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Grammarly CEO | Indian CEO |Global Indian
Global IndianstoryGrammarly’s new chapter: Indian-American Rahul Roy-Chowdhury appointed CEO
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Grammarly’s new chapter: Indian-American Rahul Roy-Chowdhury appointed CEO

Compiled by: Amrita Priya

(March 24, 2023) As Grammarly approaches its fourteenth birthday, it’s going through an exciting transition with the appointment of its new CEO.  The market leader in helping people communicate better and one of the first platforms providing assistive AI to millions of people will now be headed by Indian-American, Rahul Roy-Chowdhury.  

“I joined Grammarly two years ago because of a deep belief in our mission to improve lives by improving communication. I’m honoured to serve that mission in a new capacity as Grammarly’s CEO, starting May 1,” Roy-Chowdhury shared on LinkedIn and Twitter.

 “Our millions of users remain our north star as we continue solving their real communication challenges. Grammarly has been harnessing innovation in AI responsibly for over a decade, and we’re just getting started!” added Roy-Chowdhury who has been serving as the Global Head of Product in the organisation since 2021. 

Grammarly CEO | Indian CEO |Global Indian

Rahul Roy-Chowdhury

He thanked his predecessor Brad Hoover for his leadership over the last 12 years. “It can only be described as an epic run!” Roy-Chowdhury mentioned in his message.  

From Google to Grammarly 

The business executive spent over a decade in Google, starting out in the Bengaluru office as a product manager in 2007. He climbed the hierarchy ladder, becoming the vice president of product management during his 14-year stint. Two years after he joined Google, he moved to California.  

Roy-Chowdhury spent his years at Google leading the safety, security and privacy teams coming up with unified solutions across Google’s product portfolio. He also led the product management teams for Chrome OS and the Chrome browser. 

The empathetic leader and team builder has been passionate about his craft of product management, applying a human-centred approach to problem solving.  

Inclusivity and mentorship 

With a mission-driven mindset, Roy-Chowdhury places emphasis on the value of inclusive process in building a high-quality decision-making culture at workplace. 

I care about the mission, and I care about the possibility that what I am working on can impact the world. Trying to bring about the world we believe in keeps me going.

Rahul Roy-Chowdhury said in a podcast

Mentoring product leaders and entrepreneurs and sharing the lessons he has learned, has been an important part of Roy-Chowdhury’s career graph.  

From Grammarly to GrammarlyGO 

Roy-Chowdhury has announced Grammarly’s new AI tool, GrammarlyGO – the next evolution of the digital writing assistant. “GrammarlyGO brings the power of generative AI to Grammarly: it works everywhere you write, uses context to create personalized and relevant content, keeps you safe from harm and brings the comfort of our enterprise-grade security and privacy guarantees. Let’s GO!!” Users would be able to use the new assistive tool from April onwards. 

"That means practically wherever you go to write something—composing an email or opening up a Google doc, GrammarlyGO will be there to assist you." @mashable's take on our new generative AI product: GrammarlyGO.https://t.co/Sqd5RUeQSP

— Grammarly (@Grammarly) March 20, 2023

Driving excellence 

Brad Hoover, Roy-Chowdhury’s predecessor at Grammarly is all praise for his abilities. “During his two years at Grammarly, Rahul has focused on driving excellence and helped us up-level as a company. He has pushed our thinking and driven the organization forward with clarity, keen judgment, and sound decision-making,” he said, as he announced Roy-Chowdhury’s appointment. “Under Rahul’s leadership, we also took a big step forward with our product, increasing quality and introducing solutions to help beyond the revision stage of communication,” he added.  

Successfully enabling billions of people worldwide access the power of the open web, Roy-Chowdhury oversaw the entire functioning of the writing assistance software – managing the product, design, and data science teams.  

The course of life  

Roy-Chowdhury’s academic accomplishments are as impressive as his professional journey. After doing his BS in mathematics from Hamilton College, he went on to do MS in computer science from Columbia University, and an MBA from Stanford Graduate School of Business. 

