#ILAM Learning Centre
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juhimehraposts · 17 days ago
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BBA Aviation Colleges In India
There are several leading BBA Aviation Colleges in India that offer quality education and training in the field of aviation. These colleges provide a comprehensive curriculum, experienced faculty, and state-of-the-art facilities to equip students with the necessary skills and knowledge for a successful career in the aviation industry. To learn more about these colleges and the opportunities they offer, read further.
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ilamindiaofficial · 8 months ago
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Pgdm Course Details
Discover comprehensive PGDM course details at ILAM Learning Centre! Our PGDM program offers in-depth insights into business management, equipping you with essential skills for a successful career. Explore diverse specializations, dynamic curriculum, and industry-relevant training. Gain practical knowledge through case studies, projects, and internships, preparing you for real-world challenges. Learn from experienced faculty members and industry experts who provide personalized guidance and mentorship. Join a vibrant learning community dedicated to your academic and professional growth. Elevate your career prospects with ILAM Learning Centre's PGDM course. Enroll now and embark on a rewarding journey towards excellence in business management!
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taylastudio2022 · 2 years ago
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TUESDAY WK 4 - RESEARCH LECTURE SIMON MORRIS:
SIMON MORRIS:
In Time: where painting meets pottery - Simon Morris. 
Notes: 
Turned an interesting corner - making pottery. Where painting meets pottery, connections and energy’s
what can I learn from both
When Each Action Opens. Jhana Millers Gallery, 2021. When two colour become one. 2021. invited to do this wall paper - commercial gallery. Interesting, not easily bought, brought into homes etc. 
Simon Morris, Wen Each Action Opens - some writing for the show
Started thinking differently about practice. 
Napels Yellow, Yellow Ocre - only use one brush. 
Method of that - two colours mixing together, becoming one. 
a few things going on here - making wall drawings since the mid 90s - sub canvas for gallery space, architecture nature of the work - considering all spatial elements. 
time becomes inherent in the work 
daily life -human interaction, the world that it occupies. Painting = the wider world. 
Temporary work - gets painted out at the end, important for me. Doesn’t get stored, turns into a concept that can be re-made.
made work all over the world - only needs an air fare. 
point of tension - for our desire for objects - complicated this idea of things, owning, things, objects, looking after things. 
museums have purchased the work. - own the right to it? Private homes etc.
daily paintings 2010 - morning studio ritualistic paintings - one stroke each day - to stop procrastinating
black water colour - different process - maths, formula - very particular method, algebra 
similar conceptually
Black Water Colour, 2015, Ilam School of Art Gallery. 
Walking Drawing - development for exhibition - 2022, City Gallery project. for 2023. 
10 week residency - san fran , big studio, time to make work. Headland Centre For The Arts, - routine, working with other people, communal, having dinner together, back into studio, out for a beer together etc. 
experiences, walking in the Himalayas - spiritual wellbeing, aligning, budda monks. w/ sherpas. 
Future Memory, 2022 - Lithuania 
Driving creek pottery, coromandel
functional objects - working with others 
Engine Room
Quarts Museum, visiting potteries 
ceramic practice
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Yellow Ochre Room, 2015, acrylic paint. Commissioned by Christchurch Art Gallery. Photo: John Collie. (Above). 
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Simon Morris, Daily Painting #32 Acrylic on linen 36 x 36 cm 14 3/16 x 14 3/16 inches (Above).
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Colour light (yellow ochre), 2020  Acrylic paint, jute, wood, light 45 x 45 cm 17 11/16 x 17 11/16 inches (Above).
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Blue Water Colour, 2011 (Above).
Reflection:
I was really intrigued by Simon’s lecture, in particular the idea of daily ritualistic painting. I absolutely appreciate having a method to get out of procrastination stuck zone. I’ve experienced that a bit more so this semester for some reason, and I suppose my version of these daily paintings would be just to start knitting. It does really get me doing something, and allows me to relax as my body focuses on the knitting - or relaxes as I am doing something = any who it helps to clear my thoughts and get a base for ideas going. I spoke about these mental &well being benefits last semester in some of my research and reading which is probably worth revisiting. 
