Frames, Frescoes, Freedom: An Art Odyssey in the American North East
I
am no painter with a brush nor sculptor with chisel in hand—just a humble
novice in the cathedral of good art. Yet I do know how to cradle an idea, to
carry it faithfully across the distance from thought to reality.
It
began, long ago, with the iron muse of my profession. In thirty-five years as
an Indian Railways officer, the moment that etched itself deepest was not a
groundbreaking project or a grand inauguration, but a quiet evening between
Hindupur and Bangalore. There I sat, coffee in one hand, cigarette in the
other, in the lookout glass of an inspection saloon—watching the world unfurl
behind a racing train. The view was not a postcard, but a restless theatre:
fields and dust, surging crowds and silent stretches, laughter, struggle, and
stillness, all in one reel of light and shadow.
I sat there
bewitched, bewildered, almost chastened. What was I doing, gulping down this
living poetry with my eyes… and doing nothing about it? Art, after all, must
imitate life—and here life was, thundering at more than 100 kilometres an hour,
begging to be told.
From
that epiphany was born a movement to lace railway spaces with art—murals,
sculptures, galleries—breathing beauty into steel and stone. I joined forces with my colleague, the ever-creative Lily
Pandeya, to breathe beauty into stations and rail premises—through lively art
camps, striking murals, evocative sculptures, and even the opening of a
full-fledged gallery. Our journey, painted in hues of passion and persistence,
now lives on in our coffee-table book Art and Railways: A Bangalore Saga.
That
was years ago. After a parched artistic spell in Germany—a land generous with
inspiration yet strangely stingy with canvases—I returned to familiar shores.
My landing spot? The Rail Wheel Factory (RWF) in Bangalore: a relentless realm
of clanging steel and hissing furnaces, as artless as a blank wall under a
flickering tube light.
Another
journey was calling. Clad in a fireproof suit, a workman stood like an
astronaut on a perilous spacewalk. Before him, a brutally red-hot wheel blazed
like a miniature sun. In his hand, a torch-like tool; on his face, the calm of
one who has stared into fire before. The air shimmered with unbearable heat,
beaten back only by the furious roar of an industrial fan. This, they told me,
was “sprue washing”—a phrase as mysterious as the act itself.
Soon,
my mind was a kaleidoscope: sparks arcing like meteors, steel singing under
hammers, shadows dancing in molten light. The workers here were
extraordinary—my lens could barely keep up. Pictures spoke where words
stumbled.
Fresh
from our first marriage of Art and Railways—then Art and a Railway Factory—I
stood on the threshold of a greater challenge: the Integral Coach Factory (ICF)
in Chennai, crown jewel of Indian Railways. Five times the workforce of RWF.
Over 2,500 coaches a year. A living citadel of steel and skill.
The great team of ICF designed and built the Train 18/Vande Bharat Express. That is well known. But trains also have romance. Wheels had their quiet magic, but building trains? That was a symphony—precision, power, and pride in perfect tempo. Why repeat an earlier triumph when I could create a duple—familiar in form, fresh in soul?
ICF hummed with electricity. The clang of metal rang sharper, the rhythm of work more purposeful. Faces glowed with pride and anticipation. Was this a factory in an art gallery—or an art gallery in a factory?
I
chronicled these experiments in three more books and many blogs (the books and
two select blogs referenced at the end), inviting readers to see what we had
begun—and to hold their breath, for the real spectacle was still ahead.
Now
retired in Lucknow, I try to keep that flame alive, promoting the visual arts
through camps and exhibitions, even if the resources I once had are gone. The
curtain has fallen on the factory floor, but the stage of imagination remains
lit. This blog, however, is not about the past. It is about a remarkable art
odyssey during my recent visit to North America.
It
began at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art in Washington, D.C.—a
century-old jewel-box of beauty, history, and scholarship. Founded in 1923 as
the Smithsonian’s first dedicated art museum, it was the vision of Charles Lang
Freer, who believed the arts of Asia and the West should speak to each other.
Its serene, marbled corridors create the kind of hush where you instinctively
slow your step, as though noise might bruise the air.
I
was drawn first to Body
Transformed: Contemporary South Asian Photographs and Prints—an arc
both intimate in detail and expansive in scope. This was no static parade of
pretty images; it was an inquiry into how the human body becomes a stage for
politics, memory, myth, and change. Vivek Vilasini played with perception and
identity through sly juxtapositions; Pushpamala N.’s staged self-portraits
echoed cinema stills and colonial studios; Ram Rahman blended documentary grit
with poetic nuance; Jyoti Bhatt distilled rural life into vivid symbols; Jitesh
Kallat offered deeply personal visual narratives; Krishna Reddy’s viscosity
prints turned plates into textured landscapes; Chitra Ganesh reimagined
mythologies through a vibrant feminist lens.
This
was no random encounter. The collection came from my sister and brother-in-law,
Dr. Sunanda and Dr. Umesh Gaur, among the world’s most reputed collectors of
Indian contemporary art and they're indeed one of the reasons of my interest in art. To see works from their collection gracing the
Smithsonian was both a personal joy and a vindication of their lifelong
passion.