On the personal front, one of his big goals has been to impart his love for ’80s music to his children, and has made some progress with the British rock band, Queen’s ‘Another One Bites the Dust’. 

  • Follow Rahul Roy-Chowdhury on Twitter and LinkedIn
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Priti Krishtel: Indian-American health justice lawyer is fighting the global patent system

(November 4, 2022) The global pandemic exposed the inaccessibility of general life-saving medicines in developing countries. From basic paracetamol to only-on-prescription Remdesivir, patients across the world suffered from a severe shortage of medicines in the last two years. While many accepted it to be a side effect of the COVID-19 situation, a few decided to stand up and fight against the inequities in the global pharmaceutical system. One such leader is Indian-American health justice lawyer, Priti Krishtel, who recently won the MacArthur Fellowship, unofficially known as the ‘genius grant’, who exposed pharma companies for misusing the patent laws in the United States of America. “By distilling the technical aspects of the patent system to show its sometimes devastating impact on people’s lives, Krishtel is galvanizing a movement to center around people instead of only commercial interests in our medicines patent policy,” McArthur Foundation said announcing this year’s 25 fellowships. The grant carries an $800,000, no-strings-attached grant for individuals who have shown exceptional creativity in their work and the promise to do more. [caption id="attachment_31359" align="aligncenter" width="724"] Health Justice Lawyer, Priti Krishtel, won the McArthur Grant for exposing the inequities in the patent system to increase access to affordable, life-saving medications

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://stage.globalindian.com//wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Priti-Krishtel.jpg" alt="Lawyer | Priti Krishtel | Global Indian" width="724" height="474" /> Health Justice Lawyer, Priti Krishtel, won the McArthur Grant for exposing the inequities in the patent system to increase access to affordable, life-saving medications on a global scale[/caption]

For over 20 years now the California-based lawyer has been fighting against big pharmaceutical companies, keeping them from exploiting loopholes in the U.S. patent laws that allow them to keep exclusive rights to medicines for an extended period. Through this, the companies can sell their drugs at high prices without the threat of competition. This means that people and countries in need of medication are often unable to afford it.

Standing for a million lives

The daughter of a pharmaceutical scientist who worked for drug companies, Priti Radhakrishnan was always sensitive towards matters of social justice. After earning an undergraduate degree from the University of California, Berkeley, and a law degree from New York University, Priti, like many others, joined a big law firm in Los Angeles. However, her ideas about the pharma patent system came crashing down during her initial days, while she was working on a project in India.

It was personally gut-wrenching for me to know that the drugs had come to market, but they just weren’t getting to the people who needed them, and there was such a huge time lag in making that happen.

The lawyer was leading a team representing HIV-positive clients in court when she noticed that in AIDS cases a diagnosis was a death sentence, nearly every time. While there were antiretroviral therapies available, they were not affordable for her clients. So bad was the condition, that if parents were diagnosed with HIV, they would just hand over their kids to an orphanage. "This early work in India left a permanent mark on my heart," the lawyer said during an interview with Devex, adding, "It was personally gut-wrenching for me to know that the drugs had come to market, but they just weren’t getting to the people who needed them, and there was such a huge time lag in making that happen.”

This motivated the lawyer to co-found the Initiative for Medicines, Access, and Knowledge, or I-MAK, in 2006. She partnered with Tahir Amin, an expert on intellectual property law, who had formerly represented big corporations and health experts. "The patent system was intended to motivate people to invent by giving them a reward of a time-limited monopoly. But in the last 40 years, that intention has been distorted beyond recognition," the Global Indian said.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0BHQIyfEdQ

Explaining how the patent law is abused by big companies, the lawyer said in an NPR interview, "Take the top-selling drug in the country, HUMIRA. After the first patent expired, the company, AbbVie, filed and got so many more patents that they made two-thirds of all their revenue. But what you see in another part of the world, like Europe, is that the price came down because other companies came in as competition.

