#Advait Kolarkar
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Mauka Hai Lyrics Hindi - B Praak 2021 Super Hit
Mauka Hai Lyrics Hindi – B Praak 2021 Super Hit
मौका है Mauka Hai lyrics song is sung by B Praak is latest hindi song lyrics are written ✍🏻 by Manoj Muntashir. The music of this new song is given by Rochak Kohli and the video is directed by B Praak🎥. This most popular hindi song is Produced by Aditya Dev, T-Series. The song mix/master by Aditya Dev while music label by T-Series. “Mauka Hai” is a song dedicated to the unwavering spirit of 136…
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#Abhijita Gupta#Abhinav Shaw#Advait Kolarkar#Anand Kumar#Ashwath Hegde#Aswatha Biju#Avantika Dalmia#B Praak#Chhaya Sharma#Deepika Chourasia#Dipa Karmakar#Falguni Nayar#Hima Das#Hindi Song#Koneru Humpy#Lydian Nadhaswaram#Manoj Muntashir#Neeraj Chopra#Nihal Raj#Pooja Bishnoi#Puneet#PV Sindhu#Rifath Sharook#Ritesh Agarwal#Rochak Kohli#Saikhom Mirabai Chanu#Sonam Wangchuk#Steven Samuel Devassy#Subbiah Arunan#Tiluck Keisam
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Advait Kolarkar's first solo show in London
Advait Kolarkar's first solo show in London
Global Child Prodigy Award winner, 8-year-old Advait Kolarkar, explains why he named his first London solo exhibition “Alluring Illusions,” while his mother reveals her reaction to his early paintings. (May 13) Source link
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World’s first robot-painted art Car by ABB Robotics is here
World’s first robot-painted art Car by ABB Robotics is here
ABB Robotics has collaborated with two world-renowned artists, eight-year-old Indian child prodigy Advait Kolarkar and Dubai-based digital design collective Illusorr, to create the world’s first robot-painted art car. ABB’s award-winning PixelPaint technology has, without human intervention, perfectly recreated Advait’s swirling, monochromatic design as well as Illusorr’s tri-color geometrical…
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Mauka Hai Lyrics - B Praak | Patriotic Song 2021
Mauka Hai Lyrics – B Praak | Patriotic Song 2021
Mauka Hai Lyrics In Hindi, Sung by B Praak. Music is given by Rochak Kohli. The Patriotic song lyrics were written by Manoj Muntashir. The music video featuring Rochak Kohli, Manoj Muntashir, Neeraj Chopra, Puneet, Avantika Dalmia, Advait Kolarkar, Abhijita Gupta, Tiluck Keisam, Rifath Sharook, Ritesh Agarwal, Sonam Wangchuk, Hima Das, Abhinav Shaw, Dipa Karmakar, Anand Kumar, PV Sindhu, Subbiah…
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Four-year-old New Brunswick art prodigy is taking the art world by storm
When he's not playing with dinosaurs or reading a book, four-year-old Advait Kolarkar uses paint, canvases and his imagination to create internationally recognized abstract artwork.
The preschooler is already selling his paintings for thousands of dollars and has had his art featured in three exhibits.
His mother Shruti said in an interview Sunday that Advait first picked up the paintbrush when he was less than a year old and displayed a prowess for painting right away.
"He was creating something, not just playing with colours," she said. "He had a sense of composition and colour."
Kolarkar said her son began creating "amazing compositions" by the age of one, and attracted the attention of a gallery curator in his hometown of Pune, India.
After observing the toddler for six months, the Art2Day gallery hosted Advait's first exhibition when the boy was just two years old, shortly before the family migrated to Saint John, N.B., in 2016.
Earlier this month Advait shared his paintings at Artexpo New York, which is touted as the world's largest fine art marketplace.
According to the Artexpo website, the exhibition draws tens of thousands of art enthusiasts and industry insiders each year.
In the past, the event has hosted the likes of pop art pioneer Andy Warhol, multimedia artist Robert Rauschenberg, and expressionist painter LeRoy Neiman.
More than 400 exhibiting artists, galleries and publishers showcased their work at the exhibition this year.
"They are really renowned artists, and when you see your son's work among those artists, it feels really proud," said Kolarkar, noting that Advait's booth drew big crowds.
