I am terrible at drawing; have
always been since school days when my Vinci-esque
repertoire was limited to battle-scenes of unaerodynamic-looking planes above dropping egg-shaped bombs on proportionally-challenged hapless
infantry below, grotesquely-smiling plaid-shirted ‘kou-boys’ with shoulders too broad and legs too small and finally,
my pièce de résistance – scenery sketches of hills, valleys and plains. My
sceneries were dominated by triangular hills which I am sure, would have made
Pythagoras proud and a serpentine river flowing down from the hills in
distinctly Z-like courses, and of course, the ubiquitous
proportionally-challenged people frolicking in the foreground. Evidently I suck at drawing,
which is why I have forever looked upon people gifted with the artist’s eye for
detail, colour and imagination (not to
forget proportion!!) with awe and a teeny bit of jealousy.
While some artistically-gifted people
are content to express themselves on drawing paper and painter’s canvases,
still others explore several additional avenues of expression, like the sand
painters who work such wonderous images using just sand or the artists who use superlative
imaginative skills to fashion beautiful objects of art using the most
nondescript of artistic medium – sticks!! Yes, it is true that over the ages,
man has sought and found unique and mesmerizing artistic voices where stones,
egg shells, glass panes, even pieces of discarded junk have done service as
sometimes the brush, at other times as the blank canvas upon which man carves
out his impossible, wonderful dreams.
To conclude, for those with the
creative bent, everything is grist to the mill. So there is this friend of
mine; she is unmistakably a member of this singular clan of individuals who
splash the world around with colours and new forms. She carries a notebook
around – a constant companion of many years – where she records the passing
wisps of still half-forming images which sometimes float by. Her living room is
adorned with wall murals, picture portraits, a framed Ganesha made up of
perfectly-cut and wielded silver foil pieces and wonderful knick-knacks of
decorative items painstakingly crafted with everyday items.
I have reproduced one of her most
recent murals; I find the colours, the smooth curves and yes, the imaginativeness in juxtaposing the gently-swaying flower stalks with that of
the left silhouette of a girl’s face quite striking. Now more than ever, I am
convinced that Art is a gift – a gift which brings joy to the self and to
others, and creates new spaces for reflection and comprehension. Yes, Art is a
gift.
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