"So how drug companies are using the patent system, and the fact that patients don't have a voice in the patent system is leading to longer monopolies, higher prices, or drugs not being available at all."

Fighting the system

So far, the lawyers have led teams to stop pharma giant Novartis from patenting the leukemia drug Gleevec, and have twice prevented Abbott Laboratories from patenting the HIV medicines. The organisation has also worked with advocacy groups in various countries to reform the drug development system by involving the affected community in the process. “The system is completely insulated from the human consequences of how it works,” the lawyer said, "So how do we humanise the system? How do we bring it into more proximity with the people it's meant to serve, and evolve it for the better?”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3y6_7_5PcQ

The year pandemic stuck marked a pivotal time for the lawyer. With the big pharma companies such as Moderna having monopolies on their products, the reach of COVID vaccines was limited to the developed nations. During her research, the lawyer found that while 55 percent of people in developed countries were vaccinated, only one percent of the population in developing countries had access to any kind of vaccine. She even called out the then US President, Donald Trump's pushing of vaccines for American citizens "the beginning of a new Hunger Games".

"COVID taught us that when the biggest drug companies have monopolies on their products, they will always sell to the highest bidder. They will always price the medication or the vaccines out of reach. For example, Moderna was almost 100 percent publicly funded. But unfortunately, the U.S. government gave away the right to the vaccine. So, now Moderna stands to make $100 billion by the end of this decade, and $40 billion alone by the end of this year. And it was taxpayer funding that helped bring that invention to market," she told NPR.

[caption id="attachment_31363" align="aligncenter" width="680"]Lawyer | Priti Krishtel | Global Indian Priti with her friends[/caption]

Inspired by her father, the lawyer kept fighting against the system, arguing that apart from intellectual property law reform the US government should work towards technology transfer to help manufacture all medicines locally.

A mother to a four-year-old, the lawyer feels that while there is a long way to go to bring these reforms, slowly she can see the changes. "I just don't think that people's ability to heal should depend on their ability to pay. And I think we all can be a part of the solution," says Priti.

  • Follow Priti Krishtel on Twitter and LinkedIn

Reading Time: 7 mins

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On Top of the World: No mission is impossible for Captain Zoya Agarwal 

(January 9, 2022) Zoya Agarwal dared to dream the impossible quite early in life. As a child, she would often spend hours on the terrace of her home, stargazing while all her friends were busy playing games. She imagined herself touching the sky and the stars. Back then, anybody who would asked her what she wanted to become when she grew up, her only reply would be “a pilot.” Over the years, she braved many odds as she set out to make her dreams come true. Eventually, they did.  [caption id="attachment_33619" align="aligncenter" width="445"] Captain Zoya Agarwal[/caption] Captain Zoya Agarwal became the first Indian woman to fly the world’s longest air route from San Francisco (SFO) to Bengaluru, covering the North Pole, making aviation history by travelling a record-breaking 16,000 kilometres in 2021. It is the longest non-stop commercial route undertaken so far.  “It was a significant turning point in my career to be recognised as an Indian woman who is making a difference around the world. My journey was super exciting and magical,” smiles Zoya Agarwal, who led the all-women crew on that flight, speaking exclusively to Global Indian.  Taking the world by storm The senior pilot with Air India, who not only made her parents proud but

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ng aviation history by travelling a record-breaking 16,000 kilometres in 2021. It is the longest non-stop commercial route undertaken so far. 

“It was a significant turning point in my career to be recognised as an Indian woman who is making a difference around the world. My journey was super exciting and magical,” smiles Zoya Agarwal, who led the all-women crew on that flight, speaking exclusively to Global Indian. 

Taking the world by storm

The senior pilot with Air India, who not only made her parents proud but took the world by storm with her mammoth feat, is the only human to have found a place in the San Francisco Luis A Turpen Aviation Museum in August 2022. The museum recognised Zoya’s illustrious career in aviation and her passion for empowering women worldwide.  

