Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Oh! My Ganesha




Most-gifted God


Knowledge gets the better of wealth as Ganesha images are more in demand than those of Lakshmi, says Nirupama Dutt



The first European Embassy in Delhi to install Ganesha at its entrance was that of Ireland.
Ours is a culture of gods aplenty. But the most gifted-god remains the good old Ganesha, Ganapati or Vinayak for there are actually 1000 names for him. Gifted, of course, in ways more than one. The lovely elephant-head god with a potbelly and happily riding a mouse far too small for him is the lord of knowledge and wisdom. He is also the lord of prosperity and the symbol for anything auspicious and also the deity who presides over new beginnings.
Come Diwali and he literally becomes the most-gifted as a festival gift. In fact, it even has an edge over Lakshmi, goddess of wealth, as far as its popularity goes Images of Ganesha are wrought in gold, silver, brass, copper and what other metal one may fancy. He is moulded in crystal, sculpted in marble, cast in clay and woven in fabric. This so because he is considered the most auspicious. In fact, he has a romantic Bollywood song of yore dedicated to him: Yadi aap hamein aadesh karein to prem ka ham Shri Ganesh karein...
As the belief goes, gifting this friendly god brings good luck. K. Anuradha, a Tamilian living in Chandigarh says: "The gift of a Ganesha figurine always thrills me. I have nearly 60 Ganeshas at home. My aunt, however, has a collection of 108 for that is the most auspicious number."
Go to the google and enter Ganesha God and there are as many as 86, 143 sites available on him. And this Diwali Ganeshaonline limited is offering the god in 1000 different blessing moods. The gallery promo adds: "The idols and paintings of Ganesha of our Art Gallery are sculpted and painted by devotees of Lord Ganesha. So spread happiness in the lives of your friends and relatives by gifting them idol or painting of Lord Ganesha...and it will add to your happiness."
Interestingly, Ganesha is the most-painted god as far as the contemporary art scene goes. New Delhi has a well-known art gallery called Gallerie Ganesha. And doesn’t it do good business! Online there are as many as 35, 081 galleries selling art inspired by this benevolent son of Parvatil. Other gods like the more worshipped Rama and Krishna trail way behind.
Ask painters why they choose to paint Ganapati and the reply invariably is: "It is such an interesting form and one can play with it so well." Sounds convincing but asked city-based artist Balvinder, who has also painted Ganesha and his reply is: "The form is interesting but the real reason is that Ganesha is wanted even in art. So artists turn to him so that their works sell and they survive."

Global Ganesha
There are as many as 250 temples of Ganesha in Japan. He is known there as Kangiten who brings good fortune and happiness.
Ganesha is the presiding deity at the Silicon Valley in the USA because he is the god of knowledge and innovation.
Ancient Ganesha statues have been found in Afghanistan, Iran, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, China, Mongolia, Japan, Indonesia, Boreni, Bulgaria, and Mexico and other Latin American countries.
The first European Embassy in Delhi to install Ganesha at its entrance was that of Ireland.

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Satish Gujaral on the Old and the New




Sounding A New Start

Nirupama Dutt

The colours are brighter. The mood of the compositions is playful. Singing sparrows, chattering parrots, bleating goats, blowing horns and tinkling bells have found their way onto the canvases as the native returns to his studio from the oblivion of silence to the world of marginal sound.

``I am more keenly aware of the sounds around me,’’ says Gujral. ``I cannot decipher voices, but merely hearing my own voice has made a difference. I am more in control of my voice and able to use a varying pitch. And I think the lightness that I feel is reflected in my paintings, too. Earlier, I had to imagine the world of sound. Now I am well within it.’’

Gujral chooses not to label his works and also makes no intellectual pretensions. Each work has resulted from a mood that in turn had evolved from an aesthetic experience. The ultimate expression is a celebration of life.
But the celebration is in no way superficial. It has its roots. Roots that run deep into a tradition of art. ``Artistically, as I grow older, my adoration for craftsmanship is becoming more intense, as does my search for a new identity,’’ says Gujral. ``For the past few years, I’ve been trying to re-establish the lost link with the Indian kalam (Gujral’s metaphor for old Indian styles). It is towards this direction that I seem to be turning to in this phase of my life. I seem to be looking more and more towards our tradition of miniature painting.’’

Gujral has been fully aware of the dangers of addressing the past. There’s a certain risk of seeming pretentious or repetitive. But the artist argues, as though with himself: ``Rejection of the past is worse than the imitation of it. I am not much attracted to futurism. All this futuristic talk of the new century or, still more, the next millennium, leaves me cold. The future has nothing to give you. It is you who builds the future. And what you build the future with is your past.’’

It is the dilemma of a creative person who belongs to a culture that has a rather heavy burden of traditions. There’s a hesitation that borders on fear the fear of referring to traditions, lest one is entrapped in them. ``No, I believe this to be absolutely wrong,’’ explains Gujral. ``The reward in harking back to the past is that by doing so, one gets an identity. And this can be had in no other way. Before me was the example of architecture. Architects stopped using the features of our great monuments of the past: the domes, the arches, the decorative details. These were shunned like the plague. The result was the architecture of today which has no identity. I tried to violate these rules by using domes and arches. They were made fun of an I was called a `pseudo’. But these lived to see acceptance.’’

His experiments with architecture made him bolder when he returned to his paintings choosing the way of the Indian Kalam, with its emphasis on detail, its decorative elements, its realism, and an exquisite order of craftsmanship. These paintings follow a style that is to be seen in his canvases of the past decade and have yet a great emphasis on detail as well as the joy of working minutely in the cult of a craftsman of yore. Not just the paintings, his granite sculptures, too, which are very modern in form and yet embellished with the fine work that comes from tradition. ``One of the casualties of modernism has been craftsmanship,’’ laments the artist. ``In the name of abstraction, workmanship was cast aside.’’

But what about his own experience, for abstraction is very much a part of his creative journey, and it is evident even in his present work? ``Abstraction, yes. But not at the cost of workmanship,’’ emphasises Gujral. ``I have never surrendered to this temptation. I started, in fact, with figurative work. The Partition paintings stand testimony to the fact that I know how to draw. In later years, just as a poet breaks lines to infuse them with rhythm, I mixed abstraction with reality. The point is that faulty language does not make poetry. A faulty drawing similarly, cannot get away in the name of abstraction.’’

Coming to the new thematic elements in Gujral’s work, which reflect the joy of hearing after a long silence spanning over six decades, one cannot but ask him this question. No matter how tormented he was by his disability, yet if it were not for this, he may never have been an artist.

Gujral is quick with a reply: ``Sure, I wouldn’t have been an artist. I would never have gone to Lahore’s Mayo School of Arts. Like any other middleclass family. Mine would have liked to see me in a profession that earned me a good living.”
Satish Gujral on the Partition
Days of Freedom

Satish Gujral recounts the traumatic days of Partition and the paintings born out of the experience to Nirupama Dutt

It takes times for the images to crystallize in the mind and move onto the canvas. More so if one is right in the midst of the catastrophe. So it was with Gujral who thus recalls the holocaust: ``With unceasing catastrophes as the backdrop, millions were moving. With frightening regularity, the stress would be accentuated, much like the scratchy interruptions in an old movie, which blur the vision and distract the mind yet keep alive one's awareness of reality by giving way occasionally to short, clear footage.''

It was five years later that the artist gave one of the most memorable paintings on the theme: `Days of Freedom'. There is just the suggestion of the health in the background and two figures shrouded in shawls sit outside, their entire being distorted by grief. The hands of one figure are concealed and eyes covered. Yet, the twisted lips shriek out a silent scream. The hands of the other figure are exposed—one stretched out and the other holding back with the taut muscles and the bulging knuckles bearing witness to the humiliation.

``In August, 1947, I came back to Lahore after completing my course at the JJ School of Arts, Bombay. I was all set to open a Graphics' studio to provide multimedia training. My father was a member of the Constituent Assembly. With the Partition, his home constituency having fallen on the Pakistani side, his membership was transferred to Parliament of the new dominion of Karachi. My parents and all other family members were in Karachi. I was in Lahore with the old family servant, Partap, as companion,'' recalled Gujral seated at the long banquet table in the beautiful dining room of his redbrick mansion at Lajpat Nagar.

What was Lahore like then? ``It was burning. It seemed that nothing would be left of it. When Lord Mountbatten visited Lahore in the third week of July,5 per cent of the inner town and 1 per cent of the total city had been destroyed. Half the Hindu population had already fled. Many had just gone to drop their families and valuables on the safer side for no one knew where Lahore would go. In July, Jawaharlal Nehru had said the Ravi river be considered the boundary line so the Hindus continued to stay in Lahore,'' said Gujral.
But with the advent of the blood-soaked August, it became clear that Lahore would go to Pakistan. Gujral said, ``Things flared up and Hindus were fleeing with what they could on their heads. I decided to move too but to the interiors of Pakistan, my village Jhelum. Since there was no money with me, I asked our servant Partap to go to the railway station with our bags and I would arrange for some money and join him there. That was not to be. For whoever went to the railway station never came back as it was the scene of the worst killings. That was the last I saw of Partap.''

