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Bina Sarkar Ellias

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Bina Sarkar Ellias (born 1949) is a poet. She is editor, designer and publisher of International Gallerie, a global arts and ideas journal (www.gallerie.net) founded by her in 1997. She is also an art curator, having curated several important exhibits of renowned artists. https://mumbaimirror.indiatimes.com/opinion/city-columns/bina-sarkar-the-cave-woman/articleshow/59865389.cms

Cultural Practitioner

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In 1984, Bina Sarkar Ellias co-founded the advertising agency "Nucleus", with Rafeeq Ellias and worked for 12 years as its Creative Director. In 1997, she founded International Gallerie, a global bi-annual arts and ideas magazine that she edits, designs and publishes.

In recognition of her efforts, she has been awarded a Woman Achiever's award by FICCI/FLO 2013, Woman Achiever of the year by TimesGroup & ITC, in 2008 [1] and a Fellowship from the Asia Leadership Fellow Program and Japan Foundation for research and development of the project: Unity in Diversity: Envisioning Community Building in Asia and Beyond, Tokyo, in 2007 [2] in recognition of her work in encouraging knowledge, understanding and appreciation of cultural diversity. She has also been recipient of the Prince Claus Awards.

Besides several shows she has curated are “Migration” at the Pune Biennale 2017. Her curation of a forthcoming show in New York, is a work in progress.

Sarkar Ellias has been invited to speak at various venues, chaired the New Moves Festival discussion with 10 Asian women artists in Glasgow as well as other fora in London, San Francisco, New York, Tokyo, Teheran, Dacca, Lahore, Karachi, Delhi, Santiniketan, Kolkata and Mumbai in the last many years. She has been a panelist at the 85th Congress of PEN International in Manila, Philippines (2019).[citation needed]

Poet, editor, designer, publisher, art curator

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Bina (Sarkar Ellias) soon after graduation with Honours in English at Scottish Church College, Calcutta University, began as a freelance writer to Desmond Doig's popular journal, Junior Statesman; she was employed next, as assistant editor to T.M. Ramachandran of [Film World], an eclectic Indian magazine on world cinema. She went on to be a sub-editor at Eve's Weekly, following which she contributed articles for The Times of India, The Indian Express, The Hindu and the Hindustan Times through the years.

She founded International Gallerie in 1997, an award-winning global arts and ideas journal that encourages understanding and appreciation of cultural diversity through excellence in the arts. For 25 years, Gallerie has upheld unity in diversity through artistic reflections via the visual and performing arts, poetry, essay, photography, cinema and travel stories, narratives that reveal a world that is essentially one, even as politicians divide us.

She taught herself graphic design and has been invited by artists, galleries, photographers and a poet to design their books and catalogues. To date, she has designed and edited, Fifty Years of Contemporary Indian Art, 1997, for the Mohile Parikh Centre for Visual Arts, Mumbai, 1997 [2][permanent dead link]. She has designed artist Jehangir Sabavala's catalogue for the 2002 show in Mumbai,[3] Delhi and New York, artist Rekha Rodwittiya's catalogue, 2003 and recently in 2007, for shows in New York, Crossing Generations: diverge, the fortieth anniversary catalogue for Gallery Chemould, Mumbai, 2004, and a book on artist Tyeb Mehta, Svaraj by Ramchandra Gandhi. She has designed, edited and published an art book, Chinthala Jagdish:Unmasked, 2004, and The Curious World of Chinthala Jagdish, 2008, a book of poems, Rain, for Indian poet Sudeep Sen, 2005, Ayesha Taleyarkhan’s book of photographs:, Bombay Mumbai, 2005, American photographer, Waswo X. Waswo’s book, India Poems: The Photographs and his recent catalogue, A Studio in Rajasthan, 2008. She has edited and designed photographer, Leena Kejriwal’s book, Calcutta: Repossessing the City, 2006. A catalogue for artist Rekha Rodwittya, besides artist Surendran Nair’s book, Itinerant Mythologies, 2008.She recently designed the book 'Scent of Rain' edited by Ashwani Kumar... a tribute by Indian poets to their beloved late poet Jayanta Mahapatra.

