Art & Entertainment

Soulmate Show: What바카라™s Symbolic Of Light And Shades on Plantain Leaves?

A group show of paintings and sculptures in Delhi brings together 27 artists from across the country, a few from abroad, too. A closer look at one participant who patterns green and yellow hues at banana gardens:

Soulmate Show: What바카라™s Symbolic Of Light And Shades on Plantain Leaves?
Soulmate Show: What바카라™s Symbolic Of Light And Shades on Plantain Leaves?
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Gireesan Bhattathiripad hasn바카라™t yet named the 35-odd paintings that have evolved as a series over the past six years when he first thought of just converting certain teenage impressions about banana plantations that are aplenty in his part of Kerala. Today, in faraway Delhi, six of them form a noticeable segment of a vibrant show featuring 27 artists from across the country and even abroad.

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As if hinting at the spirit of their get-together, 바카라˜Soulmate바카라™ is the title of the group exhibition being organised in the capital by Easel Stories in association with National Institute of Fine Arts (NIFA). The June 1-4 event at India Habitat Centre was inaugurated on Friday evening by entrepreneur-educationist Naveen Jindal, a former Member of Parliament.

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바카라˜Soulmate바카라™ curator Renu Khera, who founded NIFA in 2005, is glad about having succeeded in lining up a whole range of images under a single roof. 바카라œIt has been an enjoyable journey with its fair amount of thrills and surprises,바카라 says the young cultural enthusiast. 바카라œI바카라™d prefer the participants speak more about their experience.... How the themes evolved within them.바카라

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That sets, for instance, Bhattathiripad바카라™s memories back a good three decades ago when he was intensely learning the nitty gritty of sketching and painting from a locally known teacher at a rugged village around the cusp of Palakkad and Thrissur districts. In 1987, just after his matriculation, the boy from coastal Punnayurkulam (northwest of the temple town of Guruvayur) came to the culturally robust Peringode to study art from Ganapathy Master.

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바카라œI stayed in a small house next to my guru바카라™s. Yet it was virtually gurukul. For, I was there to assist my master in his routine domestic matters,바카라 says Bhattathiripad, now in his mid-40s. 바카라œIt was fun going to the neighbourhood market to buy goods for his needs. He had cows, and to herd them became part of my daily life. He also had a farm in the backyard where we grew lots of vegetables and fruits.바카라

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It was there, in the red-soil terrain, that Bhattathiripad found plantain leaves swaying in the tropical breeze바카라”their linear cut-marks conjuring up visuals that began to appear surreal. 바카라œActually if you notice intensely, those long leaves found in various angles바카라”vertical and horizontal바카라”bear crazy geometric patterns. The sunlight and the patches of shade do have a role in this magic,바카라 he says, standing next to his acrylic-on-canvas works showing radiant human faces amid cleaved banana leaves바카라”images that struck curator Rekha during her visit this Februrary to a Mumbai show where Bhattathiripad바카라™s paintings were on display. 바카라œIt바카라™s another matter that those impressions did take their time to be translated through brushstrokes. That began happening only in 2012.바카라

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Does the transformation of the colour from green to yellow in the 48바카라x24바카라 works signify something? 바카라œYes,바카라 chuckles Gireesan, who has assisted art direction in movies during a 1990-93 stint in Madras, after having got a diploma in drawing and painting from the Government of Kerala. 바카라œIt perhaps symbolises the lessening greenery in Kerala. Yet, there is no much change in the facial expression of the people around. They seem happy-go-lucky.바카라

Pranav Chandra of Easel, which deals with paintings, sculptures, applied arts and photography, says 바카라˜Soulmate바카라™ is a 바카라œsmall step towards a big agenda: promoting art바카라.

The show바카라™s artistes include Jaipur-born Sujata Bajaj (a protĂ©gĂ© of the celebrated S.H. Raza), Fawad Tamkanat (who straddles different media and surfaces), veteran Thota Vaikuntham, Narahari Bhawandla (known for his colourful portrayal of elaborately dressed Telangana people), Ramesh Gorjala and Vivek Kumavat (noticed for his sensitive depiction of Hindu mythological figures), Anantaiah, Deepa Khanna Sobti (a Singaporean national of Indian origin), self-taught, Bahaar Dhawan Rohatgi, Anil Kumar Sinha (also a TV programme producer-director-writer), Singaporean Briton Nidhi Samani, Malaysian S. Chanthiran, Kolkatans Subrata Das, Swasti Pasari, Bratin Khan, Shuvankar Maitra, Arpan Bhowmik, Pune바카라™s Sandeep Chhatraband and Madhuri Bhaduri.

Also featuring are Hyderabadis Sreekanth Kuruva (who portrays animals using mixed media) and R.C. Sharma P. Gnana (whose bronze statue of flute-playing Krishna atop a cow is on display), Niladri Paul, Fawad Tamkanat, S. Subramanian, Shreya Mehta and Anju Sane.

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