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Inktober and Intentions

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I started Inktober on 1st, as is supposed to be, and so far I am able to keep up the momentum though on two occasions I had to summon myself to do it. If I hesitate in the beginning itself, I lag in what I do but if I like the topic, the artist or if it's something that would sound like a challenge to me then I usually complete it. So mostly I don't take up such 'events' unless and until it's something irresistible.  I came to know about Inktober in 2015 but didn't take part the last two years. This year I felt it's unavoidable. This is of course a challenge as is to many simply coz you need to draw/sketch every single day for the whole month. It's good for honing your skill, a kind of exercise - meditation, and then obviously by the end of the month you would have a good number of works or at least a good number of what you have practiced. It's a win-win situation. In case you would like to see and read what my take is and what I had done the first week, you could click  HERE

Since I am doing Insects...I am actually observing them a lot either in person and/or in photographs...reading on some of them, getting to know some facts and wondering how insignificant we think they are. Particularly with all the incidents and violence happening around, man against man/nature/and everything else, I am very often reminded of a saying; something like, everyone can not do great things but everyone can do small things in a great way. We don't usually try to remember that. I have always seen that people take softness for weakness. But they fail to realize that it takes courage to be delicate in a world this cruel where emotions/feelings/thoughts are crushed mercilessly without even a second thought. Being rude/harsh/cruel is easy. It takes effort to be delicate/considerate; it has to be done with mindful intention. 

"What do you think about it?"

The images are not in chronological order. I placed  it in a way that I felt good to look at.

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Stinkbug-Inktober-2ndWeek-HuesnShades
I couldn't accommodate this stinkbug in the box.

"To those who are participating and even otherwise who try to practice daily, are you able to keep up the momentum? What challenges do you face?"





Inktober and New found Artists

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Into the third week and still going...that’s something quite satisfying for me. The first thing I do these days once I settle down in the morning is to do my Inktober piece and then post it in my Instagram (in case you would like to check it out) account, mainly for accountability so that I wouldn't break it. I am still garnering energy and inspiration from the insects...to be frank I am not an insect person...some of them freaks me out but I try not to harm any living being though. Any and every life is precious...at least from its perspective!

In case you would like to  see my firstand second week's works...click the links.

On that note I would like to share a couple of artists' I love watching in Youtube, of course I am aware of only a few. The first artist is Minnie Small and here's her playlist. But let me tell you I have been following for some months or probably a year now, I think. In one of her recent inktober videos she introduced a few artists of which I found two others whose video works really interested me: WeroNoYume and Furrylittlepeach both who post Inktober pieces not regularly though as Minnie but all the same really good. WeroNoYume has more videos than the latter now. One other artist from Minnie's list who isn't doing Inktober but whose videos I liked is LittleCoffeeFox. Do check them out. I always love to see the varied mediums and varied techniques of the multi-diverse artists. It's so inspiring and interesting.

So with that here's my this week's inktober works.

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Jewel bug, Monarch catterpillar
Giant Shield bug nymph, Amazonian Leaf-footed bug
Lacebug, Scorpionfly


Inktober-3rdweek-HuesnShades

Planthopper


Linking it to Eva and Kristin's Paint Party Friday.

Inktober week 4

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The final week of Inktober is here and am quite satisfied with the art I have been able to create and pull together over the last 4 weeks. I am more satisfied with the fact that I have become a little more confident than I was with my hand in ink works. I have been in the practice of creating almost everyday (some days it's not posible too) since 2012 though not everything is worth showing. It's been a sort of practice but Inktober definitely gave me a purpose and clarity as to what I need to do for a whole month starting with a theme (as you know I am not following the official prompt though). 

For my earlier 3 Inktober posts, you can click HERE, HERE and HERE.

I have also been trying my hand, extremely gradual process though...started by August last week, at Derwent Intense blocks which I had bought from Dubai when we were in Dubai last summer. I have used Winsor and Newton postcards for that which again I had bought from Dubai some 3 years back. Will be posting it soon after this challenge.

Here's my last 7 days of insect art.