Gujra, made his way to the Lajpat Rai Bhawan, which was some three to four kilometers away from his home to meet Lala Achint Ram, a friend of his father's and also the father of Vice-President Krishan Kant. ``His home was overflowing with people who had moved there from other parts of the city. Lalaji was making forays into the subrbs to bring people to safety. The DAV college hostel had been converted into a refugee camp of sorts overflowing with some 50,000 people,'' Gujral remembered.

From that day Gujral's education had begun in human misery: death, destruction and desolation. The next eight months he spent with his father in rescuing abducted girls and taking them across the border. ``Every time we were able to rescue a girl, we drove down straight to Amritsar or Jalandhar. The tragedy was doubled when these girls would not be accepted by their families,'' said the artist who was to be nicknamed in the next few years as the Painter of the Partition.

Partition was the theme of the paintings Gujral did from 1947 to 1950 working with intensity and passion. Uma Vasudev commented thus on the work of this period, ``The material for his inspiration was at hand; the disaster of the Partition of India and its attendant personal tragedies for a multitude of uprooted people. This was no drawing room art. It hurt – could suffering be so inevitable? It offended – could man do this to man?''
Canvas after canvas, he relived the pain of the worst kind of bloodshed in history. `Mourning', `Return of the Abducted', Dance of Destruction', The Rehabilitated' and `The Condemned' are the very well-known works of these three years. He then went to Mexico and the sad experiences of these days followed him and were reborn with heightened intensity and a breakthrough in the form in works like `Snare of Memory' and much later `The Shrine'.
Years later Gujral wondered on contemplating on the Partition paintings whether the element of despair was induced by his experience of the Holocaust or whether it was the trauma of his own inner compulsions. He grew up speechless and ridiculed in a world which has little care for the deaf and dumb. Gujral's answer to his own query was that these works were born of his own compulsions within for no external happening could have triggered them. But what comes closer to the truth is that he internalized the external and thus these paintings of the partition were born.


Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Feminine Fables




Kanchan Chandra celebrates feminine mystique , writes Nirupama Dutt



The torso is a much-celebrated form in sculpture since ancient times in both classical and folksy traditions with the unclothed human figure worked out in perfect proportions in a symphony of harmonious beauty. One of the most famous torsos of the Greek Hellenistic period is that of Goddess Aphrodite. It dates back to 4th century BC. The torso is worked out in fascinating positions in the tradition of Indian iconography. Seeking inspiration from the allure of the headless busts, painter Kanchan Chander has used this form to make a contemporary statement, both as an artist and as a woman. There is an amazing simplicity as well as delicacy as she tackles the monumental proportions of the female bust.
In her creative journey, this artist moves through layers of experience to celebrate the feminine mystique. Born in Delhi’s Karol Bagh, Chander got a chance to study art in Germany and Chile as her father was in the Indian Foreign Service. Later she got a scholarship to study printmaking at Ecole des Beaux Arts, Paris. In 1993, she got a British Council fellowship to visit art institutions in London and study contemporary art. The exposure provided to her abroad, Along with an intense Indian experience, has gone into shaping her work. Chander seeks forms from Shakti and then moves to the experience of motherhood, which is both personal and universal.
In the female torsos, she address both sexuality and fertility – the female energy that shapes the world of Indian textiles in her art. ``This happens because I have been translating the femainine experience in my works,’’ says Chander. ``It is amazing to see the trouble women take to search out these embellishments from shops tucked away in narrow lanes. For many women, adorning the self is power.’’Her recent torsos are worked in silver and gold leaf on painted canvas. In these works she reaches out to a fine abstraction from within the figurative form.
She has also been adventurious in the frames and supports for her paintings. When she renovated her home, she did not feel like discarding the doors and windows. And these became props for her paintings. Her painted windows and doors were a complete sellout. ``But I did not repeat the exercise because just in case they had remained with me, how would I have stored them,’’she says with a laugh. Yet another of her experiment which has come in for a log of appreciation is painting on thakktis or wooden boards which are still used as slates by primary school children in remote areas.
Flor Chander, the aesthetic experience is never at odds with her social responses. Art for her cannot exist in a vacuum and both the creator and the creation are placed in a given social situation. Yet as a woman, she shows the openness of the post-feminist times in which she does not shy away from reclaiming the skills which old granny knew so well. Thus the brilliant poetry of her sequined cow by the vivid blue river or beads which clothe her torso.
Here is an artist who celebrates feminity in form and content: the painter of the new century who is not apologetic for being a woman and painting like one. As her friend and collaborative artist Helen Geier puts it: ``The ebbs and flows of Kanchan’s life have spilled over in her work, both consciously and subconsciously.’’ The outcome is as pleasing to the eye as it is to the mind.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

On Manjit Bawa in better days














'Me Elephant, He Dog': Manjit loved playing the showman , says Nirupama Dutt

Master painter Manjit Bawa strikes a pose with muse Ina Puri, both dressed in gala white --striking against the vivid red of a painted canvas. The caption to this story in a national daily goes thus: ``Me elephant, he dog.’’

Now what could the matter be? Perhaps the reference is to the year-long controversy in which Manjit’s apprentice, Mahender Soni, alleged that he had painted many of the master’s paintings. Manjit had kept a staid silence for long, only choosing to break it now that his recent show of drawing and paintings at Maurya Sheraton has been received with unprecedented enthusiasm.

The Tamasha of Indian Art

Artists, for they deal a lifetime in human emotions, are closer to the felt rather than the cerebral. Our artists give a fine display of it well into their silver-haired years. Take the inimitable
Abba Husain who spent a fortune just trying to prove a point of fetish with `Gaja Gamini’. Then there is Chacha Satish Gujral who pouted unhappily when the NGMA didn’t put up a retrospective in honour of his ----birthday. A before Checni (elder sister in Malayalam) Anjolie Ela menon had actually cut through a woman’s torso-breasts, navel et al ---in delicious sponge and chocolate icing at her 60th birthday bash. Given this merry scenario, Bhatija Manjit Bawa can get away cavorting with current muse Ina Puri.
Mirth apart, it is Manjit’s talent as a painter and draughtsman which causes one to dismiss what he has said, to see what he has drawn. Everything is achieved in minimal form, with great economy of line in his special style-- the outcome of a lifetime of struggle with form and medium. An apprentice can assist in it, he can also make pale copies but the credit for the form is with the master painter. Coming at a time such as this, the exhibition just crushes the controversy. The importance of being Manjit Bawa lies in the fact that his work has to be seen, not heard, to be believed.

When the cows came home

His journey began with the cows of Dhuri, a small town in the Malwa region of Punjab. ``My father was a timber merchant there and he used to regularly patronize the Goshala. So I learnt to love for animals early enough,’’ recalls Manjit. A slump in his father’s business made them move to Delhi where his father worked as a construction contractor. ``My father would always bring home an interestingly shaped stone or a piece of wood. Thus I learnt to be aware to shapes.’’ He studied in Delhi Polytechinc’s School of Art but went there first to be a model to his older brother who was studying drawing.
``A tall gangly youth with a turban on my head, I used to feel shy among the artists. So I’d doodle in my sketchbook as I posed for them. These sketches interested my guru Abani Sen. Bengalis dominated the art scene in Delhi. I would often be sniggered at for being a Punjabi and dreaming of learning art. But I was determined to show them. When my show at Calcutta some three years ago was a great success, I felt I had done my Master Babu proud,’’ he says. Well, that’s Manjit all over for you--happy as a child at making a point.

All you Need is Love

Talking of his early days, Majnjit says, ``In the late fifties, I started cycling through the plains and hills of India -- a great experience. Come holidays, and I would start my cycling expeditions aimed at seeing new sights and bringing them home in my sketchbooks.’’ In 1964, he did an overland journey from India to England and taught painting at the Institute of Adult Education there and also worked as a silkscreen painter, evolving new techniques. After returning, he worked in the silk screen workshop which he established at the Garhi studios for many years it was here that he started attracting notice for his painting and befriended artists like J. Swaminathan, Krishen Khanna, Paramjit Singh and Arpita Singh, friendships that lasted a lifetime.

``If one is to look for a turning point in my career, it came with the November 1984 riots which disturbed me as much as the killing of innocents in Punjab by terrorists. In life, I started singing
Sufi poetry that spoke of love for all. Instead of painting hatred, I started painting love,’’ recounts Manjit. Thus it was a new coming in Sufi robes. It was also when corporate funds flowed into contemporary art. Manjit Bawa’s art, as well as his colourful personality, stood out. Soon he was the painter to look for after Husain.