Becoming the world’s youngest lady captain to fly to the North Pole has been my dream. This feat has given flight to young girls across the world.

 Coming from a humble middle class family of Delhi, Zoya opted for science in her 11th and 12th of schooling and went on to do her B.Sc from St Stephen’s college, Delhi. 

Indian Leader | Captain Zoya Agarwal | Global Indian

Being the only child in a middle-class family meant that she was expected to follow the traditional path and settle down after marriage. “My dream of becoming a pilot seemed like an unusual career choice to my parents,” recalls Zoya, who was by then, firm in her mind that she wanted to pursue her passion. 

Shattering the gender bias

She divided her time between her aviation classes and her STEM degree. “The first half of the day was for STEM and the second for my aviation classes,” says the pilot, who has motivated millions of young women and girls to achieve their ambitions. 

The fact that many airlines didn’t even consider hiring female pilots until 2016 came as a big stumbling block for Zoya. “With career and responsibilities back home, women play a dual role. Therefore, an airline bears additional expenses when they need to support women on maternity leave. There’s no room for errors and additional expenses in this industry,” she says of her initial days. 

 

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A post shared by Captain Zoya (@captainzoya)

However, times have changed for the better, with more women pilots now being hired. “I’ve had to fight hard to show everyone around me the strength of women in this field and to shatter the gender biases associated with aviation,” says the senior pilot, who was glad to get into Air India, a company, she feels, has always valued equality of the sexes.  

Taking care of people's trust 

Zoya feels that anyone can learn to fly but one needs nerves of steel to work in the airline industry. “One has to be fully prepared for emergencies and land the plane safely,” says Zoya, who became the youngest pilot in India to fly a Boeing-777 in 2013.  She also piloted  Air India’s first Boeing 777 aircraft over the Hindu Kush mountain range. 

[caption id="attachment_33624" align="aligncenter" width="643"]Indian Leader | Captain Zoya Agarwal | Global Indian Captain Zoya Agarwal with one of the passengers on board[/caption]

"Making the passengers feel safe is the most satisfying part of the job," says Zoya, who garnered attention for her role in saving a passenger’s life on a Delhi-New York flight in 2015. The passenger complained of breathlessness mid-air and Zoya swiftly turned the aircraft around, going back to Delhi where the passenger was taken to the hospital. 

Being a pilot is not an easy profession. One has to work diligently and remained focused all the time. After all, people trust the pilot with their lives.

Avoiding all distractions and maintaining proper mental equilibrium is a must for pilots. “In my profession, the safety of passengers always comes first. Pilots have to be tough and selfless,” says Zoya, adding that the job requires her to be alert, have swift decision-making abilities and multi-task. Perseverance and passion (for the job) is what drives the pilot. 

On top of the world 

Zoya’s job takes her across the world but the journey excites her more than the destinations themselves. “I love looking out over the world when in the clouds,” smiles the ace pilot, who made an appearance on Indian Idol for its Republic Day special episode, soon after she and the other crew members completed their longest flight ever. 

Her favourite destination? “Being on top of the world,” smiles Zoya, who was chosen by the United Nations as its spokesperson for Generation Equality. 

Captain Zoya Agarwal is the first Indian woman to fly world’s longest air route from San Francisco (SFO) to Bengaluru, covering North Pole.

During the Covid-19 pandemic, when India initiated the ‘Vande Bharat mission’ in May 2020, Zoya was chosen to co-pilot the first repatriation flight, which evacuated thousands of Indians from different countries. 

“One of the memories I cherish the most is the flight from San Francisco to Mumbai which I had piloted. Every member of the crew greeted me with a loud round of applause. I can never forget that experience,” says Zoya, who was witness to emotional family members reuniting with their loved ones.  