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Phyllium Leaf insect, Housefly
Rooster tail cicada, Boll weevil
Water scorpion, Long-horned orb weaver spider

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Robberfly


As usual linking it to Eva and Kristin's fabulous Paint Party Friday.



wrapping up Inktober with an Inktober Calendar

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Inktober came to a close and so that's wrapped up. Thanks to Jake Parker who started it all! This was my first time and I enjoyed every bit of it, definitely a learning experience. Each avenue opens up new possibilities, right? I had never thought that I would ever do this long a series and that too on insects! Though it was a random and a sudden one as I very much wanted to keep myself busy in some form or the other. So all through October, until afternoon, I was pretty occupied with my inktober series.

In case you would like to go through my earlier posts - Week1, Week2, Week3, Week4.

Insights:

No topic/theme is small.
A long series is definitely worth a try as you can come up with a good number of works, at least studies.
Play with ideas.
Get inspired by lot of talent around (get to see loads of style).
No pressure as such as you are not really answerable to anyone except you.
Helps fine-tune your skill.
Set a time for it...could become a habit.
Continue this practice.
Draw in a tribe.


Fifth week works:

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Robberfly, Leaf-footed insect
Metallic wasp,Flower mantis
Buff-tip moth



Finally this is my Inktober calendar - Insect series!!

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From the Postcard Series and a Sneak-peek.

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I prefer working on small sized paintings/drawings as they are quite manageable and easy to handle. Post cards are fun that way. I had these Winsor and Newton Cotman Watercolour postcards for quite sometime. Finally I put them to use. It was during August that I started this 6x4 in postcard series. I have used Derwent Inktense Blocks. It's similar to hard pastels in form, performs like ink and if needed can act like watercolurs too. I simply loved it. And I am using just that and nothing else for this series. Since you (who follow me regularly) know that I love to dab with poetry too, I have tried my hand at it. It's more like musings on the go which happens almost always particularly when enjoying solitude.

The first thing I did was prepare a colour swatch, wanted to see how it looked and it would make a perfect reference. One thing I noticed is unlike watercolours the new layers doesn't dissolve former layers.

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Derwent Inktense Blocks 24


This is a lane is Fort Kochi near the ground on the way to David Hall art gallery.


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 Shades of green
Looming ominous 
Of joyful tunes 
To spring.


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The sky is pink with love
The Sun, a fireball
Whatever the distance 
Let the Divine merge it all.


It's been quite sometime that I have been thinking of making a zine too - a mini one. And who better to follow suit than Jordan Clark! If you wish to make one then have a look at this video tutorial of hers - How to make a zine.



I had even promised one of my sweet blogger friends, Julie Creswell, that I would be making one soon. She had made some fabulous one a couple of months back.

Here's a sneak peek into what I made:
(but let me tell you mine is no where near hers! mine is just simple illustration but it does have an interesting angle to it. )

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Do let me know what you are up to and your interesting projects and of course your feedback!

Join the Paint Party (Fun) Friday hosted by Eva and Kristin!


Postcard Series - Landscapes and poems

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When we travel we often look for postcards not only as keepsakes but also to send it to our family and friends. When I saw the blank Winsor and Newton postcards I wanted to have them but hadn't thought of what I would want to paint on them. In fact it was in hibernation for quite a while! Finally one fine day in August I took them out and decided to make some miniature landscapes on them. But as I was engaged in some exhibition works at the time I just made two and now after Inktober I started to continue with this series. I have used only Derwent Inktense Blocks as this is purely experimental for me in terms of colours as well as the theme of landscapes (except two the rest are landscapes).

So here's more from my postcard series with my micro-poems...The first picture is from a photo I saw when browsing through landscape photos, don't know whose picture it is. The second one is from a photo of Ed Shots whom I follow in Instagram and yes, I have tagged him there. He has some Awesome shots some of which have the feel of being quite lyrical! The last picture is from a photo my daughter clicked while we were walking around in Fort Kochi. It's en route to Pepper House when you get down the ferry.