Did he have to pay a price for being a celebrity? ``You see there is always a price. One wants to be known a little more and then a little more and before one knows, one is caught. However, my hotel in Dalhousie always remained a fine retreat after an overdose of socializing. And some things never changed. I still like to wash my clothes myself and all through I took care of my physically challenged son who was born deaf and dumb. My son also taught me patience, which is crucial to an artist. I have never talked of this for I do not like to draw sympathy,’’ says Manjit.
Another much-envied aspect of his life are the pretty women who have surrounded him all his life. Blushing, Manjit says: ``You see an artist cannot escape women. They are the buyers, promoters and critics.’’ Ina Puri, who has him by his painting, chips in, ``That’s all a thing of the past and now there is only one woman.’’

In their pact of art and more, she is the youthful and supportive anchor he needs and she is quite right when she declares, ``I am the woman behind Manjit’s show.’’ The difference is showing for sure.
January 11, 1999
Wishing Manjit Bawa Well
The critical medical condition of celebrated painter Manjit Bawa at the peak of the art season has cast a gloom in the art circles. City artists wish him well and recount his achievements to Nirupama Dutt
The past two decades that saw a major boom for contemporary art in the country have in a way had painter Manjit Bawa as a central player. The talented painter made long strides in achieving a celebrity status home and abroad, crossing over from pure art to a showmanship of a kind that such fame usually entails. Controversy surrounded him in the past few years, as there were accusations against him for hiring junior artists to do his works. However, Manjit continued painting and showing, inaugurating events in his silk kurtas and pashmina shawls, singing Sufiana songs and cooking Punjabi food at Lohrhi and Baisakhi festival dos and winning over feminine hearts even though he had stepped into his Sixties.
The painter born at Dhuri in 1941 always had very close ties with Pun jab and the city and many of his friends, associates and admirers were shocked when he was moved to a super-specialty hospital in Delhi following a brain haemorrage on December 17. Put on life-support systems, his condition remains critical still and many are voicing their concern for one of the finest painters of our times and wishing him well. Chandigarh-based painter Balvinder, who also belongs to Dhuri, says: “Manjit is one of our best painters and we hope that he will recover and get back to his work. He was the first to make the flat use of colour, inspired by the traditional miniatures. He remained an inspiration to many and he was a trendsetter.”
Manjit’s figurative work and use of bright colours is daring and impressive. A master colourist, his figures of Krishna with the flute or eating a banana short him into recognition. He was at equal ease painting acrobats as well as animal figures ranging from the mighty lone to the holy cow and the docile goat. Deeply disturbed by communal rioting and violence, he, however, never reacted directly but chose the artist’s way by showing harmony of the animal world or gentle figures culled from folk legends and myth. Commenting on his work and persona, theatre director Neelam Mansingh says, “I wish he comes back to his own. I got to know him at the Bharat Bhavan at Bhopal in the Eighties. He would sing Sufi songs and was the life and soul of any party. His paintings too are very special and he is one of the leading artists of our times.”
Painter Malkit Singh, who spoke to the painter’s older brother Manmohan Singh, says: “The news is very depressing. I have had a very fond association with him. He is a great painter and also a great friend exuding Punjabiat.” .Manjit is a major painter and one wishes him well.” Yes, one does hope that Manjit recovers and gets back to his painting and singing. Of course, his cooking too and one waits for a Lohrhi when he will play chef with aplomb with his favourite menu of ‘Machhli Amritsari’, ‘Jallandhari Chicken Tikka’, ‘Punjab Kadhi’ and much more.

Friday, November 28, 2008










Every life has a story…




…and the art lies in the fact that how well can it be told on paper, canvas or stage. Viren Tanwar is one of the few artists who has done his city proud by painting well the saga of life, says Nirupama Dutt




They come in a horde to study at the Chandigarh’s College of Art. The reasons for being here vary. Some come to make a career in teaching, others merely because they somehow managed to get admission here and some just to while away their time. There are very few who come here with the dream of becoming an artist. Or for that matter, very few have the ability to be an artist. But in every other batch there are one or two students who find the place conducive for their talent to take wing and fly and one gasps and says: One flew over the painter’s nest.
SHOW MUST GO ON: ‘Circus-Circus’ is the name of the show of some 20 paintings that Viren Tanwar has painted under the collective title of ‘Story without an end’. The works highlight the balancing act that the human species are always performing either alone or in unison.This show will open at the Apparao Galleries at Chennai on November 27.
Class of 1974
The Class of 1974 had one such bright boy, surprisingly a Jaat from an aristocratic family of Hisar. While other boys of the family chose to study law and engineering, this one would settle for nothing but art. His name was Viren Tanwar and when one came out as reporter covering the city’s art scene in the late-Seventies, Viren with his lean-and-tall aesthetic looks was already towering over it. One knew him less but his paintings stood out in the group shows and one could not but, call them ‘outstanding’ in the limited art vocabulary at hand.
Viren was as painterly as he came and this made him a favourite teacher to many as well as inspiration when he started teaching in the same college that had groomed him. But now looking back, one feels that what was most striking was the dignity that he imparted to the human form even when he was dealing with the gross. And this week one is face-to-face with the canvases of this painter who has indeed done the city, his friends and family as well as his faithful students proud by passing through the rough and tumble of life to paint the ‘Story without an end…’
Art & life
This is the title of the paintings that Viren has put together in a show at the Apparao Galleries in Chennai on November 27 and Viren is at his narrative best and his work has matured in the cellar of his creativity and what makes him special is that he retains his ability to laugh at life and what it brings; sometimes the smile of his five-month-young grandson and sometimes the hurt of recalling the past, which can only be described by the title of a Dostoevsky novel: ‘Insulted and Humiliated’. But it was not Viren’s lot alone. We all dreamy-eyed children of the Seventies suffered so in one way or the other. Some got lost on the way, others called it quits and some were destined to live through it all and rise phoenix-like from the ashes.
Anyway the only humiliation for a creative spirit is that she/he be alienated from one’s own art. “Well, it nearly happened and making a living and looking after the more worldly needs there were times I felt that I would never be able to paint with the fervour that I had in youth,” says Viren. But it has happened and once again this blue-eyed artist of the city is soaring in ‘Circus-Circus’, the title for his show that is going to Chennai. One chuckles with Viren, for taking the Circus to Chennai is typically ‘ulate baans Bareli ko’ and that is what has been more challenging to the artist as he has struck balance with the acrobats, mind you the girls have blossoms in their hair. And the colours, Viren has used are the bright and vivid hues of Kanchivaram silks. So there is a riot of oranges, reds, greens, blues magentas and what have you.
A jingle again
Yes, Viren haven’t these fifty odd years of our lot been such a circus! We were condemned not just to watch from the wings Kabir-like the ‘jag ka mujra’ but very often wear the bells on our ankles and go ajingle right there midst the jeering crowd. But it has been worth it for the moments lived in life and art. Knowing the likes of us, we may yet again get down to acrobatics. But Viren would say that when did we ever leave the acrobatics. We were performing the Circus and we continue to do so. Ours is indeed a story without an end: happy or sad!

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Baroda Blues



Washed, wrung and hung by Yunus Khimani (top) and Muslims around the Mosque by Bhupen Khakhar

Tree of Fire: Baroda after the Gujarat carnage

This story was written by Nirupama Dutt in the summer of 2002, based on the reaction of artists and writers to the unprecedented violence in Gujarat

There is an uneasy calm in Baroda this summer. The ancient, emaciated Vishwamitri meanders silently below the ornate bridge of the city. The old banyan trees with their long beards digging into the soil slumber amidst the shrieks of crows. These trees gave Baroda its original name. The Vadodara of today gets its name from the ancient Vatapadraka--`home of the banyan trees’.

But with the slightest caress of the summer breeze the banyans wake up startled, their leaves rustling. They seem to be deciphering the language of the winds. Does the breeze bring tidings of good seasons or of more sorrow? These wise old trees had never seen such a season of grief. Many a sad tale can be read on the green leaves, of the events that took place in this Sanskar Nagri (cultural city) of Gujarat.