  • Follow Captain Zoya Agarwal  on Instagram 

Reading Time: 5 mins

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How Sonam Kalra went global with the Sufi Gospel Project

(September 16, 2023) Sonam Kalra is the only Indian musician to win three times in a single edition of Global Music Awards and the first Indian Woman to win a Gold Medal. Sonam Kalra, creator of the internationally acclaimed 'Sufi Gospel Project,' is a US Grammy Recording Academy member who has won numerous awards and performed at venues like the Sydney Opera House, sharing the stage with legends like Abida Parveen. Known for her unique blend of Sufism and universal faith, Sonam is a celebrated voice at global festivals advocating Peace and Oneness. [caption id="attachment_45022" align="aligncenter" width="449"] Sonam Kalra, creator of the 'Sufi Gospel Project.'[/caption] Music Matters Growing up in Delhi, Sonam Kalra’s home was always filled with music, from Begum Akhtar to Harry Belafonte, Ella Fitzgerald to Bhimsen Joshi, and Kumar Gandharva to Leonard Cohen and the Beatles. “I remember sitting on my mother’s lap and listening to music. There was a certain calm, a surrender almost, a deep emotion that was apparent on my mother’s face when she listened to music and she made sure I exposed to all types of it.” When she was four, Sonam began learning music herself, egged on by her mother’s belief in

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on that was apparent on my mother’s face when she listened to music and she made sure I exposed to all types of it.” When she was four, Sonam began learning music herself, egged on by her mother’s belief in her talent. “I grew up in a liberal household with a deeply grounded belief system which stressed on the virtues of kindness, equality, justice and liberty,” Sonam says, in a free-wheeling chat with Global Indian. “My parents were my best friends and my greatest Gurus. I belong to the Sikh faith and deeply believe in the syncretic values of Sikhism. As she grew older, she was fortunate enough to learn Indian classical music from some wonderful Gurus like The Dagar Brothers, Smt. Shubha Mudagl and Pt. Sarathi Chatterjee.

In college, she took a break from music and went to art school and focussed on design. She joined the ad industry as a writer and graphic designer and worked there for a few years until she eventually found her way back to music. “That was when I realised I had something to say through my music and that was when my musical style and journey really started to take shape,” Sonam says. “When I am asked if I lost those years not singing, I always say that everything I learnt during that time also finds place in my music and the way that I present it or approach it.” Again, the deep-seated values she had learned from her family came into play – where great importance had been given to virtues of kindness, compassion, honesty, integrity and sincerity. “The truth, and the importance of being true to oneself also reflects in the music I am trying to create.”

Making Music

Kalra’s creative process is to deep dive. It usually starts with her researching poetry. She finds her early inspiration in the beauty of the lyric itself, and then, begins the process of interpreting it, structuring it, working out the composition and the arrangement. “And then I focus on it completely – even when I am not working on it, it is in the back of my mind always,” Kalra explains. Because I have been trained in many diverse styles of music from Hindustani classical, Sufi, gospel, and jazz - my music always tends to have influences of all these styles- sometimes it is subtle and sometimes more obvious. I like to create and then revisit the composition after a while to take a fresh look at it and add more layers and nuances,” she explains.

[caption id="attachment_45032" align="aligncenter" width="605"] Sonam Kalra with A.R. Rahman[/caption]

She created The Sufi Gospel Project, which was her personal, contemporary take on Sufism as an attempt to blend the many voices of faith and create one universal voice of faith. It is an attempt, through music, to break down the walls that separate people.

World Stage

At the recently held The Global Music Awards, Kalra won three awards, an experience she describes as ‘absolutely incredible.’ What makes it more special is that she won for original compositions and pieces that resonate very strongly with her. ‘BOL’ based on the words of the poet Faiz Ahmad Faiz, won her two gold medals for Best Female Vocalist and the other for Best Song. She also won a silver medal for Outstanding Achievement in the World Fusion Music category for another original composition, Alfat, based on the poetry of poet-saint Baba Bulleh Shah. A year ago, she also received an invitation to become a part of the Grammy Recording Academy.