American artist Howard Schoor, who was at Artexpo to display his work at an exhibition for the first time, said that when he met Advait at the event, he felt a kinship with the young boy despite a 75-year age difference.
"What Advait and myself have in common is that we both started painting two years ago," he said. "The difference is I'm 79 years old and he's four years old."
Schoor spent decades collecting art before he took up painting, and said his sharp eye for quality work made him recognize Advait's potential right away.
"I think there's just something where when you look at a lot of art over a period of time, you can sort of sense what will be acceptable, and collectible, and valuable," he said.
"I think this young man has a unique talent that he's been able to express at a very early age."
Kolarkar said she's proud that her son's work is gaining recognition.
To date, she said Advait has earned around $23,000 from selling his paintings.
Other than starting elementary school next year, Kolarkar isn't sure what's in her son's future -- but she said the family will support him if he chooses to pursue art as a full-time career when he's older.
"His happiness is very important to us," she said. "We want him to enjoy art the way he's enjoying now throughout his life."
from CTV News - Atlantic https://ift.tt/2vSK5ww
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When he’s not playing with dinosaurs or reading a book, 4-year-old Advait Kolarkar uses paint, canvases and his imagination to create internationally-recognized abstract artwork. The preschooler is already selling his paintings for thousands of dollars and has had his art featured in three exhibits.
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You can Win if you Want
There was a time when only two professionals remained on top of the mind of children when you asked them what they would want to be when they grow up: Doctor or Engineer. Teaching was left for the docile girls.
With time, aspirations changed.
When Kalpana Chawla and Rakesh Sharma reached the Moon and gave two new terminologies to the children-astronaut and NASA-these became the new buzzwords. With it, our old, frigid thoughts warmed up to new possibilities which we thought hitherto were only for the books. The word impossible broke itself to coin a new phrase: I m possible.
As adventure beckoned further shaking the pillars of the traditional professions, parents became experimental too; they didn't mind reconnoitering the new cult of exploratory professions to help children pursue what pleased their hearts rather than imposing their will on them: Olympics, arts, singing, acting started to eclipse the stability of professional education.
Computers revolutionized the way we lived and so did our mindset in a big way. Computer science started to appear the most happening trajectory over and above other routes and our first batch of revolutionary young software engineers rocked the world with Hotmail and the likes of other computer inventions.
These were followed by a 360-degree digital revolution.
Social media and computer applications became a norm, with new inventions taking place every little interval to make our life easier than before.
Start your office on your computer, make/receive payments through your smartphone, book your tickets/hotels on the phone directly or through platforms, learn to run, drive the car, play musical instruments online, edit a book, print a book and get connected to your loved ones/colleagues for free on WhatsApp, Snapchat etc. Advertise your office on Reddit, Pinterest, Instagram, Facebook etc. There is no dearth of possibilities you cannot explore on your Android.
Who would have thought we can meet a living legend in Charles Darwin's niece or Einstein's grandchildren?
No one. So here I was, seeing at least the first one, face to face, at a recently held literature festival in Jaipur.
In this time of improved education, technological revolution and improved facilities, we can all awaken the sleeping scientist in us; it is how one can use their intelligence to invent something new.
We are living in the age of technological revolution and prodigies: taking a leaf from the success stories of antediluvian heroes is one thing but the new age practical learning is what can make us heroes in a short time, provided we put our heart and mind into our project.
Meet some of our living legends: 3-year-old Nainika Gupta -a photography wonder, 4-year-old Advait Kolarkar-a prolific artist, Truptraj Pandya, a tabla player at 1 and a half years, Kautilya Pandit, a pro in GK and current affairs, Satyam cracked IIT at 14 and the list is far bigger than can fit here.
If indated could be a word in the dictionary, it will be just the opposite of outdated…Hmm…to be In today means to stay up-to-date with technology…other things can wait…
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This four-year-old's art sells for thousands - BBC News by BBC News Advait Kolarkar has become the youngest artist to exhibit at the ArtExpo fair in New York. The four-year-old from New Brunswick, Canada, has a queue of buyers. Video by Dan Lytwyn Please subscribe HERE http://bit.ly/1rbfUog
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Two Mighty Dragons by Advait Kolarkar
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4 yaşındaki dehanın resimleri binlerce dolara satılıyor
4 yaşındaki dehanın resimleri binlerce dolara satılıyor
Advait Kolarkar henüz 4 yaşında, New York’taki ArtExpo Fuarı’nda işleri sergilenen en genç sanatçı… Advait bir deha olarak kabul ediliyor.
