Friday, July 28, 2017

Art for a Cause

I had written a post a couple of years back about street art focussed on road repairs, that would draw the attention of politicians and bureaucrats. This was in the city of Yekaterinburg in Russia:

http://kreativeworld.blogspot.in/2015/10/street-art-to-make-politicians-work.html

Something similar seems to be happening in our Indian cities as well. There is a rich mix of potholes, manholes, open drains, litter and debris in Indian cities to provide creative minds a canvas.

Some artists are using the opportunity to make a small contribution, make citizens and bureaucrats more aware, and raise the aesthetic quotient of the city!

Here is Indian artist Badal Nanjundaswamy's work around a pothole in Bangalore, drawn like the mouth of Yama, the God of death.

In Mumbai recently, a woman biker lost her balance trying to avoid one such pothole. She got crushed to death as she came under the wheels of a truck in the process.
(http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/mumbai-woman-biker-crushed-to-death-pothole/1/1009147.html)




The event sparked an outrage in Mumbai and in the rest of the country.
But not much else happens.....


Maybe Mumbai citizens need to invite Nanjundaswamy from Bangalore!



Here is another one of the artist's works.
He is also called the "crocodile artist" because of the ease with which he draws crocodiles in a three dimensional fashion.



Nanjundaswamy is in fact rather good at street art, drawn with a three-dimensional view of animals.


Some examples with elephants and peacocks, other favourites of his, are given here.










Apart from making pedestrians stop in their tracks with the 3-D compositions, Nanjundaswamy has been able to get the city authorities to take heed on long due repairs.










For example, a drawing of a spider web really brought the point home for this manhole, and it got duly covered.




We are used to see various construction materials related to roads, overhead bridges, pavements or plant-holders just strewn around the road. There is never a thought about the user on the rad.

One such pile of road dividers lying around in its usual fashion got fixed with this unusual composition by Nanjundaswamy.






(All pics from:
http://www.huffingtonpost.in/2015/06/23/bangalore-artist-crocodile_n_7642696.html)



Street artists of Mumbai, take note!

There is a lot of work to be done to showcase all the potholes around.


Mumbai citizens have started uploading photographs of the more "arty" potholes, hoping for some action.


Here is one opportunity: ten manholes, all with varying sizes and textures!


(Pic of Mumbai manhole from:
https://www.scoopwhoop.com/mumbai-potholes-are-goddamn-works-of-art/#.ozk1pn11u)

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Something in the Stars


A song from the blockbuster Hindi movie "Kabhie Kabhie" had this hugely popular song:


".....Kabhie kabhie mere dil mein khayal aata hai
Oftentimes this thought crosses my mind

Ki jaise thujhko banaya gaya hai mere liye
That you were born just for me

Tu ab se pehle staaron mein bas rahi thi kahin

You lived somewhere in the stars before...."





Pic from the movie "Pakeezah"
And in another popular song from the movie Pakeezah, the heroine sings to her lover:

"...Chalo dildaar chalo; Chaand ke paar chalo
Let us go my beloved; Let us go beyond the moon

Hum hai tayaar chalo; 

I am ready

Aao kho jaaye sitaaron mein kahin; Chhod de aaj yeh duniya yeh zameen
Let us get lost in the stars; Let us leave this world and this land..."

(Translations of songs from fan clubs!)


https://www.newscientist.com/article/2141950
-half-the-atoms-inside-your-body-came-from-across-the-universe/


This theme about coming to life on earth from the stars and getting merged with the stars again recurs often in folk tales, songs and movies.

Well, now it is official! Turns out, 50 per cent of the atoms in our body do come from stars across the universe!









Every time a star dies, it bursts out in the form of a huge "Supernova" spewing out tons of gases into the universe. The explosion gives rise to high speed galactic winds which ferry the particles in the gases across galaxies.

https://space.desktopnexus.com/wallpaper/358290/


I had once seen the images of the "Butterfly Supernova", so called because of its form, on one of the NASA sites.

The image stayed with me. The idea of a giant butterfly of hot gases hurtling through space was awesome, and inspired me to compose the painting below.

Clearly, "...there are more things in heaven and earth, .....Than are dreamt of!...."



30" by 30", Oil on canvas by Mita Brahma



Wednesday, March 15, 2017

A poem lovely as a tree



"I think that I shall never see
 A poem lovely as a tree....

.....Poems are made by fools like me,
  But only God can make a tree."

- American poet, Joyce Kilmer, in 1913.

The artist Sam Van Aken did have a hand however, in creating a very special tree. Van Aken is a Professor of Sculpture at Syracuse University, and wanted to "sculpt a tree", that would have multi-coloured blossoms.

Because of a childhood interest in 'stone fruits', Van Aken collected plant varieties of peaches, plums, apricots, nectarines and cherries. He grafted branches from these donor trees, on the same tree, in 2008. Van Aken had hoped to get a few multi-coloured blossoms. What emerged was beyond his wildest imagination. The tree actually grew 40 kinds of blossoms and later 40 kinds of fruits!








By 2014, Van Aken had grown and installed 16 'trees-of-forty-fruit' in public spaces, gardens and museums. Each tree was unique. Each one, a unique 'living sculpture'!


Van Aken's project has grown over time. He now uses 250 varieties of stone fruits. His interest in the fruits has grown, and along with that, another mission. He wants to sustain the diversity of fruits in nature, and has gone about collecting local varieties and heirloom specimens from all over the world.


