Thursday, November 24, 2011

My blog moved

Hey there :)

My blog moved to my website and this is my first post there http://www.tomomagija.lt/blog/?p=43

I am going to post there my thought about magic and magical :)

Hope to see you there :)

Tomas

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Tomorrow We Disappear: New Delhi's Last Magicians Colony


Hey there,
One of my favorite magicians, Penn&Teller, talked about this place in one of their TV special. So I decided to share this with you. 


Produced by Jim Goldblum, Adam Weber, and Joshua Cogan, Tomorrow We Disappear explores the untold and remarkable story of New Delhi's last magicians' colony.
photograph by Joshua Cogan
According to the filmmakers, "For hundreds of years roaming artists traveled the Indian countryside, creating the stories, the mythological backbone that would unite a country. Before radio, film, and television, these artists helped form what we now call the Web of India.... In the 1950s the artists ended their itinerant routes and moved into vacant land beside a jungle in West Delhi. They called their new home the Kathputli Colony."
photograph by Joshua Cogan
Since then, New Delhi's magicians, puppeteers, and acrobats have called the slum, the Kathputli Colony, their home.
photograph by Joshua Cogan
But amidst the squalor is a remarkable tale of slum dwellers who have lived lives of the lowest degradation and of the highest luxury. Perplexing as it may sound, the Indian government bandies the community's greatest puppeteers and magicians around the world anytime they needs to showcase the cultural excellence of India.
photograph by Joshua Cogan
As the filmmakers told, "you'll sit in someone's ramshackle home and watch as they flip through photo albums where they are pictured alongside [former Prime Minister] Rajeev Gandhi or Laura Bush."
photograph by Joshua Cogan
In an ironic and tragic twist of fate though, the colony will be dismantled. Last year the government issued relocation permits to the colony residents; the slum is to be bulldozed and cleared for the development of a shopping mall. As the residents are relocated and their lives changed forever, the film ventures to ask if their culture will be lost to the passage of time or will it endure?
photograph by Joshua Cogan
The directors are raising funds for this audacious endeavor through Kickstarter in an effort to continue the project and document the uncertain future of the people of Kathputli.
photograph by Joshua Cogan

Hope you enjoyed :)
See you soon,
Tomas

Monday, November 7, 2011

Lego street painting

Hey guys,

Sorry for not posting for quite a bit - had some problems with my computer. But for now....an army of LEGO!

This amazes me every time :)


Hope you enjoyed :)

See you soon,

Tomas