I also found the way Simon spoke about objects, and human’s urges to own objects / material, and look after things, quite relevant as I think over the materials and objects used in my work. I just have been thinking over reasonings behind materials, why I choose what I choose, who they belong(ed) to, what they become, how they affect the work etc etc. This lecture just sparked ideas surrounding that aspect. 
The social aspect and communal experiences Simon spoke about was another story I really enjoyed. I love the idea of energy and experiences with others while creating and working on artworks. I just thought it was a fond memory and something I appreciate being a part of my art process, talking to others about it, having a break together from it, revisiting it.... :) 
Thinking of sculpture/materials in relation to another practice like drawing or painting, similarly to how Simon compared pottery to painting, is also relevant to how my practice has developed, and is something I continue to work through. 
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freeminimaps · 5 years ago
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ILAM - Learning Centre
ILAM is Country’s Pioneer Institute. It focuses on specialized training in Logistics & Aviation Industry. We have collaborations with multiple organizations at national and international levels in areas of research, training, seminars, and conferences. For more info visit www.ilamindia.in
  ILAM – Learning Centre was originally published on Business directory and remarkable travel blog!
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chiefpundit-blog · 5 years ago
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ILAM – Learning Centre https://ift.tt/36wbt1E... https://ift.tt/2PVvgC7
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omgsatisshroffme · 5 years ago
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Memoir: O, Kanchenzonga (Satis Shroff)
Memoir: O, Kanchenzonga (Satis Shroff)
A splash of the crimson rays of the sun appeared on the tip of the 8598m Kanchenzonga Range. Then it turned into orange and was gradually bathed in a yellowish tint, becoming extremely bright. You could discern the chirping of the Himalayan birds in the surrounding bushes and trees, amidst the clicking of cameras. I was on Tiger Hill. But my thoughts were elsewhere.
I was thinking about Kanchenjunga, my Hausberg as we are wont to call it in German, and the former memories of my school-days in the foothills of the Himalayas. These mountains had moulded and shaped me to overcome odds, like other thousands of other Gorkhalis, Nepalese, Lepchas, Bhutanese, Tibetans and Indians, from both sides of the Himalayas. I have watched the Kanchenjunga ever since I was a child in its different moods and seasonal changes. Cloud-watching over the Kanchenjunga was always a fascinating pastime whether from Ilam, Sikkim or Darjeeling’s Tiger Hill or even Sandakphu. To the Sikkimese the Kanchenjunga has always been a sacred mountain, and on its feet are precious stones, salt, holy sciptures, healing plants and cereals. It is a thousand year belief and tradition that the Himalayas, the abode of the Gods, should not be sullied by the feet of mortals.
Oh Kanchenjunga, you have taught us Gorkhalis and Nepalis to keep a stiff upper-lip in the face of adversity created by humans in this world and to light a candle, rather than to curse the darkness. To adapt, share and assimilate, rather than go under when the going gets tough in foreign shores. The Himalayas have taught us to be resilient and to bear pain without complaining, to search for solutions and to keep our ideals high, and not to forget our rich culture, tradition and religious beliefs.
After a brisk drive through pine-forested areas and blue mountains, I was rewarded by a vision of the Kanchenjunga Massif in all its majesty. At Ghoom, which is the highest point along the Hill Cart road, we went to the 19th century Buddhist monastery, about 8km from Darjeeling. In the massive, pompous pagoda-like building with a yellow rooftop, was a shrine of the Maitree Buddha, with butter lamps and Buddhist scarves in gaudy scarlet, white and gold.
It’s was a feast for the eyes. Tibetan art in exile. You go through the rooms of the museum which has precious Buddhist literature, traditional Himalayan ritual masks and a numismatic collection in the centre of the room, with coins and currency from Tibet that were in circulation till 1959. A small friendly lama-apprentice posed for a photograph of the tourists. And another lama with jet-black hair, suddenly came up, behind a mask of a Tibetan demon with ferocious-looking teeth, and springs in front of us to get photographed for posterity.
A blue coloured Darjeeling Himalayan train built in 1881 by Sharp, Steward & Co, Glasgow, chugged along on its way to Kurseong (Khar-sang), another hill station along the route from Darjeeling to Siliguri in the plains of India. There were young Gorkhali boys from Ghoom, having a jolly time, jumping in and out of the running toy-train, with the conductor shouting at them and doing likewise, and trying to nab one of them. But the Ghoom boys were far better and faster than the ageing, panting train-conductor, whose tongue almost hanged out of his red face. It was a jolly tamasha indeed. A spectacle for the passengers amidst the breath-taking scenery in tea-country.
