Events in Goa

Serendipity Arts Festival 2025 Day 2 Unfolds with Jazz Grooves, Motown Memories and Immersive Visual Worlds


Written by Tanisha Cardozo || Team Allycaral

The second day of Serendipity Arts Festival 2025 unfolded as a vibrant celebration of sound, memory and visual storytelling, reaffirming the festival’s commitment to diverse artistic expressions spread across multiple venues in Panjim. Audiences moved seamlessly between music, film, exhibitions and culinary experiences, encountering art that invited both participation and reflection.

At The Arena at Nagalli Hills, the evening’s musical journey began with The Revisit Project, curated by Zubin Balaporia and Ehsaan Noorani. Known for demystifying the complexities of jazz, the band delivered a powerful blend of groove-driven rhythms, old-school funk and contemporary jazz, weaving pointed observations about life, love and politics in India into their performance. The set offered a refreshing balance of technical precision and emotional accessibility, drawing in both seasoned listeners and new audiences.

The night reached a celebratory high with Motown Madness, also curated by Zubin Balaporia. The high-energy concert paid tribute to the iconic Motown sound that shaped generations, transporting audiences through timeless hits associated with legends like Michael Jackson, The Supremes and Stevie Wonder. The performance blended nostalgia with exuberance, turning the venue into a space of collective joy and shared musical memory.

Reflecting on the evening, Balaporia noted that the curation was about embracing the vast emotional range of music — from the sharp, contemporary language of jazz to the enduring warmth of Motown. Despite their differences, he observed, both performances met on common ground through rhythm, storytelling and shared energy.

Meanwhile, the Captain of Ports Jetty in Old Goa continued to host unique experiences aboard the Barge installation. The Silent Film Screening by Aldona Video Club transformed the floating venue into an intimate cinema, where audiences engaged with cinema that both honoured and questioned traditional narrative forms. The collective’s approach examined representation and media boundaries, offering a contemplative counterpoint to the city’s musical pulse.

From December 14 onwards, exhibitions across festival venues opened to the public, further expanding the festival’s immersive landscape. At the Directorate of Accounts, Multiplay 02: Soft Systems, curated by Jiten Thukral and Sumir Tagra, invited visitors into a participatory environment designed as a sandbox for collective experience. Featuring works by artists including Chunky Move, Jayasimha Chandrashekar, Alke Reeh, Bwanga Kapumpa and Teja Gavankar, the exhibition encouraged acts of care, rest and attention — from modelling clay portraits in the dark to listening to the sounds of trees and birds. The curators described the project as a tender constellation of practices that hold space, invite participation and foster connection through touch, rhythm and generosity.

At Art Park, The Culinary Odyssey of Goa, curated by Odette Mascarenhas, explored Goan cuisine as a living archive of memory and migration. The project showcased five traditional kitchens representing Hindu artisans, Muslim descendants of the Bijapur dynasty, Gaud Saraswat Brahmins, Indo-Luso influences and Christian descendants. Through tastings centred on ingredients such as turmeric, kokum, black peppercorn, tamarind and star anise, visitors engaged with stories of spice, history and everyday ritual narrated by the curator herself.

The Promenade hosted Urban Reimagined, curated by Ravi Agarwal, which examined the city through the lens of waste, extraction and inequality. Featuring photographs by the late Vivan Sundaram, the exhibition positioned waste as a marker of caste and class, prompting audiences to confront what urban spaces reveal — and conceal — about aspiration, excess and social structure.

At The Access Village in the Old GMC Complex, Therefore I Am brought together seven artists whose lived experiences of disability shape their creative practices. Working across painting, sculpture, photography, video, performance and digital media, the artists challenged conventional perceptions of the body, presenting disability as a powerful site of creativity, resistance and truth. Curator Salil Chaturvedi highlighted the exhibition as an essential reminder that disability is not marginal, but an integral part of the collective human story.

Together, the experiences of Day 2 wove a rich tapestry of jazz, nostalgia, visual inquiry and participatory art, underscoring Serendipity Arts Festival 2025’s role as a platform where artistic expression meets social reflection and shared experience.

