Visual Arts and I…musings of a rookie curator (part 2)
Should I clarify that my
love for art, or my obsession with art, as may like to term it, is not an
exercise in self-aggrandizement; since I can neither sketch nor paint, I
can easily excuse people who think so. But more than that, as a student of
science and later still worse, engineering, I have always found myself
deficient in appreciating some more exquisite chattels of life, like visual art.
I would visit museums and art galleries and while I wore an appreciative look deliberately,
the truth was that I was mostly lost. I can, therefore, quite shamelessly say
that all this is indeed a means to extract some vicarious pleasure out of the
visual treasures created by others. I attribute my attempts at experimenting
with art and artists and then writing books on my experiences with them to a
wistful desire for getting rid of this deficiency. This deficiency also prompts
me towards the endeavour to snoop peek into the minds of the artists not merely by looking at their art works but
also by engaging them in discussions about their works.
At the same time, even
the sense that one was instrumental in creation of extraordinary from the
mundane is very stimulating, very heady. That is another reason I pursue this
madness. A very redeeming feature has been that I discovered that the world around
me was full of people pursuing some madness or the other. My tryst in the
insane world of visual arts was not happenstance; this must be my calling and I
could not ignore it.
Let me recall the poet, Sultan Akhtar for these befitting
lines:
Fursat mein raha karte hain
fursat se zyada
masroof hain ham log zaroorat se zyada tanha main hirasan nahin is kar-e-junoon mein
sahra hai pareshan miri vahshat se zyada
(We have all the freedom,
even more than leisure and we are needlessly busy and occupied. I am not the
only one harassed by this frenzy of madness, the wilderness around me is more
agitated than my frenzy.)
You are, by now, quite
familiar with I taking recourse to the hackneyed declaration that IR had always
been an accidental engine for generation of art, reflecting the unique heritage
and multi-cultural ethos of our country. I keep parroting it because I had
gained immense comfort in the fact that I was instrumental in starting the art
movement, Safar (Support And Appreciation For Art & Railways).
I told myself that I would continue this effort wherever my railway job took me.
After the initial experiments in Bangalore division, wherever, however, was
Berlin, Germany where I was stationed for three years as the Railway Advisor in
the Embassy of India. A strange new place for me where I made many artist
friends but their understanding of Indian contemporary art was limited, with
obvious gaps, and a novice like me could hardly bridge that. Three years in
Berlin, apart from regular work and chores, was a series of bewildering and even mystifying visits to some of the
finest art museums in Europe; I could, however, hardly hop into a journey of
understanding western art with these artist friends as that would be even more
foreign to me, the maxim that art knew no barriers, notwithstanding. If
appreciation and promotion of art was my calling, then I had to keep in touch
with the nitty-gritty. I had plans to hold a workshop of Indian Contemporary
artists spank in the main concourse of the Berlin Hauptbahnhof (main train
station); the plan did not materialize due to certain reasons, one of them
being the prohibitive expense involved in arranging the travel and
accommodation of artists from India. It remained pipe-dream but I did manage to
do the next best thing possible: we held exhibition of Indian Railways and its
rich heritage at seven stations of Deutsche Bahn (German Railways),
including Frankfurt, Berlin Süd, Cologne, Dusseldorf, Dresden etc.
Pictures
from exhibitions at main stations of German Railways
At any rate, I was
flustered enough with inaction in my ordained pastime and natural ennui, itching
to be back in India so I could revert to my chosen aberration. I was back,
after three years in Germany, in the somewhat familiar environs of
Indian Railways. Not quite the hustle and bustle of railway stations and trains
but almost there. I took over as the Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Rail
Wheel Factory in Bangalore.
Let me recall my first
day in the factory. What a day! Little did I know that making of a wheel was
hard-core engineering only at one plane, it could be so much more on
imaginative levels and planes. There I was, in the middle of red hot steel,
carbon dust and screeching conveyors. Golden yellow red spray escaped from a
furnace or a ladle brimming with metal lava, like the flourish of sparks rising
on Diwali night or a shower of coloured flecks descending in Holi. But the
workers went about their job as if it were some harmless intrusion in whatever
they were doing at the time. As the days passed, a visit every day to the
factory opened up new spectacles; even as I was learning to be careful without
being alarmed, I was, all the time, drinking in these captivating scenes, these
delectable extravaganza, and these mesmerizing moments.
I would talk to the
officers there about the mesmerizing effect the process of wheel-making had on
me and they would wonder if there were wheels within wheels. It was not so
facile a comprehension yet that naked dance of molten metal and workers dressed
in astronaut-like suits, giving form to the sheer beauty of a wheel set can
indeed be a subject of creative art.
