Portrait of Satyajit Ray at UN exhibition

Ray, who received an honorary Oscar in 1992, is among the 16 personalities whose portraits has been displayed at the expo.

Updated - July 29, 2016 02:42 am IST

Published - June 27, 2015 10:20 am IST - United Nations

Chennai: 02/05/2011: The Hindu: Sunday Magazine: 
Title: Manki-Da, Memories of Satyajit Ray.Author: Nemai Ghosh, Translated by 
S.K. Ray Chadhuri, with Foreword by Sharmila Tagore.

Chennai: 02/05/2011: The Hindu: Sunday Magazine: Title: Manki-Da, Memories of Satyajit Ray.Author: Nemai Ghosh, Translated by S.K. Ray Chadhuri, with Foreword by Sharmila Tagore.

India’s acclaimed director Satyajit Ray is among 16 global thinkers and artistes whose portraits have been displayed at the UN headquarters here in an exhibition that honours them for their contribution to the common good of humanity.

‘The Transformative Power of Art’ exhibition, organised by president of the General Assembly Sam Kutesa, will be thrown open to the public on June 30.

Ruggiero’s 16 large portraits combine the ancient fresco technique with contemporary technology and depict thinkers and artistes from all continents who contributed to the common good of humanity and stood up for the most vulnerable.

Ray, who received an honorary Oscar in 1992, the same year that he was bestowed with India’s highest civilian award Bharat Ratna, is among the 16 personalities whose portraits has been displayed.

The others are Pakistani rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai, renowned musician from Gabon Pierre-Claver Akendengulegendary, American author Maya Angelou, American folk singer Joan Baez, British actress Audrey Hepburn, influential Russian painter Vassily Kandinsky, Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum, Chinese actress Gong Li.

Grammy Award-winning South African singer and civil rights activist Miriam Makeba, French philosopher Edgar Morin, Iranian actress Fatemeh Motamed-Arya, Ugandan poet Okot p’Bitek, Brazilian social documentary photographer Sebasti Salgado, Nigerian playwright and poet Wole Soyinka and Kenyan writer Ngugi Wa Thiong’o.

Through paintings, sculptures, papier mnd scented dried flowers, the exhibition embodies the necessity to place people at the centre of nations’ concern while protecting the planet. The exhibition is part of the United Nations “2015: Time for Global Action” campaign.

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