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Friday, October 30, 2015

One Such Day...


“Let me, O let me bathe my soul in colours; let me swallow the sunset and drink the rainbow.”
-Khalil Gibran

Just being oneself and enjoying the sounds and sights of existence, aware of each and every moment... literally each and every moment...when time starts to slow down and one feels that each day could very well be ages...is something extraordinary! 

We often mumble and grumble: "The day is too hectic!"
"The days are flying fast!"

And yet there are those days when things take the opposite turn.

Such days, colours start filling up each space, time and the world around...infusing brilliance; like the rich and myriad hues through a prism, in perhaps everything that one touches...sometimes painstakingly, sometimes fluidly... the colours just span through you, extending itself into the canvas, glowing and fading as spreading and taking its own form. You just become the medium! A soulful medium! 

One such day, this happened! 

PinkBird-HuesnShades

GreenBird-HuesnShades

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YellowBird-HuesnShades

The bird pictures that inspired me are from a share of a friend's in Facebook...I forgot who it was though!

Linking it to PPF...Go ahead to see some awesome art!


Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Book Launch: Coming Home to eARTH: Space. Line. Form

Coming Home to eARTH: Space.Line.Form co-authored by A V Ilango and Srivi Kalyan was hosted yesterday, 13-10-2015, by Embassy of India (U.A.E) in Embassy Auditorium, Diplomatic Area, Abu Dhabi. The event also features an exhibition of selected works of artist Mr.Ilango.
 
His Excellency Mr. T.P. Seetharam, the Ambassador of India to the UAE, said: "I am familiar with A.V.Ilango the artist and his wonderful artwork for more than ten years. I have been fascinated by the manner in which he is able to capture not just form but movement so vividly through his lines and strokes. This book serves to share his talent and skills to all art lovers and practitioners across the world. I wish to compliment  A.V. Ilango and Srivi Kalyan for having brought out a book that inspires and educates all of us and generations to come."
 
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The book ‘Coming Home to eARTh: Space. Line. Form’ looks at art as more than a form of creative expression and communication, rather exploring it in the traditional Eastern philosophy of being a mode of transcendental experience. In her preface for the book, Dr. Geetha Narayanan, Founder & Director of Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore, said: "Both Ilango and Srivi Kalyan have pulled off a coup as this book revives and rejuvenates without being prescriptive or parochial and will make a valuable addition to the bookshelf of the discerning seeker."
 
ComingHometoeARTH:Space. Line. Form-HuesnShades
 
 
A V Ilango is a Mathematician turned self-taught artist who has explored not only the picturesque setting of his hometown, Gobichettipalayam, with a colourful palette that were inspired by the daily life and festivities but also by the somber, dismal and melancholic hues of the suffering, engulfing city. His works are varied and range from series to series offering a wealth of colors, lines and forms. Ilango's Art Space started in 2004 acts not only as his studio but also aims to nurture the young talents; based on their aptitude and sensibility. He believes in "Art lets you be in the now" and follows the traditional 'guru-sishya' pedagogy.
 
According to Mr.Ilango:

“I am fascinated by the form on the space.
I go with them on a voyage of discovery
to understand their complexity and simplicity.
Finally, I see things existing
in the purest of forms.
Space and form are interwoven,
merged into one another,
until the original form becomes
intangible, imperceptible, sublime…”

 
AVIlango-HuesnShades

AVIlango-HuesnShades

AVIlango-HuesnShades
 
 
Srivi Kalyan is an artist, writer, educator, dancer and an activist who founded Fooniferse Arts, a hub for people from diverse fields to use arts as a way to collaborate, redefine and act on innovative solutions for some of the social and ecological issues the of our times.
 
In her own words:
 
"Each of my collections is an experiment in 'consciousness'. Whether I explore through mythology or free form, through color, line or abstraction, I find, that within our common human memories, lie deeper paths than what we encounter on a daily basis. And these paths have led me to appreciate the capacity of the human frame to delve into states of being that are at once a vibrating energy source and a deep awareness of living.

And yet unless we delve into these un-mapped paths with compassion as our compass, and love in our being, it wouldn't take us long to get lost. Yet, discovering our abilities to evolve, and transform ourselves is indeed the greatest gift one can have.

