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Woman of Culture

Woman of Culture

著者: Mira T. Sundara Rajan
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Discover untold stories from the world of culture with the host and her distinguished guests. Mira T. Sundara Rajan is a Canadian author, musician, and renowned legal expert. She is a great-granddaughter of visionary Indian national poet, C. Subramania Bharati (1882-1921), whose own, untold story inspired her passionate advocacy for art and artists. Executive Producer and Host: Mira T. Sundara Rajan Music Credits: Theme Song: "Melting Aura" is composed by Carnatic violinist, Sangeetha Kalanidhi A Kanyakumari, and arranged By Raghavasimhan Sankaranarayanan. Performed in Octaves by: Guru A Kanyakumari, Kalaimamani Embar S Kannan, V Sanjeev, Anuthama Murali, Raghavasimhan Sankaranarayanan, Sayee Rakshith Live Engineered, Mixed and Mastered by Raghavasimhan Sankaranarayanan Incidental music: Percussion by ghatam maestro V. Suresh tabla maestro Bickram Ghosh in a spectacular "jugalbandhi" brings together North and South Indian classical traditions, symbolizing Indian cultural unity. The full performance is available at Drums of India, Bickram Ghosh on Tabla and V. Suresh On Ghatam: https://youtu.be/7RwbLpI1Q4E?si=R97ZiKI-WoZtICau. Subscribe to Bickram Ghosh's YouTube channel.2024 アート 社会科学
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  • "Who Fights with the Sword Dies with the Sword": An Artist's Perspective on AI - part 2, with Ela Orleans, artist and academic
    2025/07/11

    In part 2 of this frank and refreshing discussion of art and AI with Ela Orleans, an audiovisual artist and composer, paradoxes abound. For Ela, AI is a creative tool that simultaneously enhances and diminishes her creative potential, a practical means of both fulfilling and subverting professional expectations, and a useful yet ironic weapon that she has added to her aresenal to help her fight against poverty, discrimination, and the continuing impact of a (post)colonial value system that affects artists and our world.

    Ultimately, Ela argues that a willingness to take responsibility for ourselves, as individuals and as a society, lies at the heart of resolving the conflicts between humans and AI. As she points out, the social, economic, and ecological problems of today have not been created by machines; but, if we fail to address the root causes of those problems, they are likely to lead us into further difficulties in the age of AI.

    Ela offers a candid and thoughtful appraisal of what she sees as the the losses and possible gains from AI for artists like her, who hope to make their voices heard in a world that is hungry for new ideas - whether or not we know it.

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    41 分
  • "Who Fights with the Sword Dies with the Sword": An Artist's Perspective on AI - part 1, with Ela Orleans, artist and academic
    2025/07/11

    With the rise of AI, artists have found themselves in a profoundly altered landscape. Is AI destined to be an amazing new instrument of creativity or a new source of unfair exploitation - notably, at the hands of AI companies who have already used the work of artists widely, with neither credit nor compensation, for training AI systems?

    In this episode, I interview artist and academic Ela Orleans, a Polish composer and audiovisual artist who grew up in Communist Poland and currently lives in Paris. Ela is well known as an artist who works with digital technology. Less well known is the fact that she is also an expert on artists' copyright, having completed her PhD in this field at the University of Glasgow in 2022. Given her unusual background in art and artists' rights, Ela is uniquely well positioned to comment on her experiences with AI, and in this discussion, I found her to be refreshingly frank and open about what she thinks the future holds.

    Please join us here for part 1 of this 2-part discussion on artists and AI.

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    44 分
  • Colors of India: India's Textile Heritage - with S. Ahalya, founder of Kanakavalli
    2024/10/14
    Meet Ahalya, founder of design emporium Kanakavalli, and one of India's most distinguished and successful women entrepreneurs! In this interview, Ahalya takes us on a fascinating journey through the ancient towns and villages of South India, each with their temples and traditions, and many with their own, distinctive approaches to design, color, and cloth. Foremost among the notable sites of Indian textile heritage is Kanchipuram, in Tamil Nadu, home of South India's legendary silk, which is above all worn by women in a splendid traditional garment: the Kanjivaram sari. Ahalya discusses the weaver's craft and the continuing challenges of decolonization in an industry that was once a theatre of India's resistance to colonial rule and remains a potent symbol of her culture today. She draws particular attention to the importance of caring for weaver communities, so that they can continue to exercise their craft and pass on their specialized knowledge to future generations. In the exuberant tradition of weaving in India, as Ahalya explains, tradition and innovation go hand in hand.
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    1 時間 7 分

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