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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, April 23, 2001 |
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Making art accessible
THE BANE of Art has always been the fact that artists all over
the world have eked out their livelihood and passion in utter
penury. History is replete with instances of old masters who have
starved to death in freezing garrets while their masterpieces
gained immeasurably in value after their lifetime.
Art galleries, themselves mostly struggling, have also been hard
put to devote wall-space for talented artists before they catch
the fancy of the "discerning" artlover. The hypocrisy of the
market is perhaps best embodied in Ken Follett's novel "The
Modigliani Scandal" which exposes the fallacy of value in
paintings. But the actual intrinsic value of paintings lie in the
artist's concept, the brush playing divine tunes with colour and
detail. Too often in India, time has ravaged the skills of
homespun artists and artisans as they are passed on from
generation to generation.
It is in this context that the Raasi Art Gallery in Adyar rises
above the morass of crass commercialism. Nestling in a quiet by-
lane (1, Anna Avenue, Bakthavatsalam Nagar) the gallery is housed
in a stately dwelling. Many Tanjore and Mysore paintings hang on
the walls of 1,500 square feet on the ground floor while the
owner, K. Srinivasan and family reside on the first floor.
Srinivasan is an engineer-MBA and has worked in industry for over
twenty years before he set up the Raasi Art Gallery, 18 months
ago. The difference in this gallery lies in the fact that
Srinivasan buys all the paintings upfront from the artists, and
market forces and transparency ensure that the artists get a fair
price for their efforts. Raasi sells these paintings to the
public at competitive prices and achieves standardisation of
quality for customers.
Srinivasan says that Raasi (Rejuvenation of Ancient Art of South
India) serves the art by researching the genesis of each art form
and preserving the integrity of time-honoured processes even
while institutionalising necessary changes in ingredients (the
use of fevicol in bonding, for example).
So far, Raasi has concentrated on Tanjore and Mysore paintings
and will soon get into Kalamkari.
Srinivasan and his wife Geetha wax eloquent on the style of
paintings. Though Tanjore and Mysore paintings look similar, the
differences are that Mysore paintings employ much thinner gold
foil, more pastel colours and do not use semi-precious stones to
embellish the painting. All the frames are made of teak wood
while some Mysore paintings are executed on glass, on the
reverse. The themes have always been based on gods and goddesses.
Raasi has also commissioned some paintings on Guru Gobind and
Shirdi Sai Baba in the Tanjore style.
Raasi is organising a Summer Art Festival from April 19 to May 6
and apart from paintings on display and sale, some papier-mache
creations would also feature. The speciality of the papier-mache
at Raasi is the startling resemblance they bear to bronzes. A
visit to the gallery would prove educative as well as rewarding.
The prices start from Rs. 250 and climb all the way upto Rs.
16,000.
M. SRINATH NARAYAN
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Section : Features Next : Crossing cultural walls | |
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