Social

JCI Ponda to Felicitate Late Shri Ravi Sitaram Naik with Lifetime Achievement Award


Written by Tanisha Cardozo || Team Allycaral

JCI Ponda announced that Late Shri Ravi Sitaram Naik, former Chief Minister of Goa, MLA of Ponda, and Past President of JCI Ponda, will be honoured with the Lifetime Achievement Award during the organisation’s 54th Installation Ceremony.

The award recognises his exceptional contribution to public life, his long-standing support to JCI Ponda, and his unwavering commitment to community development. The felicitation will be held on 14th December 2025 at Hotel Shakti Palace, Ponda, where Jc Adv. Chaitali Agarwadekar will take the oath as the 54th President of JCI Ponda along with her new team of office bearers for the year 2026.

The Lifetime Achievement Award reflects JCI Ponda’s respect and admiration for Shri Naik’s enduring legacy in public service and community engagement.

Events in Goa

Panjim Transforms into a Living Canvas for the 10th Serendipity Arts Festival


Written by Tanisha Cardozo || Team Allycaral

The Serendipity Arts Festival, India’s premier multi-disciplinary arts festival, returns to Panjim, Goa for its landmark 10th edition from December 12-21, 2025. This year, the festival transforms the city into a living canvas with immersive exhibitions, dynamic performances, interactive workshops, and public art installations across multiple iconic venues.

At Miramar Beach, the festival unveiled Terra Grove, the latest installation by renowned architect Vinu Daniel. This architectural marvel reimagines public spaces, making them inviting, responsive, and sustainable within Goa’s tropical landscape. Crafted from terracotta Guna tiles, the pavilion provides cooling shade while blending seamlessly with the beachfront, creating a space for both humans and animals. Terra Grove, sometimes called the Kulhad Pavilion, repurposes discarded mud cups, turning waste into a thoughtful, functional work of art. The project builds on Thukral and Tagra’s 2024 initiative, Multiplay, and is supported by Milton and Panjim Smart Cities, emphasizing sustainability and innovative design.

Milton, as the Festival’s sustainability partner, highlighted how installations like Terra Grove align with their commitment to reducing single-use waste and encouraging reusable solutions. Meanwhile, Imagine Panaji Smart City Development Limited emphasized the festival’s contribution to Panjim’s evolution as a citizen-friendly, culturally vibrant smart city. The festival’s presence over a decade has enriched the city’s social and cultural fabric, connecting contemporary art with Panjim’s historic identity.

Public art takes center stage this year, bringing creativity into everyday spaces and heritage venues across the city. Diptej Vernekar’s Beasts of Reincarnation: Mythical Beings in the City reinvents Goa’s living traditions of effigy-making, while venues such as Art Park, Azad Maidan, and the Old GMC Complex host workshops, performances, and interactive exhibitions. From Multiplay 02: Soft Systems by Thukral & Tagra to craft-focused showcases like Home is Where the Heart Is and Infinite Drape, the festival demonstrates how art in public spaces can spark dialogue, curiosity, and shared ownership.

The festival’s programming extends across multiple nodes of Panjim, including the Directorate of Accounts, PWD Complex, Captain of Ports Jetty (Old Goa), Santa Monica Jetty, and SAG Ground, forming a vibrant cultural circuit that blends installations, performances, culinary projects, and craft exhibitions with the city’s architecture and natural landscape. By integrating formal and everyday spaces, the festival creates an open gallery that welcomes residents, travelers, families, and students to experience art as part of daily life.

Celebrating its 10th edition, the Serendipity Arts Festival continues to champion the belief that art belongs to everyone. From architectural innovation and immersive performances to craft-led exhibitions and hands-on workshops, the festival encourages participation, sparks curiosity, and fosters a sense of community. Visitors can explore the transformative power of art across Panjim’s streets, heritage spaces, and waterfronts, making this edition a truly unforgettable celebration of creativity, culture, and sustainability.

