Thursday, May 29, 2008

Mumbai- part 42, and modern art

This post is a tribute to a truly great piece of modern art. Specifically I believe this modern art piece comes under the neo-Calvinist, neo-Daliesque, post-modernist sub-genre of art. Its also probably the largest piece of modern art in the world. Possibly also the largest artwork in the world.

This wondrous artwork I am referring to, of course is Mumbai airport terminal 1A.

Let me explain.

I never was a fan of modern art. Still am not. In fact, I thoroughly despise any form of modern art, and I look suspiciously upon any artwork post 1600 AD. The only 2 genre-specific modern art museums in the world I have been to are and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina SofĂ­a in Madrid and Tate Modern in London. In the former, I got ticked off by the security guard for attempting to sit on a sofa which I thought was kept for the benefit of the tired and gawking touristic public. It turns out the sofa itself was the centerpiece of the art display. In the latter, I was too scared to use the loos. Who knows, maybe those were the "works of art" on display.

As always I digress. So what do a loo in London, M F Hussain and a sofa in Madrid have in common. Actually, nothing. So let me come back to my point. Terminal 1A in Mumbai airport. Now one thing the discerning reader here would know of is the various types of Mumbaiyyas. Now usually, anyone who falls in category five or above in the hierarchy actually believes (among other things), that Mumbai is the cleanest, safest, most orderly city in the world with excellent infrastructure, excellent weather and with the most beautiful beaches, most helpful people and most athletic monkeys in the world. Ok, maybe exaggerated a bit on the last one, but you get the drift. The "amongst other things" in the aforementioned sentence includes (amongst other things) a belief that CSIA (not to be confused with CSKA Moscow) has merits over all other airports in the world.. and including some in other worlds *

Now, like most stage 7 beliefs, that is a completely erroneous one. Even if you only count the just inaugurated terminal 1B, it is still nothing compared to Hyderabad airport (not having seen BIAL yet, let me not comment on that). Terminal 1A on the other hand, is only narrowly edged out by Dadar station as being the worst inter-city transport hub in Mumbai.

Let me explain. When I go to an airport, I expect to see check-in counters, runways, restaurants and above all, Kingfisher airlines air hostesses. And some airplanes too The Mumbai terminal 1A differs slightly in this respect, in that most of the airport is made up of scaffolding, welders and falling cement. The last time I was there, I erroneously thought I wasn't at an airport, but was at a construction site (apparently here, they both mean the same), I apologized to the several masons upon whose space I seem to have invaded. I was on the other hand, ushered to the baggage X-ray which ominously stood out in midst of the debris.

Just how long have I been away from this city I wondered, that such calamity had befallen upon this city and I had not even realized. Three weeks was the answer. I looked about for an explanation. I found one in a board marked "Sorry for the inconvenience". My thoughts were interrupted by a large truck-trolley carrying large construction grade iron bars. Just as I wondered "How the hell do they get these inside an airport" did I see the giant construction crane, the kind which invariably plays a part in the climax of Schwarzaneggar or Die Hard movies too, fitting snugly inside the airport. Now if they could fit that inside an airport, God knows, maybe they'll try fit in an airplane next.

I made my way past the bags of cement, tripping past the iron rods in a motion that was markedly similar to Diego Maradona, Mexico 1986. Except I didn't have Peter Shilton to beat, and I wasn't Diego Maradona. I sighted a construction outpost, the kind used to make "Baby's Day Out" funny in the second half. I got there and asked the construction workers there (who for some strange reason were all wearing Indian Airlines uniforms), "Where is the check in counter?". I was solemnly told that I was actually at the check-in counter.

