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BenQ Launches Two New Monitors
BenQ has launched two new monitors in its popular line of SW and E series. The SW240 is a 24.1-inch monitor supported by AQ colour technology, especially designed for photographers. It features a 99% Adobe RGB and 100% sRGB colour gamut, and a 14-bit 3D LUT. SW240 has 16:10 ratio, a10-bit color display, Delta E ≤ 2, and hardware calibration. It also has two modes: Advanced Black and White Mode, and Color Mode HotKey. BenQ’s EW277HDR is a 27-inch full HD monitor with brightness intelligence plus technology, a 3000:1 ultra-high native contrast, 93% DCI-P3 colour gamut, and a 16:9 ratio.
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I wish to let you fall out of my hands – Experimenter, Kolkata
On January 30, 2018, Experimenter in Gariahat, Kolkata, opened I wish to let you fall out of my hands (Chapter I), showcasing works created by artists Bani Abidi and Naeem Mohaiemen. The exhibition marked the first chapter in a two-chapter exhibition, the second of which inaugurated Experimenter’s second space at Ballygunge Place, Kolkata, on February 21, 2018. The works on view at the exhibitions used film and photography to explore the complexity of human relationships and the spaces they occupy – whether transitory, aspirational, imaginary or reclaimed. The twopart exhibition also included a series of lecture performances, workshops and discussions.
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Sculpting in Time – National Gallery of Modern Art, Bengaluru
This February, The National Gallery of Modern Art Bengaluru, together with the Ministry of Culture, presented Sculpting in Time – an exhibition curated by Sadanand Menon that showcased six decades of Balan Nambiar’s artistic journey. Comprising various works – from drawings in conte, Indian ink, charcoal, pastels, watercolour and oils to jewellery, enamel paintings on silver and copper and sculptures, the exhibition had also displayed a selection of the artist’s photographs documenting Teyyam, Bhuta and other ritual art forms. Lectures, panel discussions, music programmes, film screenings and gallery walks were also scheduled during the month-long exhibition.
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Photographer Detained for Not Practising ‘Real Journalism’
Kamran Yousuf, a freelance photojournalist in Kashmir, was apprehended in early September 2017, for his alleged involvement with incidents involving stone pelting. On January 18, 2018, he was formally charged with ‘criminal conspiracy’, ‘waging war against the government of India’, committing ‘unlawful activities’ and being a ‘member of a terrorist organisation’. He has been incarcerated since then. The National Investigative Agency, does not have any strong evidence against him, so far, but the chargesheet presented by them in the New Delhi court states that Yousuf is not a ‘real journalist’. Drawing from the ethics of photojournalism, the NIA said that a ‘real journalist’ should cover the government’s development activities such as inaugurations, statement of political party, an iftar party during Ramzan, and skill development programmes for unemployed youth, which is the ‘moral duty’ of a journalist. The NIA scanned through his devices, and they stated.... “Kamran Yusuf had hardly taken any video of such an activity, or any video or image of any such activity can rarely be seen on his laptop or mobile that clearly shows his intentions to only cover activities that are anti-national and earn money against such footages.” Yousuf dropped out of college in 2014, and began working for publications like Greater Kashmir, and Kashmir Uzma, where Photograph of Kamran Yousuf via Facebook he photographed the turmoil of the region.
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