If you would like to see my earlier postcards, click here.


MossyShrine-HuesnShades
 It is a 'game' of love
Every heart is a tomb
In the name of love!


BlueNight-HuesnShades
 Into 
The blue night
The scintillating
Flowers whispered
Saccharine secrets!


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Reminiscing the salad days
Now bathing in the Sun
Longing for the lost waters!



Linking it to Eva and Kristin's Paint Party Friday.



Postcards and Poems

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More from my landscape postcard series and my micro-poems...Every card is painted with Derwent Inktense blocks. To read more and see my earlier postcard art and poems click here and here.

Blue-Sunset-HuesnShades
 Twilight
Gold and silhouette
Magic happens
In the horizon
Zenith weds nadir!


RedCottage-HuesnShades
 The world stripped off
Emptied our souls
Leaving blank statements
To be filled by void.
Yet are bosom
Of stories - told and untold.


Thekkady-HuesnShades
 The blues
The greens
The browns...
Solitude and solace...
Nature is
The best cure.

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"No man is an island,"
They say.
But we all are
In the middle of nowhere
Weaving our own
Tales, interspersed
With spice and lace
Creating alter-realities
Feeding on our curiosities.


Linking it to the Amazing platform of Paint Party Friday. Thanks to Eva and Kristin for hosting it.


Postcard Series - Finale!

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Last of my postcard series with Derwent Inktense Blocks and I have completed all 14. Though I have shown only 12 as the view-denied two haven't reached my satisfaction. And let me tell you this is not a sponsored post of Derwent. I bought these Inktense blocks sometime back and finally put them to use. That's it. It was definitely fun putting it all together and once I decided that I would want to paint landscapes (mini,of course) the rest was easy.

The landscapes below are two of my favourite places - the first is my hometown, Palakkad, and the second is near to my second home, Fort Kochi, one of the most beautiful and artsy places in India. I have not been able to capture the unabridged beauty of the places though! Like always the picture is accompanied by my micro-poems.

Want to see my earlier postcard art? It's here - Part1, Part2 and Part3.

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Swirling and giggling
Fields, once thronging
Less and less to be seen
Amid the concrete jungle
Building up like weeds
Depending on neighbours
For pesticide food
Neglecting our own granaries. 


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Setting Sun
Reminds us
Of settling 'spaces'
Everyday, every time
To a new beginning.


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Linking it to Paint Part Friday! Kudos to the Amazing Ladies in PPF! 



Negative Painting - An Introduction (In 5 Steps!)

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As artists, we draw and paint many complex things using complex techniques but when we get back to some simple and basic stuff, it really makes one feel good...more so it's POSITIVELY FUN! It's again a validation of the fact that joy can be found in simplest of things.

What is negative painting?


Negative painting is painting around the subject than painting the subject itself. You are actually adding by subtracting. You move from lighter to darker as you go creating an illusion of depth and distance. It a process of layering...lighter layer to darker layer to the darkest.



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Fish-Pond-NegativePainting-HuesnShades



Features

It’s actually fun as you don’t need to be an expert at painting to do a negative painting. You just pick up some forms, shapes and paint around it. Once you get the hang of it, it’s pretty easy.



  • When you start, you could just sketch some shapes, forms and start painting around it.
  • Watercolour seems to be the best medium for it because of its transparency and the glow that it would apparently provide.
  • No details needed just blocking out the shapes.
  • Let each layer dry before you apply the next layer.


How to do a negative painting?

Things needed:

Handmade paper (You can use any watercolour paper/textured paper etc)
Colours used - Lemon yellow, Gamboge hue, Ultramarine blue and Cobalt blue hue. (I have used Camlin Artists' watercolour cakes)
Brushes

1. Firstly I dampened the paper and glided my brush loaded with lemon yellow and then gamboge hue across the paper for the background. Lifted off some paint with tissue paper as I wanted a pale look. (At this point I was thinking what shape to draw. If I had made up my mind on fish beforehand I wouldn't have painted with these colours though. I was actually thinking of flowers while painting this background!)