Another
wing revealed Delighting
Krishna: Paintings of the Child God. Here, the divine as a
mischievous boy danced across centuries—blue skin glowing under gold leaf,
lotus eyes curving into a smile half-innocent, half-cosmic. These were not just
paintings; they were acts of love suspended in time, drawn from Nathdwara temple
in India. Some glimpses here:
Outside,
Washington baked in relentless July heat. Inside, art cooled the spirit.
From
Washington, we went to New Jersey, where the Gaurs’ own gallery became my
private sanctuary. This time, I met Jyotindra Manshankar Bhatt through his work
alone—but it felt like a handshake. A pioneer of modern printmaking and a
gifted photographer, Bhatt saw the extraordinary in the utterly ordinary. From
mirror-work walls to tribal tattoos, he documented folk traditions with both
ethnographic care and modernist daring. His prints danced with peacocks, fish,
hands, sacred motifs—symbols both dreamlike and real. His photographs
whispered: a woman in mid-laughter, a door half-ajar, a shadow more eloquent
than its subject. A quiet rebel, he framed the ordinary from angles so
unexpected they seemed—once seen—inevitable.
A
few windows into the journey:
From
there, Providence called. Our son had graduated here during the strange, disembodied
days of Covid, and we had missed the moment. Now we arrived—not to cheering
crowds but to a city alive with art. Providence wears its creativity on its
walls: vast murals on brick facades, playful street art in alleys, underpasses
turned into kaleidoscopes. Each mural declared something: identity, struggle,
memory, joy, disgust. Moments, caught and framed:
The
Rhode Island School of Design’s museum was the crown jewel. RISD is not just an
art school—it’s a forge for bold voices in contemporary art and design. The
museum reflects that duality: a temple to classics and a laboratory for the
avant-garde. Ancient Chinese sculptures stood in quiet dignity; nearby,
Renaissance portraits radiated refinement. A turn of the corner brought
large-scale modern paintings bursting with abstraction, digital installations
pulsing with light, and experimental works that asked not just “what is art?”
but “where does art end and life begin?” A sampler from the tapestry:
Glass cases held intricate Japanese ceramics, Central Asian textiles, European silverwork. Modern sculptures in steel and resin stood beside gilded antiques. The centuries gathered here not to compete but to converse—each work leaning towards the next as if in dialogue.
Walking
out into the Providence evening, I felt the same sensation I’d first known
years ago on an Indian train: art is everywhere, if you’re willing to look—on
the walls of a museum, in a back-alley mural, in a village photograph, in the
curve of a pot or the toil of a worker finishing a cast wheel. It is all the
same urge—to catch life before it slips away.
Who
could have thought that a brief family visit to the US would unspool into such
a rich pilgrimage through the world of art? And in the quiet after each
encounter, I felt again that truth I’d first glimpsed in the glass of a railway
saloon: art is simply life—caught, stilled, and made to speak forever.
Nevertheless,
the Bard once spoke through Dromio of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors that, "...for they say
every why hath a wherefore", and he has also taught us through Polonius in Hamlet that, “Though
this be madness, yet there is method in’t”.
...
Blog by the author referenced
here:
https://anindecisiveindian.blogspot.com/2016/03/railways-and-art-wheels-within.html
https://anindecisiveindian.blogspot.com/2016/10/creativityis-contagious.html
Books on Art and Railways by
the author
1.
Art & Railways, a Bangalore saga (co-authored with his colleague Lily
Pandeya)
India ISBN:978-81-928759-0-3
2.Reinventing the Wheel another
Bangalore Saga India ISBN 978-93-5267-168-7
3.A
Skein of Trains India ISBN
978-93-5288-141-3
4.Trains
Unchained, the continuing saga of art and railways, the SAFAR.
India ISBN 978-93-5321-185-1
Music, paintings, poetry, sculpture, technology, you have taste for so many things. :)
ReplyDelete😊🙏 thanks for reading
DeleteAmazing! A treat to eyes, the kaleidoscopic imagery and visuals, every sentence creates. Most unique blend of art, music, painting, sculpture and railways. I relish all your posts Sir .
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot 😊🙏
DeleteSir, you are an Art loving person within an Engineer, who transformed RCF, ICF an art gallery
ReplyDeleteGood Morning sir 🙏🏼 Great Information
ReplyDeleteBeing aware of your contribution in Bangalore by beautifying Railway premises with art (and having been kindly resented with a copy of the coffee table book by you), I can only say that this piece comes as no surprise. Your description of the one and only Smithsonian is so much like going there for a mini visit. Thaks for this post and continue with your engagement with art!
ReplyDeletegood blog
ReplyDeleteReally superb
ReplyDeleteA lot of people (like me) love poetry and music and art. But they just enjoy it themselves and don't do anything about it.
ReplyDeleteYour determination of doing something about it...about promoting and propagating the beauty of the poetry, the art, the music, the culture...that is truly admirable. Proud of you.