I thought about my friend Harka, who used to live in Ghoom, and who was one of those boys during my school-days. The last I heard of him was when he and his dear wife invited yours truly and a student friend named Tekendra Karki, now a physician in Katmandu, to have excellent Ilam tea with Soaltee Oberoi sandwiches. Tek and I were doing our BSc then at Tri Chandra college in Katmandu.
Along the side of the mini railway track, reminiscent of the Schwabian Eisenbahn from Biberach , were groups of vendors of Tibetan origin selling used clothes, trinkets, belts, bags and most other accessoirs that you find being sold along the Laden La road, leading to Chowrasta in Darjeeling.
A short drive to the Batasia loop, where the blue train makes a couple of loops during its descent to Darjeeling, and suddenly you see the clouds above the silvery massif, rising languidly in the morning.
The families of the British officers used to retreat to the hills of Darjeeling, Simla, Naini Tal to escape from the scorching heat of the India summer and carried out their social lives and sport under the shadow of the Himalayas. The Chogyal of Sikkim gave the hill-station Darjeeling to the British as a gesture of Friendship, for the Sikkimese fought with the British troops against the Nepalese in the Anglo-Nepalese Wat (1814-15). The British government thanked the Chogyal of Sikkim and rewarded him with a handsome annual British pension.Didin't he become a vassal of Great Britian after this act?
I went with a school-friend to Dow Hill via Kurseong, past the TB sanatorium, in a World War II vintage jeep driven by a Gorkha named Norden Lama, who had blood-shot eyes and a whiff of raksi. There’s no promillen control (alcohol-on-wheels) in Darjeeling, and in the cold winter and rainy monsoon months it isn’t unusual to find jeep and truck-drivers stopping to take a swig of raksi, one for the road, to keep themselves warm. I must admit, I felt relieved when we reached our destination in one piece.
Driving along the left track of the autobahn at 150 km per hour is safe compared to all the curves that one has to negotiate along the Darjeeling trail on misty days. We were rewarded with excellent ethnic Rai-cuisine comprising dal-bhat-shikar cooked with coriander, cumin, salt, chillies, garlic, ginger and love. My school friend who’s a Chettri, a high caste Hindu, known for the ritual purity and pollution thinking, had married a Rai lady, much to the chagrin of his parents, but unlike Amber Gurung’s sad song “Ma amber huh, timi dharti,” they were extremely happy and had come together after the principle: where there’s a will, there’s a way. Or “miya bibi raaji, to kya kareyga kaji.”
As is the custom among Gorkhalis, we ritually washed our hands, sat down cross-legged, put a little food symbolically for the Gods and Goddesses, and relished our meal without talking. Talking during meals is bad manners in the Land of the Gorkhas, Nepal and the diaspora where the Gorkhalis and Nepalese live.Gorkhaland is a dream of people who cam from Nepal through migration to the British tea gardens, roads and toy-train workshops in Tindharia, and since the roads have gained importance after the British left and in the aftermath of the Indo-Chinese conflict in 1962, there was a need for the roads to be repaired by the Indian government and what better workers to hire in the foothills of the Himalayas than the sturdy, willing helpers of Nepalese origin who have lived in the area since generations.
Just as the government of Nepal under King Mahendra and Birendra carried out resettlement programms for the hill people who were eternally foraging for work in the plains (Terai) and India, the Bengal government did the same through its bureaucratic rules of transferring the Nepalese of Darjeeling district who had worked in the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway to the plains at Katihar and other places. It was a difficult transfer for the Gorkhalis and they not only had to battle with the beastly and scorching sun of the the Indian plains but also had to learn to communicate in Hindi, Bihari, Bengali and English with the arrogant Bengalis. On the other hand, the Bengali babus started coming in teeming numbers to the hills of Darjeeling fleeing from the plains of Calcutta, and delighted at the prospects of living in the hills of Darjeeling, Kurseong and Kalimpong with perks and enjoying the fresh air and Nature, especially Kanchanjunga. The mountain took a new meaning for the Bengalis and Satyajit Ray was inspired to produce and direct a film with the title Kanchenjunga. It became „Amar Kanchanjunga“ for the Bengalis.