Are the vibes we
experience just an outcrop of idle empathy or are we looking at some quarry cum
bonanza for visual artists? Metal is indeed very popular with artists for use
as a medium of their creativity. But can there be many who would find
inspiration in our industrial processes? To an observant viewer, the process of
scrap steel turning to red hot molt and then solidifying to a hardy wheel, is indeed
bewitching. This transformation of raging red liquid into a benign cold grey
round mover is handled by the workers in a seemingly sedate manner, making the
whole exercise so magical. I always felt like staring at this magic for hours
on end. Even as these thoughts engulfed me, they also invoked
great happiness. Elated and ecstatic, I thought, “Am I not blessed to be in the
midst of such a celebration of human endeavour?”
Wheels
in the making at the factory
And the wheel-makers
I reverted, pretty soon after the initial wonder-struck days, to the old friend and guide, Dr. M.S.Murthy, the famous Bangalore artist. As I took him around the foundry, he agreed with me that casting a wheel is an inspiring phenomenon. But he added a new dimension as well. In his own inimitable way he observed something interesting. “The way you guys are chock-a-block with wheels and the way you arrange them! It’s a pleasing installation art for me,” he commented. My mind was made. I had to act……Art must imitate life once again.
Wheels
and wheels…installation art?
I began floating the
seemingly bizarre idea among the diehard officers, supervisors and staff of the
factory. They soon rolled up in greater numbers and with greater fervour than I
would have ever imagined. Not knowing what was in store, these art enthusiasts
were encouraged to give shape to their creative ideas. They came alive with a
checklist of various possibilities and potentialities. And slowly, the face of
the factory started to change from a drab jungle of metal and scrap to a large
manicured terrace garden with exciting images and visuals, encompassing many
facets of mural art and sculpture.
Wall murals sprang up in the factory premises in no
time
“The
great artist is the simplifier”, once said Vincent Van Gogh. We had to simplify
the quest for pleasure, not complicate it. With the help of these enthusiastic
factory worker, some of them artists themselves but not many, our message was
finding great acceptance and appreciation. Art and heavy engineering-the mind dismisses it aside, thinking they
are incongruous, but the living colours and images, sculpture and artwork,
became proofs that they can gel.
I am tempted to quote these famous lines of the poet, Majrooh Sultanpuri,
Main akela ha chala tha janib-e-manzil magar
log
saath aate gaye
aur karvan banta gaya
(I began my journey
towards the destination all alone but people kept joining me and a caravan got
made)
It was all about a play between your eyes, your mind and your soul. "The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light.” (Mathew 6:22). Helena said, albeit in jealousy, in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, “Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind, And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind.” The factory personnel were encouraged to think that it shouldn’t matter what an artwork looked like and that they would do good to enjoy them for the thought enshrined in them.
Metal sculptures were created by RWF staff and some
professional artists
In addition to the wall
and plate murals, metal sculptures and installations done by the RWF club
members and other staff, we also engaged NGOs and professional artists to
supplement and complement these efforts. An art camp was also organized in some
top artists of Karnataka participated with Sri Syed Kirmani, the famous
cricketer and a jovial, genial soul, as the chief guest. These professional
artists took the expression of making of wheels to another level of creativity.
Art camp inside the factory premises
An art gallery was opened
in the foyer of the factory administrative building, the first such venture in
any factory of Indian Railways. Today, a visit to this gallery is in the nature
of sine qua non today for anyone coming to Rail wheel factory for the first
time.
The RWF art gallery and art club members
My second journey with visual art among wheels in Rail Wheel Factory had taken off splendidly. It continued magnificently in this dyed-in-the-wool industrial setting, which had hitherto no familiarity with art and artists. No déjà vu. It certainly felt a lot different from what I had witnessed earlier. And as this dream run with visual art continued with great response, I had to record this historic experiment. So was born this coffee-table book titled “Reinventing The Wheel, Another Bangalore saga”, with a painting by Sri B.G.Gujarappa on the, capturing the essence. What exactly was I trying in a factory which manufactures wheels for railroads? Was I not basically reinventing the wheel? Hence the title.
The book cover and
its launch by Sri Suresh Prabhu, the then Minister of Railways
As my term was about to
end at Rail Wheel factory and I was slated to join the Integral Coach factory
at Chennai, I looked back at my days in Bangalore, Berlin and Bangalore again
remembered the poet Abdul Hameed Adam,
Afsana chahte
the wo afsana ban gaya
main husn-e-ittifaq
se diwana ban gaya
mauj-e-hawa se zulf
jo lahra gayi tiri
mera shuoor lahzish-e-mastana ban gaya
(Don’t take it literally but what it means is that I
was looking for a narration through beauty of coincidence I had become mad to
make up a story. In a gush of wind as your hair wafted around, my consciousness
assumed the nature of drunken stagger.)
(to be continued…)
hi,
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing information about Design. This blog is Very Useful For me.
Graphic Design Company
Invitation Cards Design.
Wonderful blog post. This is absolute magic from you! I have never seen a more wonderful post than this one. You've really made my day today with this. I hope you keep this up! india visa application
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot
ReplyDelete