To that end, through creating art, inspired by philosophies, music, dance, poetry, deep reflection and the nurturing earth, I find the lovely companionship of throbbing energies in space, in the form of people and other living beings, in abstractions and in silence." 

SriviKalyan-HuesnShades

SriviKalyan-HuesnShades


The Embassy of India in U.A.E has been supporting arts and artists with abundant zest for the past two years opening their cozy and resplendent spaces as exhibit homes for both established and artists trying to make their mark.
 
Thanks to Krishna Kumar Sir of Collage Communications for the invite to the occasion. Though I couldn't be present personally, I was there in all spirit!
 

Pic courtesy: Mr. Krishna Kumar N P, Artists' Websites
Information courtesy: U A E Press Release and Artists' Websites
 
 
 

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Face2Face

Indian Bloggers




The Kerala Museum of Madhavan Nayar Foundation located in Edapally is a place one needs to delve in at leisure. It sure is a place where every child and adult needs to find themselves in, at least once, to get to know the history, art and culture of Kerala. It is the realization of a passionate dream of an industrialist-philanthropist, Shri. Madhavan Nayar. It comprises of the Museum of Kerala History, Paintings and Sculptures, Indian Miniatures, Dolls' Museum, Center for Visual Arts and Projection Studio.

Recently, they took a major initiative in conducting Face2Face, an art collective which happened from 18th to 23rd September. 11 acclaimed artists from across India were brought face to face into a mesmerizing creative space embedded in nature to result in an outpour of ingenious language through their  art.

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This prominent and high profile Art Residency happened under the guidance of internationally acclaimed independent art curator/advisor,  art historian and a writer, Sushma Bahl who carefully chose not only the artistic talents but also the thematics of the residency. Mrs. Bahl was the Art and Culture Director of the British Council India. She is a member of the Governing Council of Sanskriti Arts Foundation in New Delhi and the Society of the National Museum Institute.

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Sushma Bahl

Sushma Bahl has steered the first-ever Festival of India in the UK and South Korea besides artists’ residencies and collaborative cultural projects in India and in South Africa, Germany, U.K. and Bangladesh amongst others. Mrs. Bahl’s extensive engagement with the arts includes Exhibitions and Art Fairs across Asia, publications, catalogues and Artist’s books. Her most recent work, Forms of Devotion, is an exploration of the Spiritual in Indian Art under the aegis of the Museum of Sacred Art, MOSA, Durbuy, Belgium. She is the author of 5000 Years of Indian Art (2011) by Roli Books. She has also edited and written for books on artists Thota Vaikuntam, Paresh Maity, Satish Gupta and Shuvaprasanna.


The participating artists in Face2Face were Haribaabu NaatesanKanchan ChanderKavita NayarSidharthPratul DashSeema Kohli, Pradeep PuthoorViren Tanwar, Sudip RoySharmi Chowdhury and Zakkir Hussain. (from left to right in order - pic below)

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The Residency was inaugurated by Kattoor Narayana Pillai, Chairman of Kerala Lalita Kala Akademi. It was followed by an infotainment session on Edaykka, a musical instrument which was once confined within the religious and divine spaces, by Krishnaprasad Thripunithura; a maestro in that, accompanied by his son, Arun Krishnaprasad who enlightened us with the secrets of the instrument, it's making, the legend behind it and the modern scenario and perspective compared to the erstwhile one.

InaugurationbyShri.KattoorNarayanaPillai-HuesnShades
Inauguration by Shri. Kattoor Narayana Pillai,
Chairman, Kerala Lalita Kala Akademi
Standing beside are Arundhaty Nayar and Raj Nayar (Trustees of the Foundation)

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Shri. Krishnaprasad Thrippunithura's Edaykka session


The artists have worked in wide range of mediums from oils to acrylics, watercolour to found objects, etchings to sculpted paintings. I would like to mention that each and every artist who took part in this residency and with most of whom I could interact were full of life!!! They were ever-ready to share their experiences, joy and to talk about their art. It was, personally, an amazing experience to connect with them.

I had the opportunity to meet and talk to Sushmaji, the art advisor; thanks to Arundhaty Nayar without whose invitation that would not have been possible. Here's what Sushmaji had to say about Face2Face Art Residency program.