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Pic courtesy: Pixaby
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juhimehraposts · 5 months ago
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Aviation Management Courses in Bangalore
Are you interested in pursuing a career in aviation management? Look no further than Bangalore! Known as the Silicon Valley of India, Bangalore offers a plethora of aviation management courses that are perfect for aspiring students like yourself. Whether you are passionate about airport operations, airline management, or aviation safety, these courses will equip you with the knowledge and skills needed to succeed in the fast-paced aviation industry. ILAM Learning Centre is the perfect for launch your career in Aviation Management Courses in Bangalore. So why wait? Enroll in a course today and soar to new heights in your career.
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ilam-india · 9 months ago
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Explore ILAM India's Diploma in Supply Chain Management in Mumbai for specialized training in the intricacies of supply chain operations. This program equips you with the skills and knowledge essential for navigating the dynamic supply chain landscape. Learn from industry experts, engage in practical projects, and gain insights into logistics, procurement, and distribution. Propel your career forward with a comprehensive understanding of supply chain management. #DiplomaSupplyChainManagement #MumbaiEducation #ILAMIndia #LogisticsCareer
ILAM - Learning Centre
Office No.10-13,III floor, Broadway Cooperative Premises, Dr.Ambedkar Road, Near Dadar-TT circle, Dadar East, Mumbai, Maharashtra - 400014
Mobile No. - +91 9967494387 Email — [email protected] Website: https://www.ilamindia.in
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ilam-india · 9 months ago
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Discover ILAM India's Logistics Diploma Course, offering comprehensive training in logistics management. Gain practical skills, industry insights, and specialized knowledge to excel in various logistics roles. Learn from experienced faculty and hands-on projects, preparing you for a successful career in the dynamic logistics industry. This course equips you with the expertise needed to navigate the complexities of supply chains and logistics operations effectively. #LogisticsDiplomaCourse #ILAMIndia #CareerInLogistics
ILAM - Learning Centre
Office No.10-13, III floor, Broadway Cooperative Premises, Dr.Ambedkar Road, Near Dadar-TT circle, Dadar East, Mumbai, Maharashtra - 400014 Mobile No. - +91 9967494387 Email:  [email protected] Website:https://www.ilamindia.in
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juhimehraposts · 1 year ago
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Enrolling in MBA in Aviation Colleges in India at ILAM Learning Centre in India offers several benefits for aspiring aviation professionals.
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juhimehraposts · 1 year ago
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BBA Logistics in Jaipur by ILAM Learning Centre
ILAM Learning Centre offers a BBA Logistics program in Jaipur that equips students with a strong foundation in business administration and specialized knowledge in logistics management. Through a comprehensive curriculum and industry-relevant training, students gain the skills necessary to thrive in the logistics industry and pursue promising career opportunities.
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juhimehraposts · 1 year ago
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MBA in Airport Management by ILAM Learning Centre
ILAM Learning Centre offers a specialized MBA in Airport Management program, catering to individuals interested in pursuing careers in the aviation industry. With a curriculum that combines theoretical knowledge and practical training, ILAM prepares students for managerial roles in airport operations, security, logistics, and more. Experienced faculty and industry exposure enhance the learning journey, making ILAM an ideal choice for aspiring aviation professionals.
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juhimehraposts · 2 years ago
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BBA Airport Management Colleges In Mumbai
ILAM Learning Centre offers a Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) program in Airport Management with an affiliated BBA  Airport Management Colleges in Mumbai. This program provides students with comprehensive knowledge and skills to manage airport operations, passenger services, cargo handling, and aviation security. ILAM Learning Centre's BBA Airport Management program equips students with practical experience and industry exposure to prepare them for successful careers in the aviation industry.
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chiefpundit-blog · 5 years ago
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ILAM – Learning Centre https://ift.tt/36wbt1E https://ift.tt/36y4RjB
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chiefpundit-blog · 5 years ago
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ILAM – Learning Centre https://ift.tt/36wbt1E
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chiefpundit-blog · 5 years ago
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ILAM – Learning Centre https://t.co/FKKAUp6FoD
ILAM – Learning Centre pic.twitter.com/FKKAUp6FoD
— krishnau (@krishnau) November 4, 2019
from Twitter https://twitter.com/krishnau
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