Journey Ahead

As someone who has performed across the globe in over 30 countries and at prestigious festivals and venues including The Sydney Opera House and MTV’s Coke Studio, Kalra believes music is a journey of learning. She has shared the stage with legendary musicians like Sir Bob Geldof, Vikku Vinayakram and Sufi Legend Abida Parveen.

[caption id="attachment_45031" align="aligncenter" width="605"] Sonam Kalra with Sufi legend Abida Parveen[/caption]

“The experience of performing is always special to me and each performance has been a gift and an experience to learn. I just feel like I have so much more to do, so much more that I must create and get better at, that it drives me to work harder.” Her advice to young singers is to create original music. “Find your own voices and tell your truths, your stories through your music. Emulate but do not imitate and know that there is no shortcut - practice, practice, practice. Work so hard at your craft that it has no option but to give you results,” the Global Indian signs off.

Follow Sonam Kalra and the Sufi Gospel Project on Instagram, X, Facebook, YouTube, Spotify and her website.

Story
Saloni Lodha: London-based designer captivates the global audience with Indian fashion

(December 13, 2023) Born and raised in India, settled in Hong Kong and based out of London, fashion designer Saloni Lodha is truly global in more than one way. If her designs have found a niche clientele among the who's who of the world, she is still connected to her roots and it's this perfect blend of Indian and modern that makes her a designer to reckon with in the fashion circle. When she moved out of her home in Maharashtra as a teenager she had no idea that fashion designing was her calling. But serendipity put her in the right place at the right time, and as they say, the rest is history. With the likes of Michelle Obama, Kate Middleton, Emma Watson and Jessica Alba proudly strutting in the designs of this Indian designer, Saloni has become the champion of Indian textiles in the international market. But the journey of this Global Indian wasn't all rainbows and sunshine as she had to steer her way to the top. Wings of freedom Born in Nashik in a traditional Rajasthani family, Lodha was raised in a conservative setup that had the women of the house restricted to household chores. Seeing

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itional Rajasthani family, Lodha was raised in a conservative setup that had the women of the house restricted to household chores. Seeing the various ages live under the same roof, the close-knit environment of the house started her love affair with textiles as she always saw her mom and grandmom clad in a sari. Being a very visual child, her eyes were always drawn to colors and prints. "From the age of 15, I began cutting up my grandmother's brocade saris to make dresses for myself and my friends," she said in an interview. But a young Lodha wanted to free herself from the shackles of tradition and therefore made the choice of moving to Mumbai at the age of 16 to study advertising at Sophia College. "It's a very conservative and religious life. I don't know how, but I always knew I didn't want that," she added. During those three years of college, she did internships and took as much freelance work as she could find.

Love for fashion - a new beginning

At 19, she met Giorgio, a banker from Italy, who she ended up marrying within a year. The couple soon moved to Hong Kong, and this was the place that played the perfect catalyst in giving wings to her designing dreams. She never intended to be a designer as her style quotient was mainly restricted to jeans and T-shirts throughout her college life. But her own evolution as she entered the glossy world of the Hong Kong expats gave birth to her clothing designs.

 

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A post shared by Saloni Lodha (@salonilodha)

"That's when I started to think about fashion. All you could find there were these big luxury brands, so I thought I could make my own dresses and sell them to clients in a more personal way," she said. She set up tiny pop-up shops to sell her dresses made of silk, cotton and brocade. This exposure helped her set sail for her future in designing and in the summer of 2003, she moved to London to do a course in fashion from Central Saint Martins. The British capital's monochromatic fashion sense made Lodha think about adding a pop of color. "I realized I wanted to bring the spirit of India in some sort of way, but not in that obvious, hippie look. Here was India, the factory to the world — but there was not one single brand that retailed out of the top 200 department stores. That didn't really make sense to me," she told New York Times.