Advait Kolarkar henüz 4 yaşında, New York'taki ArtExpo Fuarı'nda işleri sergilenen en genç sanatçı…
Advait bir deha olarak kabul ediliyor.
Advait'in yaptığı soyut resimler binlerce dolara satılıyor. Alıcılar ise sırada bekliyor… Advait şimdiye kadar üç sergi…
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Exposições na Índia, Canadá e Estados Unidos e quadros vendidos por mais de dois mil euros. Advait Kolarkar tem apenas quatro anos, ainda nem sequer anda na escola e já é considerado um prodígio.
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Advait Kolarkar has become the youngest artist to exhibit at the ArtExpo fair in New York. from BBC News - Home https://ift.tt/2yN8Hsc
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This four-year-old's art sells for thousands
Advait Kolarkar has become the youngest artist to exhibit at the ArtExpo fair in New York. from BBC News - World https://ift.tt/2yN8Hsc via Blogger https://ift.tt/2Kc8ILJ
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This four-year-old's art sells for thousands
Advait Kolarkar has become the youngest artist to exhibit at the ArtExpo fair in New York. from BBC News - Home https://ift.tt/2yN8Hsc from Blogger https://ift.tt/2IzqCCs
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Advait Kolarkar has become the youngest artist to exhibit at the ArtExpo fair in New York. from BBC News - Home https://bbc.in/2Msvn2S
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4-year-old sells paintings for $2,000 at his own N.B. exhibition
For most toddlers, prime real estate on the family fridge is the height of artistic exhibition for their hand-painted masterpieces. Not so for Advait Kolarkar.
The four-year-old painter splashed onto the Saint John, N.B. art scene shortly after his family arrived from Pune, India. His vibrant abstract pieces fetched about $500 in his hometown when he was just two years old. Now, his paintings inspired by galaxies and dinosaurs are selling for up to $2,000 at his own exhibit at the Saint John Arts Centre.
“Every stroke, every layer is his feelings, his expression,” Advait's mother, Shruti, told CTV Atlantic on Wednesday. “He is glad that people can take some part of his imagination to their home.”
Advait’s 30-painting exhibition is aptly titled “Colour Blizzard.” It opened last Friday and will run until March 3. The paintings are figuratively flying off the wall, with 24 of them already sold.
With titles like “Supernova” and “Jellyfish,” each canvas is a wash of well-composed colour, thickly layered by hand and brush. According to Shruti, her son’s work is completely spontaneous. Nobody instructs him or influences what he paints.
Shortly after moving to Saint John, Shruti approached the city’s cultural affairs officer about displaying some of Advait’s work at a local library. Bernard Cormier quickly realized the paintings belonged in a more prestigious setting. He believes Advait could be the youngest Canadian to have his own exhibition.
“I’ve never seen someone that age dabble with the paint in the way that he does,” he told CTV Atlantic last July. “I’ve been exposed to artwork all my life and I see something special in this young boy, so why not encourage him?”
Helen Bridgeo will soon have five of Advait’s paintings in her home.
“When I looked at his work, it made me feel joyful,” she said. “It made me feel happy.”
Advait’s art is set to be featured at one of the largest trade shows in New York in April, an honour many artists wait a lifetime to experience.
For now, Advait is mostly content to let his work speak for itself. Sitting on a paint-spattered drop cloth spread on the floor in front of several of his finished canvasses, he bellowed simply, “I love painting!”
With a report from CTV Atlantic’s Mary Cranston
Jellyfish: A fascination with oceans and aquatic life has gotten Advait to create its vivacious force through colors. Jellyfish is one of Advait's first sold painting
Posted by Advait Kolarkar on Wednesday, December 27, 2017
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Supernova An exploding star which becomes brightest before the final catastrophe, where it ejects most of the mass,...
Posted by Advait Kolarkar on Saturday, December 23, 2017
(function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = 'https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.11'; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk')); from CTV News - Atlantic http://ift.tt/2DJRpeo
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