Unexpectedly I decided on fish and thought of going along with it as the yellow was pale and so drew some fish forms here.


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2. I painted the next layer with ultramarine blue but very lightly around the fish.


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3. The next layer I used cobalt blue hue after adding a couple more fish.


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4. Again I added a few more fish and painted the fourth layer using ultramarine blue. 


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5. The fifth layer I mixed cobalt blue hue and a tinge of black after adding a some more fish.


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And that's done!

I have used just 5 layers here (the steps are 6 because I added the fish . You could use less or many more layers depending on the size of your work.


These two are my first and second attempts which was done simultaneously. They have just 3 and 2 layers respectively and are done on regular postcards.

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 with Gamboge hue, Orange and Scarlet


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with Sap green and Emerald green


These 2 designs were inspired from pictures I saw while browsing.

Linda Kemp is a Canadian artist who has some fabulous negative paintings to her credit. She is an instructor in Artists Network and you can find some good videos of hers in YouTube. You can check out her works there. There are two other artists' whose art I really love and both of them have done some negative paintings too and they have taken it to a different altitude! It's Iraville and Pearfluer - checkout these videos...





Hope you enjoyed this post. Do leave me your feedback.

If you wish to check out my earlier postcard series you can click HERE.


Linking it to the Gorgeous PPF community!


When the lamps told the tales

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When we reached Puthiyangadi in Kozhikode, the GPS indicated as reached near a lane while my sister-in-law and I looked around baffled as there was no big sign that mentioned a Lamp Museum. We asked a person in the nearby shop and he looked lost. So we walked towards a quiet lane and saw “Deepa Kripa” where a lady was combing in some coconuts with her hands on the ground for drying and the man walking around with something in hand. That turned out to be Deepanjali Lamp Museum, one and only lamp museum in India, and the man, Mr. I.C.R. Prasad. We reached there without an appointment as we somehow missed the number but Mr.Prasad was kind enough to take us in though he kept repeating that he takes visitors only on appointments. 

Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades

His Story

So when a lighthouse engineer travelled around states that bordered oceans he was enamoured by the light these simple structures, silent sentinels shed inviting people to safe shores. Lighthouse has always been a symbol of hope, vigilance and stability warning us of rough waters and counselling us to be alert. It was his love for light that resulted in his collection of lamps from all around the world. It has been more than 20 years and still counting. Though opened only 6 months back in his own residence, he has travelled many places in search of unique lamps with history and stories to tell. His abode is one treasure trove of such stories that each lamp has got to narrate from 17 century onwards, be it the very old, traditional lamps from Kerala, the colonial ones or from various parts of Europe. The first of its kind in India, it definitely serves a purpose of shedding light on the history of lamps and its evolution.  

Mr.Prasad has conceptualised and set up museums for the Government in 5 places in India – Kannur, Alappuzha, Mahabalipuram, Chennai and Dwaraka. He has also written 8 books for the Government of India on the subject of lighthouse.

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Mr.I.C.R.Prasad

The Lamps

Every nook and corner of his home is filled with these curios of yester years and everything from outside seems alien, out of place and out of context here. From the angle of the photos you could make out that it’s cramped with lamps, lamps and more lamps. According to Mr.Prasad this is a temporary home for the lamps as he would like to have a permanent lamp museum of his own and he also mentioned that though there are some lamp museums in Europe and elsewhere this is one of its kind in India. Being a private museum/collector has its constraints in space, arrangement and maintenance yet it is done so passionately that every other drawback is overlooked.

One can see lamps carved from stones to metal ones of the recent past, holding ones to the hanging ones, from the buggy ones and ocean ones to the places of worship and everything in between. There are of course some lamps that caught my attention though from these innumerable myriad ones. When asked on how many lamps he has, Mr.Prasad smiled and replied that doesn’t believe in counting “his children”. He believes in quality and not quantity he added. 