Baroda is back in the business of living. But the grand dome of the university and the tall, embellished tower that crowns the sprawling Laxmi Vilas Palace, lending an old-world charm to the city’s skyline, now intruded upon by high-rises, have a forlorn air. They have seen the proud Barodans humbled and fear instilled in the very air they breathe. At Tandalja Road, sadly referred to as `Mini Pakistan” because it is a suburb inhabited by Muslims, one sees many new huts and shanties. They belong to the people who fled their homes in the walled city and nearby villages this March for fear of being lynched or burnt alive. The mosque in the heart of the colony wears a vibrant coat of green paint, but there is a note of anxiety in the voice of the Mullah as it rises in azaan at the evening hour. People sit around the mosque but there are no smiles, no laughter, only tired faces and vacant eyes.
Is life imitating art? For the scene has something familiar about it. In March this year, we saw two large paintings by Bhupen Khakhar, the famous artist of this city, exhibited in Delhi. Titled Muslims around the mosque I & II, these paintings in blue and green tones capture the everyday scenes of Muslim life. A woman in a burqa, elders in conference, a man eating a rumali roti, or yet another reading the holy Quran. The painted scenes are calm and the colour tones are of dreams and innocence. Yet the artist conveys a sense of apprehension with the scenes divided into frames, a suggestion of distant horizons and a few flowers fallen from a vase onto the tablecloth. It is as though the peace of this everyday life could be disrupted at any moment. What is visible may be lost all too soon. They are like painted prayers for the joy of living. Executed in 2001, these paintings came to Delhi after the carnage had begun in Gujarat. There was something prophetic about them. Poets and painters are prophets of a kind. Seated on a mat in his home in Madhuram Mohalla off Tandalja road, Aziz Qadri—a respected poet of the progressive tradition—recites verses against the khoon ki Holi (bloodbath). It was written months before the bloodshed actually took place. ``It is not as though I am a prophet. The mood was tense in Gujarat. And these tensions are created by politicians—otherwise what happened is unthinkable in our Sanskar nagri.’’

The sculptor nagji patel echoes Qadri’s sentiments. An alumnus of the famed Faculty of Fine Arts of the Maharaj Sayajirao University, he says, ``This violent Baroda is not the city we know. But the whole business is political.’’ Nagji patel gave a contemporary symbol to the banyan city. At the Fatehganj Chowk on the Ahmedabad road stands his tall sculpture of twin banyan trees, sculpted in pale pink sandstone. In the exquisitely carved foliage are birds, bees and monkeys in happy togetherness. Hailing from a small village in Karjan Taluka, Nagji recalls his days in the College of Fine
Arts: ``Every day, we would go to Kamati Bagh and do our exercises in sculpting birds and animals in the zoo. And these friends of my youth found their way into the banyan Tree sculpture that I made in 1992.’’

This princely town in southern Gujarat has nurtured many an artistic talent and been a home to some famous artists and poets. It is a beautiful city of gardens, campuses, museums, palaces, playing fields and libraries. The secular traditions of art is has nurtured make it difficult to associate Baroda with violence. But for the past few decades, this city too has been enveloped by flames the violated its essential character. The city came into prominence in the 18th century and most of its monuments were built in the following century, during the enlightened rule of maharaja Sayaji Rao Gaekward III (1881-1939). The Maharaja appointed two British engineers, R.F. Chisolm and Major R.N. Mant, as state architects. And the architectural landmarks of the city have a happy and picturesque blending of the East, with both Hindu and Muslim elements, and the West. Baroda’s artistic tradition dates back to ancient times: bronze sculptures have been excavated in the western suburb of Akota. This was the site of the ancient Ankotakka, which flourished between 2000 BC and 1100 AD. The Tambedkar Wada, built in the mid-19th century, has murals depicting both Hindu myths and the changing lifestyles of the Parsis, who became Westernised long before other Gujaratis. The list of luminaries in art, literature and other fields who were invited to live and work in Baroda is quite impressive. The M.S. University is unique in many ways —it is the only fully residential varsity with all affiliated colleges on campus, and completely autonomous since the chancellor is not the governor of the state, as in other universities. Aurobindo Ghose, the revolutionary freedom fighter who later became a seer, was on its facultyu and his residence in Baroda is now a museum. Hakim Kale, the poet who taught Emperor bahadur Shah Zafar, belonged to this city. The legendary Urdu poet Mirza Ghalib was his guest in Baroda for six months after the 1857 siege of Delhi.

Faiyaz Khan, the founder of the Agra gharana, was invited by the Maharaja to move to Baroda and he lived, sang and taught here till his death in the 1950s. The city paid him homage by building a mausoleum over his grave. Qadri recalls, ``It was a delight to hear Faiyaz Khan Sahib sing raga jaijaiwanti. Khan Sahib kept his doors open to all music lovers. You could just to in and sit by his side as he did his riyaz (practice).’’ It was his mazar that the riote3rs desecrated by flinging burning tyres on it. But that’s not as had as what happened in Ahmedabad, where the tomb of the much –loved poet Wali Dakhani, also known as Wali Gujarati, was completely destroyed by rioters. And the administration was quick to erase all traces of the tomb by laying a tarred road over it, right in the thick of the riots. Qadri reads out a poem called Wali Dakhani ka Shehar Ahmedabad, in which he reiterates that he has no desire, no wish and no intention of visiting the city. The poet Ehsan Jafri was killed along with eighteen people in Ahmedabad, and the house of another well-known poet, Kismet Qureshi, was burnt down.

Holding back his angry tears, Qadri says, ``When the situation returned to normal, I had someone calling on me and asking me to recite a poem at a qaumi ekta (communal unity) meeting. I told them that unity is fine, but do not use the word `communal’, for communal unity would now mean burning me alive at Liberty Fountain.’’ He points to rare manuscripts and books, the only treasures of his poor home, and says, ``My fear is that these too may be burnt one day.’’

The fear is not unfounded. Outside the city, in the posh and cosmopolitan area of Sama Road, Physics professor J.S. Bandukwala’s house—complete with its large library—was burnt down. An activist of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties, he was a marked man. When the rioters first came to burn down the house, his Hindu neighbours prevented it. They the neighbours were threatened and all they could do was help the professor and his daughter escape, even as their home was reduced to ashes. The professor has gone to see his son in the US. Will he return, and will the house be rebuilt? Maybe, but something very vital has been burnt down for all times.
Fire has become the obvious symbol in the works of many Baroda artists who, like Qadri, seek catharsis through creativity. No, the muses are not silent in Baroda, for this is a city which has long nurtured the traditions of art. Unhappily, the frames today encase symbols of the stove, the gas cylinder or the burning cigarette. Vasudev Akkitham’s watercoour, Dawn, shows two people from two different faiths, holding onto each other and watching their city burn. While the work spells some hope in togetherness, there is also a feeling of helplessness in not being able to quell the fire. Debraj Goswami shows a uniformed phantom figure riding a white horse while a cigarette burns the very body of the horse. A mixed-media work by Vijay Bagodi, in which Gandhi is shown with his back turned to a scene of death and violence. The recurring image of Gandhi is only natural, for the land of his birth has seen the worst violence since Partition. Is it the land of the Mahatma who preached non-violence? Where and how does an artist find a positive image? In Trupti Patel’s mixed media work…that humanity forgot the pain is reflected in figures sprawled on the ground, each systematically burned with a lit agarbati. Fluttering birds, a pyramid of blood and a woman in water are images K. K .Muhammed uses with a touch of irony in A Course in General Guilt. However, artist Rekha Rodwittia offers hope in the symbol of a nurturing woman swallowing the fire that surrounds her, an invocation to mother earth, as it were.

That image has another resonance too. One of Raja Ravi Verma’s most famous paintings, Sita Bhumi Pravesh, which he painted during his stay in baroda, depicts mother earth coming to the rescue of Sita. The Baroda court artists have included well-known names like the Italian painter Augusto Felici and the mother and daughter team of Sass and Elizabeth Brunner. The German art historian and Indologist Herman Goetz refashioned the Baroda Museum and later joined the Faculty of Fine Arts. A very important phase in the art history of Baroda is the period of Raja Ravi Varma, who took up residence here on the invitation of the Maharaja. He painted some of his best-known works here. If the maharaja, on the one hand, patronized the Western, derivative art of Ravi Varma, he also had the vision to take note of the upsurge of talent in the Bengal school and invited Nandalal Bose to make the murals in the Kirti mandir.

The faculty of Fine Arts, set up soon after Independence, drew on the rich artistic heritage of the city to create one of the finest art institutions in the country. Hansa Mehta, the first vice chancellor, laid down the territory that contemporary artists were to explore: `We have lost our originality and either copy the Western forms of art or the ancient Indian forms. The student is expected to study both these forms but is also expected to strike out on a new path if he wishes to contribute his share in the advancement of art…’ The best names in the field of art and culture were associated with the establishment of the art college. In 1949, Markand Bhatt, who had done a stint at the Barner Foundation in Philadelphia, was invited to set up the faculty. Some of the most talented artists from all over the country were invited to come and teach. They included N.S. Bendre, Prodosh Dasgupta, Sankho Chaudhuri and, some time later, K G Subramanyan. It was the relentless effort of these pioneering artist-teachers and their successors that resulted in a contemporary gharana of visual art—the Baroda School.
It is interesting to view the artistic journey of two towering artists of the Boroda School – Gulammohammed Sheikh, who is today a father figure, and Bhupen Khakhar, a celebrated painter who charted his own course and remains a close associate and friend of Sheikh. A writer, critic and painter, Sheikh—after Behdre and Subramanyan – has been a major influence on the Baroda artists. Sheikh’s paintings have a rich narrative style with elements taken from Indian miniatures but intermingled with his personal and social concerns. Sheikh focuses on land-scapes, but they are never without human presence – there is either an actual human figure or part of the human dwelling:the hut, the door, the wall or courtyard. And there is a very interesting relationship between the outer and the inner worlds, beginning at a tangible point and suggesting the intangible.