As he explains, the supermarkets stock as per the urban tastes, and many of the local varieties did not make it to the vegetable markets at all, leading to less farmers growing them.


Van Aken's project has become a three-in-one botany-art-conservation project. Years of planning, grafting, and observing have made him confident to prune a multi-fruit tree just right, for multiple and continuous blossoms. He has painstakingly collected rare varieties, and created these wonder-trees.




Van Aken makes sure to visit his trees twice a year, adding more grafts, and pruning the branches here and there. It takes nine years for each 'tree-sculpture' to reach its full form. Five years for the grafts to get nurtured, and another four years before the trees bear fruit.




His tree-sculptures draw gaping crowds wherever they are installed, and the incredible sights of multi-coloured fruits hanging from different branches are specially loved by children.












Saturday, February 4, 2017

The sound of water



"Meeting", 42"X40", Watercolour on paper, 2007, by Paresh Maity
At the retrospective of Paresh Maity's water colours, currently on at Lalit Kala Akademi, what impresses you immediately are the large oceanscapes.


The fluidity of the medium is just right for large expanses of sky, and boats lying on the beach. There are a few figures and foliage here and there, but they are totally in harmony with the main part of the composition, which is expanses of sky and water.


What a sharp contrast to the uniformly grey skies of Delhi, the polluted air and the cacophony of vehicles!

Urban children can probably not imagine such greens and blues, or the serenity of palms and still water.






"Talsari", 24"X30", Watercolour on paper, 2002, by Paresh Maity

Paresh Maity has been a prolific artist. His works are with the National Gallery of Modern Art, and various international and national galleries. He is active in painting, sculpture, installations as well as photography.




He is known as India's "best water colour painter", and most of his water colours are about "waterscapes" from rural Bengal, though he does capture images from Kerala, and Venice amongst other places.






Palm Avenue, 31"X31", Watercolour on board, 2008, by Paresh Maity




Water, boats, and boatmen and at the most a few palms remain his favourite subjects. However, a visit to Rajasthan seems to have made a deep impression on him, and he made a number of "desertscapes".



Since he has been painting for forty years, the styles have changed over the years; also he has a huge repertoire: broad strokes and dramatic skies, brush strokes and scruffy vegetation, or fine lines and a few crouching figures, all creating drama on the canvas.







"Family discussion", 36"X60", Oil on canvas, 2012, by Paresh Maity


Paresh Maity's oil paintings are striking with their bold colours, and the firm lines of the human faces. He uses a lot of reds, blues, yellows, and all in pretty resplendent hues.


The subjects here are mainly faces and figures in human settings, and also scenes from Indian cities, specially Benares.





"Reflection on water", 60"X60", Oil on canvas,2015 by Paresh Maity



When I caught up recently with the Paresh Maity retrospective, what I enjoyed as much as the paintings was this video. It had the sounds of water, just as the paintings had the visual experience. Both had captured the serenity, joyfulness, playfulness and timelessness of the flow and web of waves at a shore, and you could just be a part of the flow...do have a look at:

A video installation at Paresh Maity's retrospective



Saturday, January 14, 2017

Of Beasts and Men

Many of us have enjoyed the book, songs, movie and TV serials in various adaptations of Rudyard Kipling's "The Jungle Book". Mowgli, the child raised in the jungle by animals; Baloo the bear; Bagheera, the black panther; Kaa, the python; and of course Sher Khan, the tiger; are all characters familiar to us.





But I did not know much about the father of Rudyard Kipling, John Lockwood Kipling, an architectural sculptor (at the Victoria & Albert Museum), curator, illustrator and educator, who taught at the J J School of Art, Mumbai and was Principal at the Mayo School of Industrial Art (now Pakistan's National College of Arts). I first got to see his work from a chance view of media coverage about a forthcoming exhibition at the Victoria & Albert Museum on his works. And that drew me to learn more about this interesting combination


John Lockwood Kipling illustrated the book covers of many of his son's books, like "Under the Deodhars" (seen alongside), and of course, "The Jungle Book". The works were a unique combination of drawings of Indian men, women, beasts, along with western practices of stylised alphabets, line drawings, compositions and sensibilities.



The Jungle Book, and The Second Jungle Book,
with original illustrations
by John Lockwood Kipling (from kobo.com)

For various editions of "The Jungle Book", there were more book covers, illustrations in chapters, and stylised alphabets at the beginning of chapters, like this "R" from the first page of a chapter "The Undertakers":




Illustration for a "Chapter capital" (!895)
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:T2JB423_-_Jungle_Book_capital_R.jpg





There were fantasy drawings too, like this wonderful composition about Mowgli leaving the jungle. There is a large number of illustrations in other publications by John Lockwood Kipling too, like "Beast and man in India: A popular sketch of Indian animals in their relations with the people (1891) and "Tales of the Punjab, told by the people" (1891) both published by MacMillan and Co., London. Both father and son seem to have influenced each other greatly in their books and illustrations. 



Wood carver at Shimla,
pencil and ink drawing, 1970
Both seem to have been keen observers and listeners as well, of common people, their occupations, characters in epics and folk tales. 


This drawing was part of a project, where John Lockwood Kipling was commissioned by the government to tour the North India provinces, and make sketches of craftsmen. 

Thanks to this initiative by the government of the times, and the talent of Lockwood Kipling, we have a wealth of information on dresses, tools and occupations of those times, and all captured in beautiful detail.

I do think with so many of the traditional arts and crafts dying out in
India, such a project in current times would be a great idea too.