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Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades

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Tales of the Lamps

In the olden times, fire was precious and very few ancient household had place where they stored and safeguarded light which made them powerful in a way. Mr.Prasad remembers a few times when people had gone to get some light from such affluent households. It was termed as ‘kedavilakku’ (the Eternal lamp). It was a lamp with oil pot, a spoon to refill.

There was a time when the Namboodiris went out in their nocturnal visits and their lamps were hung as a sign to let others know that they were in. It is French in origin and later on people even used long water glasses, embellished and modified it with filigree rims and hanging chains. There was also the mine lamp specially designed for the purpose of miners who worked underground. The sun-moon lamps were one of the earliest when the people worshipped the Sun and the Moon and then later on they were incorporated into their lamps along with the Holy Cross of the British-Dutch missionaries who came into propagate Christianity. One can also find impressive works of the Islamic lamps; the one that caught my interest had a small scissors and a hooks to pull up the wicks and an extinguisher of a knob-like form to put it out when needed. Persian and Mughal lamps to tribal lamps, there were also chandeliers from different eras to the petromax which actually is the name of the company that made them. There were also guiding lamps used in ships and boats to incandescent lamps, 

Unique-hanging-lamps-Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades
Sun-Moon-lamps-Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades

Unique-Islamic-primitive-lamps-Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades

Church-lamps-Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades

Islamic-lamp-Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades

Snake-head-and-Horse-head-lamps-Deepanjali-Lamp-Museum-HuesnShades


To Visit

The best way to know more would be to visit the place. Deepanjali Lamp Museum is in Puthiyangadi, Kozhikode, Kerala. Mr.Prasad is a pleasant host and would appreciate if called and taken appointment prior to the visit. Saturdays and Sundays are off. Timings on other days are 9 am to 4 pm. There is a nominal fee of Rs.25/- You could contact this number for an appointment – 09400491691.

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21 Days in my Art World - #1

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21 days in my art world, a challenge that Tara Leaver called for - when I saw it in Connie Solera's post I was amused. I loved the idea of sharing it as I had never done anything like it before! Though I saw the post 2 or 3 days after the challenge had started I thought of giving it a try. So here I am posting it in my blog as well...after 9 posts in my Instagram feed.

Day 1: Favourite painting 

This is one of my favourite paintings from the series “Repercussions” which I had curated-co-ordinated in October 2016. Currently picking this one as it is this series that brought some serious attention to my work. .
It’s quite difficult to pick a favourite since there’s some reason or the other that decides that favourite factor- it could be the story that led to the concept, the way it turned out, the learning process, the mediums used, the technique and that accidental ‘Aha’ moment!!!...so on!! 



“I see me in you 
Apparition that broke through 
I make alter truth.”

Acrylics 91.44X60.96 cms

Day 2 - Lesson Learned! 

Being a self-educated artist, everything I try is a learning process, trial and error and full on experimentation! But I do enjoy every single step! Observation, contemplation and application are the key words! Enjoy every bit of it!!
These faces were the attempts of ideas that were lingering in my mind while I was preparing for a series in 2016. 



Learn, learn and learn 
- faces, skin tones, features, dappled light!


Day 3 - Work in Progress

Just like many of the artists’ there will always be more than one work on the table, at the least 2!! It’s fun when you juggle between one to the other! Then there’s this piece where the leftover paints go which in itself becomes another work of art! Enjoy it all!
Currently engaged in a new series of 6 paintings.



Detail of a painting - new series

Day 4 - Art Book

Books!! That’s something I hoard just like art materials! Tsundoku, I believe is the word for books!!! Since I am at my home I have just these 2 at hand right now. All my books rest in Kochi!
“Paula Rego” by Fiona Bradley is one of my faves as Rego is one of my favourite artists and the book really shook me from the core for so many reasons and particularly the way she painted the minutest of details!!!
Love “The Little Van Gogh Museum” for its pictures! Invigorating!! “Sonabai- Another Way of Seeing” by Stephen P Huyler says “The art of Sonabai Rajawar is entirely unique. It has no precedent. Her story expresses the capacity of human beings everywhere to meet their challenges head-on, and to draw from deep within their inner resources the strength and insight to change their lives. She was not daunted by oppression; she found ways to transform it into expressions of courage, beauty and joy in living.”
There’s a collection of essays in Edward Hopper(forgot the name!!!), read that a couple of years back which again is an interesting one. He’s one of my faves too!