Sheikh’s artistic journey, which began when he was a small boy in Kathiawar and took flight in the city of Baroda, has been a long one. Among his most significant works is City for Sale, executed on an epic scale in 1981-84, which is now in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Communal riots are its theme and the painter confronts the chaos, disaster and blasphemy. The irony of the situation comes through in the vegetables bouncing out of the pushcart and men being stripped to ascertain whether they are Hindu or Muslim! Discussing the painting, Sheikh says, ``our rich and valuable experience of diversity in faiths, ideologies, attitudes, has been brutalized by successive bands of Mafiosi, who have subverted the process of continuous transformation that this wonderful mix should normally lead to. My painting is about the irony and absurdity of this brutalization. This is how my city of Baroda, like other Indian cities, has been brutalized.’’

What makes it a sad journey for the painter or writer of the subcontinent is the fact that the brutalization is a continuous process with fires of communal discord moving from city to city, village to village. One painting is not enough, even if it is on an epic scale. The creative person is compelled to return to the same theme time and again. The historian, the activist, the journalist and the artist are forced to seek out secular symbols and throw them up to the world. The past and present, the inner and the outer mingle as they do on Sheikh’s canvas. The people of Gujarat have relived the terror of Partition this spring. Talking of the trauma, Qadri invokes Manto:``Manto had said at the time of Partition, don’t say five lakh Hindus have died or five lakh Muslims have died. Say ten lakh human beings have died.’’ Saadat Hasan Manto, chronicler of the horrors of partition in Urdu prose, remains relevant till date. Though I am a Manto fan, a question nags me every time I see yet another production of Tuba Tek Singh on stage, or yet another translation of his writings – is it the power of his pen that moves us or is it that we have refused to learn from history? Perhaps a bit of both. Or perhaps it suits the powers that be to repeat history, regardless of human agony?
It is here that the painter or the writer comes in, in the gap that even the historian shies away from. For some years, Sheikh has been contesting the claim of the political over the religious domain by reclaiming the sacred space. The result has been a series of evocative Kabir paintings in which the artist seeks to represent the saint as an icon of the age. But in times that are so brutalized that the unborn child is the target of rioters, the scheming fundamentalist is the hero, and all human values are up for sale, does anyone care for a Kabir or a manto? A burning tyre would probably have been the lot of kabir in India today, as the mental asylum was the lot of a Manto in the Pakistan of yesterday. But Kabir will sing a secular song, mando will write of rivers changing their course and Sheikh will pant The Flock and the Guardian, taking the cue from Kabir in which the wonder of a lion guarding a herd of cattle is reconstructed in the present context. It is a dismal canvas of life that Sheikh confronts in his Pratapganj home in Baroda: ``We may try to console ourselves by saying that what happened in Baroda is less in magnitude than what happened in Ahmedabad. Violence has become a part of this city. Baroda has a strong secular tradition but we artists, writers and academics are confined to art colleges, little magazines and seminar halls. We have little contact with the masses. The national press, however, played a good role in the Gujarat violence. The only ray of hope is that even through all this Saurashtra saw no violence.’’

Bhupen Khakhar was a chartered accountant in Bombay till he came to Baroda to study art criticism. And he stayed on to become one of the leading artists of the country. Free of a conventional art training, Khakhar dared to experiment freely, using popular images and materials. He delights in calling himself a completely apolitical artist and has shocked many by painting images of homosexual life. The human predicament shown in an ironic light is his forte. However, his recent works have strong images of violence. Commenting on this, the social historian Sudhir Chandra says, ``Never before was it so black as it is in the paintings here… Is there some threshold of pain beyond which – even for an inveterate teaser like Bhupen Khakhar – no alleviation, no laughing device, remains within reach? In our time, this is an unnerving thought: the exhaustion of the possibility to laugh or laugh off.’’ Committed, like Sheikh, to painting the Indian reality, Khakhar cannot but find violence and death invading the frames of his paintings. Along with his portrayal of the Muslims around the mosque, that was discussed earlier, are paintings like Bullet Shot in the Stomach and Beauty is Skin Deep Only in which death and destruction loom large. Recently, he also exhibited huge cutouts with garishly painted cine-stars on one side and images of violence on the other.

It is not easy for the artist to find the imagery to paint the terror of butchered innocents. One of the most horrifying instances of violence was the burning down of the Best Bakery at Hanuman Tekhri on March 1. All the Muslims had moved out of that area except the baker’s widow and his family, who were still running the bakery. The family stayed on because an influential person of the area assured them safety and protection. However, it was that very person who led a mob and 14 persons were brutally burnt alive or hacked to pieces while the police looked the other way. Zahira Habihullah’s account of the violence is repelling: ``My mother kept begging that she had no support except for her sons. Our three Hindu servants’ stomachs were slit open. Two of my brothers were burnt alive; two others were tied up and torched …’’ But such are the things that happened, and worse too.
Any artistic intervention in such a situation must go beyond cliché. And how do aesthetics figure in the orgy of death and destruction? However, the Baroda artists , many of them young, have shown sensitivity in dealing with the onslaught of violence and honesty in facing it. Accepting the reality of this one-sided killing of members of the minority community, Sheikh says, ``Some of us are condemned to live in terror and the divide between the two communities has become very deep.’’ Says Nita Thakore, an artist whose medium is fabric, needle and thread, ``Baroda had never seen violence such as this. The pushcart of my sabziwali (vegetable vendor ) was burnt. In an amazing show of courage and resilience, she was back on the street, and selling vegetables, within 24 hours. What is disturbing is that many people have stopped reacting and have started accepting the violence.’’

But not the artists, at least. An exhibition was visualized by Baroda artists Anandjit Ray and Nagji patel in early February, much before the violence broke out, for the local Nazar Gallery. Termed ``The Banyan City’, the group show called upon the artists to focus on their local environment. That is what they did but there is a great difference in the works painted before the Godhra incident, and those executed afterwards. The earlier works show the artists happy and at ease, as is seen in Ratan Parimoo’s work Aishwariya as Gaekward maharanim, a tongue-in-cheek take-off on Ravi Varma’s princely portraits. And then hot winds that scorched Gujarat in spring and do not spare the Sanskar nagri. Most of the works painted in this period protest against the violence in different ways and try to make some sense of chaos. The banyan is the obvious symbol, yet artists have dealt with it in differing ways. There is the very eloquent mixed-media work by Yunus Khimani, There stands our blackened banyan. Nita Thakore builds the trunk of the banyan by entwining calligraphic symbols – both Hindu and Muslim – and buds and leaves from embroidery motifs of Kutch and Saurashtra.

Thakore recalls, ``My mother had clearly told me not to bring a Muslim boy home or she would throw both of us out. I wish the generation after partition had encouraged social and family ties between the two communities.’’ Now, the guardians of Hindutva have started targeting couples of mixed marriages and members of the artist and intellectual community in Baroda too have been threatened. Sad, indeed, given the city’s secular and liberal tradition. In an easy, `A post-Independence Initiative in Art’ included in the volume Contemporary Art of Baroda, Nilima Sheikh writes, ``Education in Gujarat, more particularly at the M.S. University in Boaroda, was mainly in the hands of educationists who came from the Nagar Brahmin stock of administrators. Enlightened and progressive, they had led with the righteous assurance of those who believe they have the generic claim to mould the intelligentsia, their caste authority remained intact despite the pervasive Gandhianism … In the early years at Baroda, however, it had to take a back-seat, owing to the cosmopolitan ambience at the Faculty of Fine Arts. Its finest qualities got filtered through this ethos into a more progressive significance. As an amusing but not irrelevant aside, one might recount that Markand Bhatt, Bendre, Sankho Chaudhuri and Subramanyan, the four main protagonists at Baroda, had all married on the basis of their own choice, across caste, community and even religious lines. A multicultural secularism became quite the norm within the Faculty, and survived almost four decades.’’
Baroda’s lament is a soulful cry for multicultural secularism everywhere. The rise of fundamentalism first hits pride and progress. The self-appointed guardians of religion decide who one must love and what must one paint or create – recall the controversy over MF Husain’s portrayal of Hindu myths, or the row over Deepa Mehta’s films Fire and Water. It was Faiz Ahmed Faiz who had said the climate in his country demanded that no head be held high and that a lover must lurk like a thief. The artist community and intelligentsia are gearing up to remove the black stains that have encrusted their banyan by organising an exhibition of paintings by Baroda alumni scattered all over the country. Raga jaijaiwanti must be redeemed, so a concert is to be held at Ustad Faiyaz khan’s tomb in October.