Her own global brand

So after spending a few years consulting for production agencies, she started her own company in 2008 with a focus on Made in India label. Her website reads, "The brand draws from the designer's Indian heritage and its aesthetic is centred around a combination of color, artisanal craft and innovative cut and finish."

The line was snapped up by top London department store Harvey Nichols and others followed suit. She launched her Summer/Spring 2008 collection during the London Fashion Week, but it was in July 2009 that the turning point in Lodha's career came when Emma Watson of Harry Potter fame made an appearance at The Early Show in a red dress by Saloni. This put Lodha on the global map.

 

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A post shared by Saloni Lodha (@salonilodha)

"I just wanted to create a beautiful, contemporary brand taking the Indian aesthetic, which I grew up with, but modernising it with very simple silhouettes, something that anyone can wear anytime. You can wear it to go to work, you take it to the evening, but very affordable, and we wanted to use all the Indian handcraft and all the techniques - block-printing, weaving - but just to make it affordable because everything, at that point in the market, was so expensive," she said.

Her label began creating the right noise in the fashion circles, and soon pulled in clients like Michelle Obama, Naomi Watts, Anne Hathaway model Helena Christensen and Samantha Cameron. If the creme da la creme were dressing up in her couture, luxury stores like Harrods, Selfridges and Barneys had stocks of her collection. In 2016, Duchess of Cambridge, Kate Middleton, made heads turn with a Saloni Lodha dress for a function at Kensington Palace.

 

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With each passing year, Saloni Lodha brand started expanding its wings and making a name in the fashion market. In the last 15 years, Lodha has truly become a global name in the fashion circle as she beautifully infuses Indian textiles with western silhouettes making it a perfect blend of modern and rustic. "There's a long way to go and I feel like I am learning how to do it every step of the way," she added.

  • Follow Saloni Lodha on Instagram
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The Right Click: Photographer Clare Arni has documented the India story over three decades

(December 19, 2023) In 1993 , Clare Arni hopped into a Maruti 800 with her sister and her son, to begin an 800-km journey along the River Kaveri, starting at the source, Thalakaveri, in Coorg, and ending where it empties itself into the Bay of Bengal, reaching the sea in Poompuhar. Their goal: To document the lives that have flourished around this ancient water body, as it twists and turns its way through the Deccan, morphing into the giver of life at the Kings bathing Ghat, and the keeper of the dead in Srirangapatna, where thousands perform the final rites of their loved ones. In 'Disappearing professions in Urban India', a collaboration with her sister, Oriole Henry, the siblings wandered through six of India's old cities, finding professions that were on the verge of being relegated to annals of history, from mattress fluffers to billboard painters. Straddling varied themes that include architecture, travel, social documentary, and cultural heritage, Clare Arni has spent the last three decades documenting the India Story, in all its varied richness. From working with celebrated Indian architects like B.V. Doshi, Charles Correa, Geoffrey Bawa and Sanjay Mohe, to documenting remote tribes deep in the Sundarbans, Clare

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he Sundarbans, Clare Arni has done it all. Her internationally acclaimed work can be found in prominent galleries abroad and has been featured in publications like The Wall Street Journal, Harvard Design Magazine, Tatler Conde Nast (UK), and Abitare (Italy). Her expansive career includes book publications with top British publishers like Phaidon, Thames and Hudson, and Dorling Kindersley. Clare's long-term projects document the rich tapestry of life in various Indian locales such as Hampi, Banaras, Northern Karnataka, Rajasthan, Sundarbans, and Orissa.

[caption id="attachment_47639" align="aligncenter" width="394"] Clare Arni[/caption]

Early days

Born in Scotland in 1962, Arni arrived in India when her father was transferred here for work. He established the Vikaasa school in Madurai, where Arni also studied until the age of 13, when, she tells Global Indian, she was “rudely uprooted from a place that I considered home and sent to a mediocre boarding school in England.” She followed this up with a degree in art history and film and media in Scotland, but she says, “I returned to India as soon as I possibly could. When I think of the nostalgia of home, I still recollect the bird song and hot winds of Madurai,” she smiles.

