, Ola Electric taps EY India to get back on track

Close to a dozen executives from EY came on-board at Ola Electric a few weeks ago on deputation for ...

Tata Motors secures 5-star BNCAP safety ratings for Nexon, Curvv, and EV models in latest crash tests

Tata Curvv.EV BNCAP testTata Motors did it again! Tata Motors has once again secured 5 star rating i...

India needs to step up manufacturing to meet Viksit Bharat goal: Volvo Grp India MD

Volvo Group India Managing Director and President, Kamal Bali. The manufacturing sector is a weak li...

Dollar pullback to help Indian rupee, weak risk appetite to weigh

Investors are now nearly certain that the U.S. Federal Reserve will deliver a 25-basis-point rate cu...