After being told that my flight was four hours late, that I couldn't check in right now, couldn't eat (since construction sites don't have restaurants, d-uh), couldn't leave the airport, couldn't sit down (since there wasn't any sitting place), I pushed my luck and asked if there was a loo in the vicinity. I was told to go till the end of the wall, and then find the loo beyond the scaffolding under the construction crane in a place where cement may be falling from the roof with welding sparks flying all around. (The only thing missing was a sign saying "Beware of the tiger"**). I tried to follow her advice. Except that in the spot where I was told to find a wall, there was merely a building frame and lots of construction material. After narrowly averting death from all the falling iron rods, I reached a place which vaguely resembled a garbage dump. There were 2 of them in fact, one which had "ladies" written outside it, and the other with "gents" written outside it.

A philistine might have dismissed the entire experience, cursed Mumbai airport, and probably blogged about it. Not me. I instantly realized how this was actually a brilliant piece of modern art masquerading as an airport. It surely was more artistic than Yoko Ono's apple in the middle of the room. Now then again, in the 2 modern art museums, I did have difficulty differentiating the exhibits from the other stuff, so maybe here I was off the mark.

But surely this had to be a modern art masterpiece. I mean, nothing else explains the sheer brilliance of the chiaroscuro, facade, sepia tones, and other artistic words which don't mean anything sensible in this context. Suggesting that the Mumbai airport was like a bad airport was like suggesting that the Bangalore Royal Challengers were like Deccan Chargers. I silently wondered at the creativity of the museum curator who chose to convert the entire airport into a modern art museum. Future generations will revere this masterpiece. No wonder this city's inhabitants think that this airport befits the city it serves.

I believe they should charge admission fees to enter this museum. In fact, I think they already do. Its called 'fuel surcharge' or something.

Sigh. Hyderabad and Bangalore aren't the only cities which needed a proper airport


* Credits to Muggesh for that one
** Douglas Adams. D-uh

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

One of your masterpieces. Not spoken in the same vein as the CSIA, of course.

Anonymous said...

You can't have a shiny new terminal without SOME construction! You were the egg that was broken to make the Mumbaiyya's omelet-pav.

Atulya said...

@ Namy: Trust the infrastructure consultant to have an infrastructure-esque view on this one. And granted, shiny new airport in Santa Cruz is better than shiny new airport in Panvel (a la Hyderabad), but still, I can't lose a chance to make fun of something.

Anonymous said...

Had you looked around carefully, you might have seen the title of the modern art as well .... something to the effect of :" Irate Monkee on cement" - circa 2008

Anonymous said...

And if you dont stop spouting abuse on Aamchi Mumbai, there might just be a new peice of modern art entitled -" Irate Cement on Monkee"

Hari Shenoy said...

As a very good friend of mine has recently started saying - K to you and Kodhi.

You've been spoilt by too many international flights. Plus your anti-Mumbai vitriol will get you in trouble with the Shiv Sainiks who're at peace with KTs for the time being, but any more posts and soon they'll ignore the Jehadis and turn on those that thulp ragi mudde for breakfast ad nauseum.

Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide, you'll have to kill to stay alive.

Incidentally, every man-made building EVER constructed, that had bricks, mortar, cement, sand, stone, glass and all that would have undergone that one phase in its early life which we would refer to as 'construction' or something slightly later on which we'd call 'renovation'.

Maybe a heightened awareness of these two aspects would have made you look differently at the efforts that were being underway at the CSIA.

Anyways, I owed you comment, and I guess the best form of praise I can give you is that the sarcasm was full on and would be detectable even by people like me who're sarcasm-retarded.

Once again, K to you and Kodhi.

Atulya said...

@ Hari: Apparently, you didn't quite get ALL the sarcasm. Its called satire, actually.
_Incidentally, every man-made building EVER constructed, that had bricks, mortar, cement, sand, stone, glass_ Gee, I never knew that. Thanks so much for pointing it out. Again, its called satire, not 'anti-Mumbai venom' of any sort.
And since when did "heightened awareness" of anything ever stop me from spewing satire (NB: Not vitriol)
@ cuplord: As always, K
Actually add a "K" to Hari as well

Madhurjya (Banjo) Banerjee said...

in my defense, "hopefully, when it's complete" and no mine was not 1A :D

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