Tag Archives: Women Are Heroes

Special Woman Around us: Tritha…a modern indian woman with a golden voice meets psychedelic musicians from Paris

  The voice: versatile, agile, profound with a plummy richness of sound. Tritha’s dusky tones and throbbing intensity, vibrating and moving emotional commitment, entrance her audience and leave the public spell bound. Listen: http://soundcloud.com/tritha_pro/tritha-rangamati-pagli-album
  The musician: born in Kolkata, Tritha started training in North Indian classical music at the age of five, and never stopped. She is currently a student of Santanu Bandyopadhyay from the Bishnupur gharana.

Equally at home with Indian Classical music as with Bjork and Janis Joplin, Abida Parveen or Aretha Franklin, Tritha has forged her own unique, inclusive sound and has already gained critical and popular acclaim for her songs, several of which were used by the Magnum Agency, France, for their movies on Women changing India last year.

Continue reading

“Women Are Heroes”: documentary film by JR (France)

Women Are Heroes is the first movie of the French young photographer JR who lives in Paris and has become a hero to many people around the world. He doesn’t use his real name, because most of the work he does is illegal. It has its premier showing today in Paris.

This documentary film takes place around the world and particularly in Brazil, India, Kenya and Cambodia. It begins in the favelas of Brazil, where we recognize the huge posters of JR and the reactions they provoke in women. Then in India, where we discover women caught between traditional customs and modern day. Then Kenya, where, again, women must live in a more chaotic and unstable that. Finally, in Cambodia, we will face the violence of the ultra violent expropriation against households headed by a matriarchal system that attempts to resist the face of real estate giants … Each woman in the film amazes us with her courage and faith. It took three years for JR to make this movie. More in JR’s website.

JR audio interview with the photographer by Jim Casper.

Continue reading