The lovers of Baroda refuse to go into hiding, and there is a valiant attempt to hold the head high in spite of what happened. I return again to the home of Aziz Qadri off Tandalja Road. The poet is calligraphing dohas in Urdu and says, ``I have lived in Baroda before the Partition and after. There was no question of any rift between the Hindus and the Muslims. We all lived together in peace. Didn’t I tell you that ours is a Sankar nagri, even Ghalib lived here for full six months? And you know our Maharaj Mallerao was a nationalist and gave shelter to Tantia Tope’s soldiers during the First War of Independence in 1857.’’

Why do I keep returning to the poet? Isn’t he rambling, perched as he is on a precarious peace in `Mini Pakistan? He is like the character played by the late Kaifi Azmi in Sayeed Mirza’s Naseem, a film on the demolition of the Babri Masjid seen through the eyes of an adolescent girl. The changed times have rendered such liberals, who relate anecdotes of past glory and bonhomie, quite irrelevant. Or are they still relevant?



































Friday, October 31, 2008

Painter Satwant Singh



Nirupama Dutt
Junoon mein jitni bhi guzri bakaar guzri haiAgarche dil pe kharabi hazaar guzri hai
(Every moment spent in passion was rewarding/ Although the heart had to endure much pain) — Faiz Ahmad Faiz
Coming face-to-face with the paintings of Satwant Singh is an intense experience. For his work is the purest play of passion, worked with intensity found only in masterstrokes. Having shared a long and close association with the artist and his work, what one feels seeing a fresh work by this artist is that each work is painted with energy that ordinary souls would find hard to muster.
But here we are not dealing with the ordinary. Satwant is an extraordinary artist born with gift of art nurtured lovingly for nearly half a century. No, the painter is no old man. The fact is that he started painting when but a boy. For him it was the only way to relate with this delightful and at the same time disturbing world this boy stepped into out of the dark comfort of his mother’s womb. “I was a lonely child and I started speaking late. So even before I spoke, I had started drawing. I didn’t make friends easily. I kept myself engrossed with the goats, roosters and sparrows. Or I escaped into fantasy,” says Satwant. This world of childhood still presents itself in his work which is a wonderful mix of reality and fantasy.
A man of many talents, one could wax eloquent on his many contributions to different forms like caricature illustration, narrative and poetry. The present collection of works that come so like winsome wine that was maturing in the cellar for long and suddenly it has poured out in good measure, with passion put to the finest use.
The viewer is transported into the complex symbology of the inner world of the artist and the erotic that meets the eye is a metaphor for his own creative urge. It is worked out so magically in a harmonious coming together of line, form, colour and texture. All this has been achieved with the long labour of love. The joy and the passion this artist feels in communion with his medium is communicated ever so spontaneously to the viewer.
For passion is indeed a universal humanity, that imparts meaning to art and life. Move from the large paintings to the smaller works painted on discarded brown office files and Satwant’s art comes a full circle. If his forms shimmer in the outburst of colour, the tonal effect takes the viewer to the deep and ponderous layers of the artist’s mind. “Whenever I see a slip of paper lying around, I cannot help but draw on it. Drawing and painting are compulsive acts for me and what you see now has half a century of discipline and dedication behind it,” says Satwant.
His painting on files is in a way symbolic of a freedom that he has recently found from long years of work to earn his daily bread and fend for his family. Now he is back to doing that what comes most naturally to him. Art is a meditation for our ‘Saint’ Satwant who combines the serene and the ardent; the painful and the pleasure giving so with radiance that sparks light the gaze the way of seeing.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Maqbool Fida Husain



Artist in exile



Exile and the artist are something new for a country like ours known for its liberalism and tolerance. Has M.F. Husain actually chosen to flee or is it a new marketing technique by this artist who has always thrived on controversy? Nirupama Dutt probes this question as Husain fails to return home on promised dates


Maqbool Fida Husain, undoubtedly the most popular and prolific contemporary Indian artist, laughs at the word ‘exile’. His is a full-throated laughter of a man who has seen 90 plus one seasons of life and creativity. The irony is that he says this while in exile of sorts, away from his home country.
Is it a willing suspension of disbelief when the maverick painter, whose one canvas fetches a crore and more, says: "What is ‘exile’? Because I’ve been wandering all over the world for the last 50 years? I have been working all the time, there is no such thing as exile.
In fact, my exhibition is opening on December 30 in Kolkata. And I’ll be there." He said so to Shekhar Gupta walking the talk with him in Dubai last year. However, it was not Gupta who walked the talk but Husain who did so. December came and went, and January is almost gone but Abba Husain is still to return home.
Shrieking silence
His family is sadly silent, his friends vocal and angry, and a handful of intellectuals and artists who are trying to raise the conscience of the nation to bring back a beloved painter home find their voices drowning in slogans of hate. Following Barkha Dutt’s debate on NDTV, an angered man cries out against her defense of his bare-bodied paintings: "How will she react if Husain paints a nude portrait of Barkha Dutt and auctions it in an art exhibition." There is much else, too unfit to print.

When such a tone takes over, all reason is lost. It is Hai! Husain in ways more than one. His detractors want him done to death and finished, and they are even announcing awards and rewards ranging from lakhs to crores. His admirers are crying out against such treatment meted out to a painter who has perhaps contributed the most in putting modern Indian painting on the international art map. His is also an amazing story of struggle, courage and resilience, rising as he actually did from the streets.
The painter of hoardings has came a long way but he is now an outsider to not only to the land that he was born to but also to its life and beliefs that spread themselves on his canvases.
Changing colours
The Husain story is probably the saddest reflection on our times and their growing intolerance. Terror unleashed on art and artists, writers and writing, singers and music is not something new to the world. We have seen it all too often but it happened in climes that were fundamentalist and totalitarian. Fatwas to death are issued against artists and writers as in the case of Salman Rushdie, Taslima Nasreen or Orhan Pamuk.
Surprised at the upsurge of intolerance in India, a Pakistani poet, who had once sought exile in India, on a visit in the late 1990s, read out a very satirical poem on the changed mood of the country. The poem went something like this: Tum bhi ham jaise nikale/ Ab tak kahan chuppe thhe bhai... (So you too turned to be like us/ Where were you hiding all this while brother`85) Proving her words true, some persons tried to assault her when she was reciting in a symposium organised at Jawaharlal Nehru University.
That was a time when increasing attacks on art and artists had begun in India. Theatres showing Deepa Mehta’s very fine film Fire were defaced and she was not allowed to film Water in India. Her statements on gender issues were seen as a grave threat to our ancient civilisation by the morality brigade. Husain’s painting of Saraswati in bold simple lines and a bared body had already been destroyed by the Bajrang Dal in 1996. In 1998, the wrath was turned on a painting titled Sita Rescued. And last year it was anger unleashed at Bharat Mata, a painting meant to go on auction to raise funds for victims of the Kashmir earthquake but the Apparao gallery was pressured into withdrawing it. Husain said he had never given the title but that did not change matters. Interestingly, the titles given to Husain’s anti-Hindu paintings on the Sanatan website and Sanskar Bharati pamphlets are not Husain originals but those given by Prafull Goradia in his book Anti Hindus.
Twist in the tale
Husain’s rather serene and symbolic portrayal of a bare-bodied woman on the map of India was too much to take. What followed was unprecedented. In May 2006, the Home Ministry advised the police chiefs of Delhi and Mumbai to take ‘appropriate action’ against the artist. The Hindu Personal Law Board president Ashok Pandey announced a Rs 51 crore reward for eliminating artist M F Husain. Congress Minority Cell leader Akhtar Baig offered Rs 11 lakh to any ‘patriot’ to chop off the painter’s hands for hurting Hindu sentiments. His apology and subsequent departure from the country did not end the witch-hunt and a gallery holding an exhibition of his works was vandalised in London and forced to remove the show.
Ironically, all this when the ‘liberal’ Congress is in power and Husain was always close to the party. Recall his painting of Indira Gandhi as Durga and the title of ‘court painter’ that he earned during the Emergency. When the controversy arose about the Sita painting, painter Vivan Sundaram went on record saying: "The intimidation is fascist in nature. This attack has crossed all barriers. They have intruded into a person’s private space—an artist’s home. The state must to do something about this. This is becoming a kind of rallying action. They are targeting art and artists because they have no political agenda to pursue." This was said of the Bharatiya Janata Party but what about the Congress or the climate under Congress rule.
Prolific painter
There is much more to Husain than the controversy. A prolif ic painter, he painted by the streetlights at night in Mumbai of old, He overcame much with struggle, labour and an immense talent to become the country’s foremost artist. The long and hard practice of painting cinema hoardings turned his brush into a magic wand of sorts. It is sheer pleasure to watch him work and he has often worked in full public view.
The Indian art market has never been as prosperous as it is now and to Husain should go much credit for bringing artists to such a position. Many art galleries received encouragement and support from the painter. Besides, he is as good a showman as he is a painter. He knows how to be in news whether it means perching his frail frame on a scaffolding to paint the forehead of a tall building, or making quite a splash with his bare feet, painting a horseback in the middle of the white cube of a gallery or putting much of his money in celluloid to celebrate his fetish for Madhuri Dixit’s derri`E8re. He is only being honest when he says: "Even marketing is an art form. I’ve created a whole new phenomenon of how to market. And I am not defensive about that. I do market my work. Also, because all these big dealers are now becoming defunct."
There are advantages of riding controversial waves but the dangers, too, are there. There are some in the art world and outside who still hold that this ‘exile’ is yet another Husain tamasha, which will further hike the prices of his paintings. Is this naughty white-haired wizard, who is a veteran at the game of art, having a last laugh as he paints on and into immortality? Perhaps so but he is also proving a point that there never was an artistic period or an art-loving nation for that matter.
SINGING HUSAINAS
Husain has no case to answer. For, there is nothing restrictive or self-limiting about the Indian identity the Mahabharata asserts: it is large, eclectic and flexible, containing multitudes. This is why I have been particularly happy to add my name to the petition circulated by many of our country’s leading artists and writers, asking the President to confer upon Husain the highest award of the land, the Bharat Ratna.
—Novelist Shashi Tharoor
Husain must speak, must lead, must stand by his art — not apologise and withdraw. Most importantly, he must return to the place of his roots. To apologise is to give the lie to his art, cheapen it as a shallow thing.
—Shoma Chaudhry, Tehelka
It is sad that a painter whose portrayal of Hindus gods and goddesses was next in popularity to the calendar art of Raja Ravi Varma has been banished as anti-Hindu.
—Shamsul Islam, theatre activist
When future scholars write the social history of this past decade in India, a major trend they will undoubtedly note is the upsurge of intolerance. Right since the Babri Masjid was demolished in December, 1992 by a frenzied mob out to settle "scores with history", there has been unrelenting violence, discrimination and humiliation against groups of people. They are vilified simply because they happen to disagree with something, or have different beliefs, faiths, or ethnic origins. Books are burned (e.g. Ambedkar’s Riddles of Hinduism), eminent artists (M.F. Husain) attacked, and newspaper offices (Mahanagar and Outlook) ransacked.
—Praful Bidwai, columnist
The Husain controversy is no longer a predictable Hindu-Muslim debate nor is it only about the orthodoxy of the BJP. The Congress party is just as accountable.
—Barkha Dutt, Managing Editor, NDTV