Arni returned to India at the age of 22, soon after college, to earn a living as a photographer. Self-taught, she learned on the job, attempting to create as diverse a portfolio as she could manage. “I started with fashion photography and did campaigns for Weekender and Wearhouse,” Arni recalls. “I did any work that came my way, photographing everything from racehorses to chickens, and then making black-and white-prints in my darkroom.”

Architecture calling

Her calling, however, lay in architectural photography. Clare was soon shooting directly for architects, documenting their projects publications and competition entries as well as for architectural and interior magazines. “I worked for many Bangalore architects but also for several projects for Charles Correa, BV Doshi, Geoffrey Bawa and Sanjay Mohe. For Charles Correa I documented the town Of Bagalkot before it was submerged by the dam and the house that he built for himself in Bangalore,” she explains. Apart from many design magazines in India, her images have been published in renowned international magazines like Abitare (Italy) Tatler, Conde Nast (UK) Wallpaper, The Wall Street journal and Harvard Design magazine. Her work is also part of Phaidon, Thames and Hudson and Dorling Kindersley, all of whom are leading British book publishers.

[caption id="attachment_47643" align="aligncenter" width="507"] PhotoL Clare Arni[/caption]

Documenting Stories

She also started shooting longer book projects for writers like George Mitchell. These were rewarding as they allowed her to travel extensively around India documenting places like Hampi, Banaras and Northern Karnataka. “I also worked for NGOs like Welt Hunger Hilfe where I travelled to remote communities in Rajasthan, Sundarbans, and Orissa documenting the work that they had done with self-help groups, women’s empowerment and updating agricultural practices,” says Arni. Her travels have been continuous even after she had her son.

Her Kaveri River project took a full four months, which she spent on the road with her son and sister, documenting the civilisation that had grown and flourished on its banks. “The river became part of our everyday lives walking its banks and swimming in its waters, taking coracles to the bottom of waterfalls, and flying an ultralight to capture it from the air,” Arni recalls. “I have been very lucky as my work and passion was the same and I was able to see and document so much of India.”

Going solo

After all of this she started to have solo photographic exhibitions and it was what she admits was liberating as she could work without clients and create works with total freedom. This is when she began to look at living cultural heritage instead of just built architecture. One of her biggest shows was ‘Disappearing professions in Urban India’, done in collaboration with her sister, Oriole Henry, where they examined historical professions associated with six cities and how they were surviving and adapting to the present day. “It was a wonderful way to get to know these cities,” Arni says. “We wandered through the streets searching for these professions and often found that they had either gone or that only a handful remained to carry them forward. We found mattress fluffers, tinners, hand painted billboard painters and calligraphers. We documented the changing face of single screen cinemas and stand-alone coffee shops that were making way for multiplexes and international chains,” she explains. This exhibition was shown around India and in America.

[caption id="attachment_47645" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Photo: Clare Arni[/caption]

A full life

Arni likes to work on long term projects where she gets immersed in the subject over several years. Some of these are ongoing. Some of the new books that she has done are directly with clients where she conceptualises, shoots, and helps with design inputs. She has enjoyed working collaboratively with talented photographers like Selvaprakash Lakshmanan on many of these books. “I have had a rewarding and challenging new direction at this point of my life. I am head of arts programming at a charitable trust school, RBANMS in Bangalore. I am extremely fulfilled working and interacting with these children and am excited by the programs that we are working on together with a host of visiting artists that share their time and skills with the school,” she says. Her advice to newbie photographers is that patience is important and spending time with your subject whatever it may be is key. “Even if you think you have got the shot, stop for a moment and think how else I could do this, experiment and you will get a better shot,” she advises. Looking ahead, she is working on finishing a couple of books, and spending time in the school.

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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