Rest to be continued in my next post...do let me know your thoughts on the same - favourite painting, favourite books. the lesson you learnt etc.

Linking it to PPF & its Amazing ladies!




21 Days in my Art World #2

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Tara Leaver's 21 days in my artworld has reached Day 17 and I am finding it quite interesting. I had never really shared so much online regarding my work and related matters so this became an opportunity to open up and share about oneself as an artist, the process and every little thing related to creating art.

So continuing my journey...

Day 5 - Favourite Tool

Favourite tools keep changing with the creations right! Since I am currently engaged in a series of small paintings I am using these 5 brushes- one tattered, three ageing and one new. 😊 Mist sprayer is a must right now!
There are quite a few all-time favourites though!!

Day5-HuesnShades

Day 6 - Current Challenge

My current obsession-challenge is portraiture and getting the features and expressions right! I would love to get the subtle nuances that makes those expressions worth it. There’s always a story behind each face and each expression of that particular moment. Would love to get hold of that subtle magic! Each person is a story-teller of sorts! 
These are my 10-15 mins attempt with different mediums. 

Day6-Portraits-HuesnShades

Day 7 - Colour Palette

Color palette in my current series is quite restricted as usual is the case with me. But it happens naturally depending on the subject matter/ story that I choose to depict. I don’t have a permanent palette, it keeps changing. I love bright colours though. You may wonder what I am creating with this colour palette, unfortunately I can’t reveal it now. But this has been one of the interesting series I have worked on. It has given me some more ideas💡!!! 😊 
I am attempting a video this time. Hope it works well! The video has music, thanks to my daughter who edited it! 😊
Colours in the video: Raw Umber, Burnt Umber, Burnt Sienna, Raw Sienna, Payne’s Grey, Prussian Blue and Titanium White. I am using bits of other colours as well.


Day 8 - Inspiration 

I am almost always inspired by everyone and everything around me in some manner but there’re moments, instances, experiences, even expressions that catch my attention and that dwells with me. Most of the time one inspiration leads to the other. I am also inspired when I see and read about various artists, their life, their work process, their struggles and hardships, their success...even some slightest things for that matter! The news of everyday violence against humanity in general and women & children in particular stirs me up to the core and it haunts me. Though I am not vocal about it, it churns inside me. My daughter is a great source of inspiration! She’s a bundle of potential with unlimited possibilities and full of life!!! She’s my greatest Muse! Sometimes it’s ones own self...what I personally go through. Movies and music influences me and so does books.


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 Rene Magritte’s "The Lovers", 
a Paula Rego study


Sunshine-Day8-Inspiration-HuesnShades
“Sunshine” - sketch of my daughter


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Ms.Marple, Agatha Christie and “Dark forces” - charcoal works


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Haren Das’s print as sketch, 
Louvre-Abu Dhabi from a photo reference of Sanjeev Goyal


Day 9 - Where the Art happens 

Art, for me, can happen anywhere inside my home. From the sitting room or bedroom to the dining hall and near the window-sill or balcony floor where we dry clothes!!! Even in my lap!!! In short I don’t have a dedicated studio space as such... but the “moving studio” is kind of fun as it’s quite challenging at times!!!😊 And when it’s the balcony even natural forces play an important role in how the background turns out to be!!!

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Rest to be continued...

Linking it to Paint Party Friday


Meet An Artist - 100 Faces of Alicia Chen

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Faces are fascinating. Each face has several stories to their credit. Meeting her in Instagram was a happy accident at a time when I myself had caught up with the obsession of drawing and painting faces. I am captivated by the subtle nuances of each expression and the stories they hold within. It was when I found the same chord in the drawings of this particular artist that I decided to know more about her and her art. Her drawings are intense, expressing a never-die spirit and a warmth the people hold onto, veiled in melancholy vein . She is a Taiwanese artist engaged in drawing 100 faces called the 100 Faces Project. She has stories to tell of struggles, hardships, intense pain and sorrow ultimately overcoming these and attaining individual triumphs...a personal tale of life's adventurous journeys, crossing each obstacle and finally leaping with faith to hold onto life and loved ones. She is Alicia Chen.