January 21, 2007

Painter Veer Munshi




Artist as painter of zodiac signs
Veer Munshi in his artistic take-off on the zodiac signs makes and breaks icons and popular beliefs, writes Nirupama Dutt
WHAT is common between Lord Shiva, Shakespeare, Satyajit Ray and Sachin Tendulkar? A funny question indeed. Ask Veer Munshi, our Chitranjan Park neighbourhood painter in New Delhi, and he will run his hand over his receding hairline and say in all wisdom: "They are Taurians pushing and bold; As it has been told." Munshi’s recent body of work finds him unravelling the world of the zodiac signs with painterly aplomb and, in the process, painting images that please the eye and stimulate the mind.
The abstract world of the Zodiac signs, indeed, makes for a fantastic study and also one of the most popular ones. The success of the fortune columns in newspapers is such, perhaps the best-read column after the weather report, that many papers now carry it every day instead of just the weekend. Thus, the Zodiac signs become for this artist a metaphor through which he communicates the mood of our times by making and breaking icons. And his achievement is that he transcends mere classification to put a question mark on the generalisations the Zodiac signs make. Munshi’s interpretation of the characteristics of a sign is often a strong commentary on the human journey.

Let’s go over some of the interpretations of the signs and traits of those born under it to see the interesting mind game that the artist plays. Munshi starts with the Ram, the happy Aries who wish to assert their identity by saying ‘I Exist!’ and what we have is fine painting a tribute to the great Impressionist, Vincent Van Gogh. The caption to this painting and others have been written in the poetic idiom of a wise one, be it Linda Goodman, Bejan Daruwala or Veer Munshi, holding forth on what is or will be. The caption to Aries sun sign going over the impulsive and challenging nature of Aries who are ever pining for love says, "A Van Gogh turns a yellow spot into a sun coldly burning and becomes immortal." The painting shows the famous self-portrait of Van Gogh and the artist posing before it with his head sprouting the famous sun flowers and a pistol, the one with which the artist was to shoot himself, lying on a chair to be found in the Van Gogh paintings.
What is very interesting is that the works of famous artists, perhaps those who always fascinated Munshi, and their lives are interwoven in these paintings. We have Salvador Dali as the thrusting bull for Taurus, leading as though the rogue gallery of others born under this sign. Other artists who figure in these series are Paul Gauguin, Pablo Picasso, M.F. Husain, Bhupen Khakhar and Munshi himself.
Born at Srinagar, Kashmir and schooled in art at the M.S. University, Baroda, Munshi has been sensitive to the politics of violence and displacement. His installations and art works exhibited in group shows have shown him commenting strongly on the politics of the time. The artist says of these works, "Many of them have been like slogans made for shows specially designed to protest against events." However, in these works it is the emergence of metaphor that encases his philosophy. These paintings work at many levels — enjoy the visual delight of iconography if you will; lose yourself in the mystery of the sun signs or look beyond and see what the artist says between the strokes as it were.
Very interesting indeed is the depiction of the Aquarius mystery. Aquarius is the sign of the New Age — the evolving sign that feels it must return to life what it has gathered from it down the centuries. Thus the painting has images of the Charles Darwin Theory of Evolution along with a pitcher of the Good Earth for the Aquarian is the water-bearer. What is returned to the Earth is, however, violence in the image of a terrorist. It is here that the artist is brilliant in envisaging, what could be and what is. Politicians too figure in these series most interestingly.
To represent the Capriconian we have none other than Atal Bihari Vajpayee with the head replaced by the lotus flower and the many arms holding symbols of different faiths but the trident somewhat more prominent than the others. The Leo prowess is featured by Bill Clinton and Mandela for talking of Cancer, the artist says: ‘A Mandela is always on the round somewhere...’
Munshi made these twelve large and complex canvases over a period of two to three years. However, the research and study took up a much longer time. "I read so much about the Zodiac philosophy. Not just that in delineating personality types. I started reading about Van Gogh. Then I read his letters to his brother Theo. So I gathered a lot of knowledge in the process." It is the artist’s accomplishment that nowhere does he brother the viewer with all the acquired knowledge but invites him to embark on this fascinating journey using symbols in economy. The result is aesthetically very pleasing.
A challenge, indeed, but then what would art be if there were no challenges ahead?




September 7, 2003

Monday, October 20, 2008

Brush with Women




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Re-imaging the Indian Woman
The past three decades have seen the women artists succeeding in reinventing the Indian woman, writes Nirupama Dutt