Human Interest

Goa Remembers the 1901 Mandovi River Tragedy: A Community United in Prayer and Memory


Written by Tanisha Cardozo || Team Allycaral

As the sun dipped below the horizon and cast a warm glow over the still waters of the Mandovi River, Goans gathered in quiet reflection to remember one of the most tragic events in the state’s maritime history—the capsizing of the motorised launch “Goa” on December 3, 1901. The evening commemoration unfolded near both the Betim and Panjim ferry jetties, where residents, students, historians, and cultural enthusiasts assembled for a solemn litany that honoured the 81 victims whose lives were lost that morning more than a century ago. Organised by Festakar Marius Fernandes and Clube Festakar, the gathering began at 6:00 p.m., blending prayers and hymns with a sense of collective memory. Attendees crossed the river by ferry, moving from Betim to Panaji, symbolically echoing the ill-fated journey taken by the passengers of the launch “Goa” over a century earlier. Their arrival at the Memorial Cross in Panaji deepened the emotional resonance of the evening as the litany continued at the historic monument.

The tragedy itself occurred at around 7:00 a.m. on December 3, 1901, when the overcrowded vessel, carrying between 160 and 170 passengers, capsized mid-crossing. Many onboard were dressed in their Sunday best and were on their way to Old Goa for the Feast of St. Francis Xavier. The sudden disaster claimed 81 lives—men, women, and children—marking a sorrowful moment that left a lasting imprint on Goa’s collective conscience. Rescue efforts extended over four days, with local sailors and the naval gunboat “Mandovy” aiding in the recovery of victims, underscoring the magnitude of the loss and the grief that enveloped the community.

Three years later, on December 3, 1904, two memorial crosses were erected—one at Panaji and one at Betim—built by the Goan diaspora in Aden, Yemen, as a testament to their solidarity with their homeland. These stone crosses stand today as enduring symbols of remembrance, urging passersby to pause and pray for the souls of those lost in the tragedy. During the ceremony, historian Prajal Shakardande reflected on the ongoing significance of preserving the memory of the disaster, describing it as a living lesson in community responsibility and the consequences of neglecting safety. Festakar Marius Fernandes emphasized the importance of integrating such historical events into school curricula to ensure that younger generations understand both the tragedy and the resilience embedded in Goa’s past. Co-ordinator Prakash Kamat added that remembering the victims ensures that the lessons of history continue to resonate with future generations.

As the litany came to an end, Dr. Gwendolyn de Ornelas offered prayers at the Memorial Cross near the jetty. Candles flickered in the evening breeze, and floral tributes were placed in honour of the departed. The soft hymns drifting across the Mandovi created a poignant atmosphere—one that honoured the lives lost in 1901 and reaffirmed the community’s enduring promise to remember, reflect, and continue telling the story of the launch “Goa.”

Sports

Hyderabad Clinches Convincing Win Over Goa in Under-23 Women’s T20 Trophy


Written by Tanisha Cardozo || Team Allycaral Sports Desk

In an exciting clash of the Under-23 Women’s T20 Trophy Elite tournament, Hyderabad overpowered Goa by 7 wickets on Monday. The match, played at the Lady Amritbai Daga College Ground in Nagpur, saw Goa post a total of 110 for 6 in their innings. Key contributions from Harshita Yadav (16), Urvashi (21), Tanisha Gaikwad (33), Usma Khan (12), and Athashree Shivarakar (18) helped Goa reach a competitive total, though Hyderabad bowlers Srivalli and Trisha managed to make early breakthroughs by claiming one wicket each.

Chasing 111, Hyderabad paced their innings smartly, finishing at 114 for 3 in 17.5 overs. Skipper Mamata played a captain’s knock, remaining unbeaten on 38, while Akshaya Reddy (28) and Trisha (22) added crucial runs to guide the chase. For Goa, Angel D’Costa and Tanaya Naik picked up a wicket each, but their efforts couldn’t prevent Hyderabad from securing a comfortable win.

With this victory, Hyderabad continued their strong showing in the tournament, while Goa concluded their campaign with 2 wins and 3 losses out of 5 matches, ending with 8 points and finishing fourth in Group D. The match highlighted Hyderabad’s depth in batting and Goa’s competitive spirit, promising more exciting encounters as the tournament progresses.