Bina (Sarkar Ellias) has curated several art shows: ‘Rain’ at Sakshi Art Gallery, Bombay, commissioning 32 Indian contemporary artists to make works on Rain; ‘Kashmir’ at Tao Art Gallery, Bombay, where artists from Jammu & Kashmir, long-marginalised, were invited to present their works with mainstream Indian artists in an awareness program of Kashmir, its history and conflict; and ‘The Curious World of Chinthala Jagdish, a show of the Hyderabad artist and his whimsical art works. She curated the online show of international art for Pen & Brush, New York, and launched her curatorial project 'Tagore Lost and Found' with 30 Indian artists at Siddhartha Tagore's Art Bull Gallery in New Delhi, 1 March 2013. She recently curated 'Migration' for the Pune Biennale 2017. It included photography, films and poetry mounted in six shipping containers with junk art created by Pune artists in the foreground. She also curated a section of the Pune Biennale 2017, mounting 'Migration'... a series of photography, films and poetry in six shipping containers, besides sculptures in open space. Her work in progress is a curatorial project for the Pen & Brush Gallery in New York (January-March 2025).

A poet, her chapbook of poems, 'The Room' has been published by AarkArts, UK, besides having appeared in various magazines, anthologies and online poetry sites. Her book of poems 'Fuse' has been published by Poetry Primero, an imprint of Poetrywall, 2017. Poems from it have been translated into Arabic, Urdu, French, Greek and Chinese. A Chinese edition of FUSE was launched at the Formosa Poetry Festival in Tamsui, Taiwan, 2017. 'Fuse' has also been taught at the Towson University in Maryland, USA. A Spanish-English book of her collected poems was published in Madrid, Spain, Co-authored by Nieves Alvares and translated by Isabel Miguel. Her second ekphrastic book of selected poems responding to art and photographic images 'When Seeing Is Believing' has been launched in Mumbai and New York. 'Song of a Rebel', a book of socio-political poems published by Red River was launched in 2020 and the most recent 'Ukiyo-e Days... Haiku Moments' published by Red River is a tribute to traditional Japanese Woodblock prints, responding with her own haiku.

International Gallerie

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International Gallerie was conceived and founded by Bina Sarkar Ellias in 1997, as a platform for addressing universal socio-political/cultural issues as interpreted through excellence in the arts from global regions. Gallerie encourages unity in diversity in the belief that it is culture that ultimately humanises.

Quotes

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“Gallerie draws my attention to what I didn't know or what I thought I never needed to know... it is positive and passionate.” -Mel Gooding, noted art critic, UK.[4]

“A magnificent production as well as an especially forceful presentation.” ——Amartya Sen, Nobel Laureate, India/USA/UK

“Reading Gallerie is like leafing through the contemporary Louvre... in your living room. For twenty years, it has nourished my awareness of the evolving global art and culture situation. It’s an honour to be published in its pages.” ——Gulzar, poet, lyricist, filmmaker, India

“I didn’t see how Gallerie could possibly be better than its first issue, but each successive one proves me wrong!” ——Adrian Piper, philosopher and conceptual artist, Germany

Personal life

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Bina Sarkar was married in Tokyo to photographer and award-winning documentary filmmaker Rafeeq Ellias[5] and they have two children; Raoul Ellias, a successful IT professional in the US and Yuki Ellias, an actor-director, who played Hermea in Tim Supple's "Midsummer Night's Dream", and has received a "Best Actress Award" from her solo performance in "Elephant in the Room", which played at the Fringe Festival, Edinburgh, 2017, for three weeks.[6] Bina Sarkar Ellias when not a wandering nomad, lives and works in Bombay.

References

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  1. ^ "Gr8 women achiever awards - The Times of India Photogallery". 16 July 2011. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  2. ^ "The Japan Foundation > Japanese Studies and Intellectual Exchange > Intellectual Exchange > Hosted/Co-hosted Events > Asia Leadership Fellow Program > 2007 Fellows". 22 June 2009. Archived from the original on 22 June 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Jehangir Sabavala". Saffronart. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Research". 2 July 2007. Archived from the original on 25 August 2011. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  5. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "Reviews roundup: A Midsummer Night's Dream". the Guardian. 15 March 2007. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
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