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Among the festival's highlights will be the premiere of a new commission for the National Symphony Orchestra by Indian composer Zakir Hussain on Friday through Sunday, as well as theater and dance. A literature series will feature author Salman Rushdie, among others, in the 2,400-seat Concert Hall. Contemporary artists will have a nightclub space called The Monsoon Club that will feature popular DJ Rekha on March 12 and Panjabi MC on March 19. An Indian architect designed the performance space to look like a frozen monsoon with thousands of tiny threads hung by hand overhead. One of the most impressive displays shows India's tradition of intricate jewelry. Millions of dollars worth of jewels are exhibited by The Gem Palace of Jaipur, India, which has served as a jeweler to English and Indian royalty since 1852. A headdress made of diamonds and pearls that includes 50,000 handset pieces is the centerpiece. It took 25 craftsmen three years to complete and is on loan from an unspecified royal family in India. Visitors may assume the pieces are ancient, but they were all created in the last 15 years, said Siddharth Kasiwal, who heads U.S. operations for the family owned Gem Palace. "We wanted to show that this kind of love and compassion and patience still exists," he said. "We are continuing it." ___ Online: Kennedy Center -- Maximum India:
http://www.kennedy-center.org/
programs/festivals/10-11/india/
[Associated
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