IT is the artist who gives a face to the gods and many times also to the human beings. The image of the Indian woman so celebrated painting, theatre, literature and cinema owes much to the great painter Raja Ravi Varma (1848 to 1906). It was Varma who gave a form to Sita, Damayanti, Shakuntala, Mohini and many others. Prints of his paintings still grace temples including the little pooja alcoves in homes. These images had an impact on early cinema and theatre and the image of the beautiful and fair woman wrapped in silk and loaded with ornaments became the popular image of the Bharatiya nari. The power of his creations was such that many painters like Dhurandar of Maharashtra and G. Thakur Singh and subsequently Sobha Singh were greatly influenced by him.
In modern times we have seen the swing of taste and this style falling out of favour and the emergence of the lyrical bare-bodied women by M.F. Husain, the voluptuous damsels made by F.N. Souza and lank nudes by Jatin Das. These are the women made by men. But the past 30 years have also seen the emergence of the women artists in large numbers all over India and they have made a mark by re-imaging women.
Mother and child
What is the basic difference between women made by men and women made by women? Woman as represented by men is an issue that has generated a lot of scholarly works the world over. Commenting on a male artist painting a female nude, world-renowned art critic John Berger made a relevant point. He said: "You painted a naked woman because you enjoyed looking at her, you put a mirror in her hand and called the painting Vanity, thus morally condemning the woman whose nakedness you had depicted for your own pleasure."
Closer home, leading artist Anjolie Ela Menon puts the women's vision in perspective by saying: "We view the female figure and the preoccupations of our gender with empathy as distinct from the voyeuristic nature of the male gaze." If we get to the work of the first lady of the Indian canvas, Amrita Sher-Gil, we see that she was not able to subvert the male gaze or the phenomenon of spectatorship. The women painted by Amrita seem to be offering themselves for gaze. After Amrita's early death in 1941, there is a long gap in which there were hardly any women artists on the scene. Amrita with her Indo-European parentage and European training in art was in a way a unique 'occurrence'.
Besides the folk artists, art training for the average urban Indian woman was an accomplishment for the matrimonial market. Accomplishment meant knowing how to cook, sing, embroider and paint a little. It was only in the 1970s of the last century that a virtual flood of women artists appeared on the scene, equipped with degrees in art and ready to take up art as a vocation. The rise of the woman artist coincides with the rise of the women's movement. And from among these women we have today artists who have made a name for themselves home and abroad like Arpita Singh, Nalini Malani, Arpana Caur, Gogi Saroj Pal and many others. And the next generation has given many more women practicing in different areas of art with the way made easier for them by the pioneers.
Interestingly, Bombay-based Nalini Malani took up a virtual fight with Ravi Varma in a very famous water colour of hers called ‘Re-thinking Raja Ravi Varma’ in which the musical beauties of the painter were pushed to the margin by flesh-and-blood women. And the centre space was taken by a supportive mother figure. The clear message was that women were no longer content to be the Barbie dolls of male fantasy.
Sohni
Ask Arpana Caur what she thinks of the women as painted by Ravi Varma and her reply is, "Those women were not true to life at all. They were painted dolls and bedecked with ornaments like a Christmas tree. They were not working women like you and me."
If Nalini re-thought Ravi Varma, in recent times we have seen Arpana re-invent Sohni of the Sohni-Mahiwal fame with a sure hand and heart. Sohni as depicted by Sobha Singh is a popular image and till some years ago the print of this painting used to be found in nearly every Punjabi middle-class home. This was Sohni beautiful and bedecked drowning with ecstasy in the Chenab. Arpana in her series of paintings on the theme, shows Sohni as a strong brave and earthy woman who defied the social norms and remained true to her love. Taking a cue from an eighteenth century miniature painting by Nain Sukh, Arpana has painted a brave woman battling against the waters of the turbulent river Chenab and meeting her end. Sohni is the very embodiment of female energy.
Gogi's portrayal of woman has been very bold and strong. In her ‘Aaag ka Dariya’ series, she shows the woman crossing the river of fire of her existence by carrying a small female form in her hands. The woman thus takes the responsibility for herself and her daughters. What is very interesting is that women as painted by are contemporary woman artists are not static beings just content to sit or stand pretty. They are active beings shaping their destiny as also the world around them. If nothing else, they are at least brooding! In her beautiful series ‘Embroidering Phulkari and Memories’, Gogi's nayika does not embroider phulkaris merely to be stored in tin trunks but she embroiders the phulkari motifs on her own being and the environment around her.
Anjolie who has painted brooding nudes, Madonnas with children and also female empowerment as Shakti says, " ‘She is me’ is often implicit, at least metaphorically, in the work of most women artists." The autobiographical narrative, as it were, runs parallel to the fabric of painting.

Painting of a Love Legend










The saga of Sohni





Nirupama Dutt recounts how artists have represented the legend of Sohni Mahiwal


OF the famed love-legends of Punjab, the story of Heer-Ranjha is the most celebrated but perhaps most poignant and picturesque is the saga of Sohni-Mahiwal. This love legend has the Chenab river as the central motif and the water of the river plays the role of bringing together the lovers and then parting them forever.
Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan in his famous qawwali sung of Sohni as the one who lost her all for love. As the tale goes, Sohni, a potter’s daughter in Gujarat and an artist in her own right, baked the most beautiful pots ever. Mahiwal, the prince of Bukharo, came to Gujarat and saw the pots made by Sohni and led from the pots to Sohni, he fell in love with her. Sohni too gave her heart away to the prince charming. The social order would not accept this love for a man from afar and so to be near her, he became a buffalo herd, thus the name Mahiwal.
However, Sohni was married off to someone else but the lovers continued to meet. Sohni would swim past midnight with an earthen pitcher for support to meet her Mahiwal on the other side of the Chenab. He would await her arrival with a fire lit outside his hut. However, her sister-in-law discovered this secret rendezvous and one ill-fated night replaced the earthen pitcher with a half-baked one. Sohni was drowned in the Chenab and her corpse reached her lover.
The legend of Sohni-Mahiwal first captured the imagination of poets like Fazal Shah and Qadir Yaar who are considered the "Sohni specialists", just as Waris Shah and Damodar are the specialists of the saga of Heer.
Qadir Yaar (1802-1892) wrote of the love of Sohni in the Sufi strains where Ishq Majazi (human love) is considered a shortcut to Ishq Haqiqi (love for God) poignantly penned the last night of the qissa of Sohni thus:
Satish Gujral’s version is stylised and romanticManjit Bawa’s painting portrays a pensive SohniArpana Caur depicts the legend through a woman’s eyes
Across the Chenab his hut beckoned her
Like a lamp flickering on a grave
On that stormy night the breath of the
Chenab was torn, clouds screamed
To test Sohni, God created this night
Cold, violent and strangely rain-drenched
Speaking Allah’s name she lifts her pot
Knowing intuitively it is half-baked…
The saga of Sohni has also attracted painters of Punjab through the centuries. The first-known painting on Sohni is that by an 18th century pahari painter, Sen-Nainsukh. Thus miniature in gouache on paper shows a bare-breasted Sohni with her wet hair falling on her shoulders smiling and swimming across the Chenab. On the edges of the water are stylised rocks and dwarfed exotic trees so typical of the miniatures. In the fifties, the painting of Sohni-Mahiwal was painted by Andretta-based painter Sobha Singh, showing the two lovers in ecstasy in the waters of the Chenab.



Recently, other Punjabi painters like Satish Gujral, Manjit Bawa and Arpana Caur have re-painted the romance. In late 19th Century we have the painting by Pakistani painter Ustad Allah Bux. This painting shows an aghast Mahiwal receiving the corpse of the drowned Sohni. The painting enjoys a place of pride in the Lahore Museum.
It is Sobha Singh’s painting of 1957, in the collection of Karan Singh, former heir to the Jammu and Kashmir throne, which captured popular imagination the most. Sobha Singh moved from Lahore and set up his studio at Andretta, a pretty little village in the Kangra valley. While art connoisseurs dismiss the work of Sobha Singh as kitsch yet his print of Sohni-Mahiwal was to be found in every middle-class home till the seventies. Commenting on this work, Mehr Singh, a pulil of Sobha Singh and former president of the Punjab Lalit Kala Akademi, says:
"Many modern artists try to dismiss this work. But it is one of the most outstanding paintings done by an Indian artist in the 20th century. No other work has evoked such an enthusiastic response. New editions of prints are still being taken out and are in wide circulation."
This painting shows Sohni with her wet garment clinging to her shapely body being received by Mahiwal in a half-embrace as both of them, ecstatic, go to the bank of the Chenab. There one can see a glow of the fire that Mahiwal has lit to warm his drenched beloved. Sohni in this painting is fair and lovely and Mahiwal dark and handsome. Mehr Singh once again goes gaga over the form of Sohni, "How beautiful Sobha Singh has made her. She looks to be a naddi (belle) of West Punjab."
After Sobha Singh, the first painter who turned to this theme was Satish Gujral, a product of the Mayo School of Art. His rendering of the theme is lyrical and stylised. Within the rectangles and circles of a square canvas rises a half-bent form of Sohni with Mahiwal sprawled below at her feet and a peacock perched on the green and gold foliage and a pitcher resting below. The pitcher, of course, is integral to any painting of Sohni. When asked how Gujral decided to paint of this theme, his reply is, "I took the legend because it is a part of our heritage — a glorious past when one lived and died for love. The artist turns to the past time and again because without a past there is no present."
After Gujral’s work comes the rather pensive portrayal of Sohni by Manjit Bawa. Done in his own special style, Sohni floats across a placid blue rectangle and the ripples of the water are seen on her pink and peach garments. The pitcher under one arm, she floats along as though propelled by destiny. The work certainly is an engaging one and his Sohni has an ethereal charm. And that is how the nayika called Sohni journeys from the 18th through the 20th Century.



But the real blossoming of this theme as far as the Indian canvas goes comes in the opening years of the 21st century with a woman artist wielding the brush. Arpana Caur in a series of paintings on the theme has re-painted the love legend as seen through a woman’s eyes.
Her paintings of Sohni are earthy, vigorous and there is an empathy with the subject. Arpana says: "Sohni was a very brave and strong woman and her story is indeed inspiring. She defied social norms and swam across the river to be with the one she loved. She swam while others slept."
Thus the connection between the two lovers in her works is seen through a series of pitchers of which one is broken. Her Sohni has the plain looks of the girl next door but her spirit is spectacular as she battles against the waves bare-bodied. In one painting the image of the traffic lights intervenes and Sohni has no care be the light at red or green, she has to reach her love and then return before the sun rises. In another, she dances on the waves and in yet another she sings the song of the waters with the fish.