On Face2Face Art Residency

"As the title suggests, it is offering an opportunity for an encounter, an encounter between the artists and the museum, an encounter of an art that is done today and an art that was done or created some two- three decades ago. It’s an interaction, face to face, of the artists from different parts of India who have gathered here together. There is that interphase, interaction; which helps in looking at each other, learning from each other, talking to each other, sharing and networking. That becomes the essence of Face2Face. This museum provides a wonderful opportunity for that, because it has such a wonderful collection and such an amazing face that artists are finding it very stimulating and inspiring!"

Face2Face and other Residencies

"Each Residency is focussed on a definite thrust for example here, the interaction between the artists and  the museum, between what they are doing today and what was being done three decades ago, that is the main focus. For ex. the residency I had done with artists from Asian countries and India was about cultural synergy between different countries and the cultures of different countries. Each project depends on who the players are, who the involved artists are - that gives a definitive focus. What we often try to do is to offer a mix of structured program and a bit of free time for the artists to follow their own lead. Somebody might like that you were talking about like the leather puppets… somebody might find that very interesting. They would want to go and meet those people. So they have an opportunity to do that. They also have time together making new works and actually sharing information of their work experiences, about the issues that concern them, their technique, their way of approaching work and market and everything else. So I think, broadly speaking, a mix of structure and open-ended program which gives the artists both a purpose and some freedom are essential for a successful residency."

Theme of the Residency

"I would have liked them to create work inspired by the museum, the locale and Kerala.  Because the time is short (6 days), the artists who have come here, have brought half-finished works; they did read up, so I think in some discreet, small way like Sidharth, the artist who is up here, working right now…he talked about these ball fruit which is hanging on the tree nearby and the dance form, Mohiniyattom; these two things have inspired him because he came across these two features here. So in some ways, direct and indirect, it does make a difference of what it is and you can give the artist a theme but we don’t want to restrict it so much that their creativity gets constrained. You want to have a link that links it altogether; that link was face to face; among themselves and with the others. Looking at the work, am quite amazed and impressed that they have managed to produce so much. There is so much vibrancy, colour and technique to it for example Natesan is using computer discarded…found objects. So it’s about recycling, about environment, about reuse, about conservation. Viren Tanwar has done acrobatic theme, Sharmi has used paper work and cycling again about issues to do with pollution, health and the like. So everybody has picked up different threads and they have created works inspired by that thread."


The exhibit was formally arranged at The Taj Gateway, Kochi with an impressive talk on 'The Art of Buying Art' by Sushma Bahl. Thanks to Sushmaji and Arundhatyji for inviting me. it was wonderful to enjoy the whole event and make it a memorable experience. These are a few clicks of the artworks by the jovial, zesty and amiable artists' who deserve to be in the limelight.

*click on the images to view it big


HaribabuNatesan-HuesnShades
 Haribabu Natesan


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Kanchan Chander



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KavitaNayar-HuesnShades
Kavita Nayar


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Sidharth


PratulDash-HuesnShades
Pratul Dash

SeemaKohli-HuesnShades

SeemaKohli-HuesnShades
Seema Kohli


PradeepPuthoor-HuesnShades
Pradeep Puthoor


VirenTanwar-HuesnShades
 Viren Tanwar


SudipRoy-HuesnShades
 Sudip Roy


SharmiChowdhury-HuesnShades

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 Sharmi Chowdhury


ZakkirHussain-HuesnShades

ZakkirHussain-HuesnShades
Zakkir Hussain


Who could have thought that some unused keys and unwanted objects could be moulded into beautiful and majestic art in Haribabu Natesan's work! There's feminine energy-vibes that surround and embalm the works of Kanchan Chander, Kavita Nayar and Seema Kohli be it the feminine form, the embryonic or the divine! Even Sidharth has incorporated that pulsating energy in connection with the-all-encompassing nature while Sudip Roy has sensuous female form alongside the Eternal Lover. Pratul Dash and Zakkir Hussain speaks about displacement-urbanization and colour-chaos in the present scenario; a socio-political commentary. Viren Tanwar uses unpretentious female forms to voice an endless narrative! Sharmi Chowdhury exposes a certain fun-playfulness while commenting on the day-to-day affairs and the environment. Pradeep Puthoor with his intricate art and unearthly forms mesmerized the onlooker.


That's all for today's post, friends...Thanks to one and all who visit this space, take the time and effort to drop sweet-supportive comments.. Thank you dear friends!