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In pursuit of paradise | Art & Culture

Aga Khan Centre organises exhibition featuring works of 21 artists For many living in the Indian subcontinent or other former British colonies, paradise is high up in the sky. However, a minor reflection can be found in London, too - a city where you seek redemption, reward, and recreation on the basis of your good deeds (basically your capacity to accumulate surplus cash and your ability to gain the UK visa). Every summer, the affluent taste a segment of earthly paradise abroad. However, this summer, there is another paradise on offer in London. The Aga Khan Centre has organised an exhibition, named Making Paradise.

HomeFront: Billie Holiday, Beethoven, and Bad Bunny, plus art to comfort and calm

HomeFront: Billie Holiday, Beethoven, and Bad Bunny, plus art to comfort and calm By Marie Morris Globe Correspondent,Updated February 25, 2021, 6:35 p.m. Email to a Friend Andra Day stars in The United States vs. Billie Holiday. Takashi Seida/Hulu Welcome back to HomeFront, where the moon is almost full, the snow is melting a little, and next week is March, can you believe it? Now that I’ve all but guaranteed a freak blizzard, here are some suggestions for cocooning entertainment. FILM: The “electrifying” Andra Day deserves better than “The United States vs. Billie Holiday,” an “earnestly scattered” effort that earns 2½ stars from Globe film critic Ty Burr. Day delivers “a marvel of dramatic and vocal technique as well as a full-on possession,” he writes. “[Y]ou can’t take your eyes off Holiday, who in Day’s performance is a diva and a lost soul, the nation’s conscience and her own worst enemy.”

Around Boston, a tide of art to comfort and calm

Around Boston, a tide of art to comfort and calm By Cate McQuaid Globe Correspondent,Updated February 24, 2021, 10:00 a.m. Email to a Friend Chanel Thervil unveils portraits from her “Quarantine Self-Care Series on Instagram.Matthew J Lee/Globe staff When the world went into lockdown last year and the devastating effects of COVID-19 played out in hospitals and on television screens, painter Zarah Hussain remembered her own respiratory trauma. A difficult pregnancy had precipitated a tear in her diaphragm. Three years ago, she had surgery to repair it. “It was immensely traumatic to heal and recover. And the thing that really profoundly helped me was the breath,” she said in a Zoom conversation from her home in London. “Count in eight and count out eight. That’s really difficult to do when you’re in a state of stress or anxiety.”

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