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Deepa Gopal Sunil: A little brief about yourself and your background.

Alicia Chen: I was born in Taiwan and became a new immigrant to Canada in 2015. My art journey started internationally from Taipei to Vancouver, New York to Toronto, where I currently reside. I spend much of my time collaborating and working with art professionals from recognizable institutions and building strong relationships within the art community. Based on my rich and unique life experiences as an artist, art educator, young business entrepreneur and curator, I create artworks cemented in the act of storytelling, showing unique capability for capturing the essence of my subjects. For me, art is a way of visually documenting my life through the connections I form and infusing it with meaning. Art is a way of evolving oneself and empowering the minority.
I am also an active curator in Toronto’s Asian Canadian communities involved in conducting and coordinating cultural events and film festivals between Taiwanese bureaucracy and Toronto-based charity and non-profit organizations where I aim to bring diversity together and to make social changes.


Alicia Chen-45/100-HuesnShades
Maria

click on the picture to see it large


Each face has a story and you have put that so beautifully. How did you start this project? What’s the story behind it?

I started it in search of happiness and connecting with people in a new city. Surprisingly people like to share their stories, some are more enthusiastic than the others.



Do you meet each individual that you draw the portrait in person? Do you get to know them personally?

I meet most of them or I go through a deep conversation online.


How many faces have you done so far?

I have done 50/100 faces.


Favourite medium

Graphite, charcoal and pastels on paper.


Alicia Chen-28/100-HuesnShades
Paul

click on the picture to see it large


Do these amazing people that you draw feel intimidated at any point of time when you say that you would like to share their story with their portrait?

A few have chosen just to share one line or two when they were not sure about being so open in the public.


What is your intention and motivation behind the 100 Faces project?

Hopelessness, isolation and disconnection lurk underneath the surface of everyday life. It is these core, but lesser vocalized human experiences that form the epicentre of my visual world, and serves as building blocks for my people-focused artistic studies. My works document the extraordinary personal histories of my subjects and translates them onto the page with painstaking detail. With each portrait, I probe the triumphs and struggles faced by everyday people in their everyday lives against the backdrop of a rapidly changing social landscape. The face being the most basic line of connection, ‘100 Faces’ project is an effort to depict the human face, as it really is, so that it can serve as a powerful mirror through which our internal states can be shared with others. In the course of my life, I’ve overcome tremendous hardships and as such have spent my life seeking out encounters with people whose lives are steeped in tales of personal growth. Invariably, I found that above all, it is our faces that wear these experiences— which conceal and reveal who we are in the profoundest of ways. Portrait by portrait, I try to uncover the history behind the lines and imperfections etched in their faces. I hope to do my part in constructing an honest reflection of Toronto’s rich and variegated contemporary political reality through this project.


Alicia Chen-38/100-HuesnShades
Khaled

click on the picture to see it large


Where do you want to take it? What is the next level?

When it's done, I want to host a talk and invite my models as speakers.


How do you choose which person to draw/which story to portray?

I have chosen people who inspired me from all walks of life and all races.  Age 23 and up. No students. I'm especially drawn to people who overcame or found a way to deal with their struggles.


Alicia Chen-2/100-HuesnShades
Shiloh


click on the picture to see it large


How do you think has this project helped to shape you eventually? Has there been an unconscious or conscious moulding in you – as a person, an artist, as a citizen or in any other way?

As a practicing artist, I've met some incredibly successful people who taught me to work with people, go with the flow and do things faster than waiting for it to happen. I've summed up what caused people's depression/anxiety and I try to avoid falling into that pattern. 


If it’s not intrusion, what is your next project?

As I'm evolving with the project, I can't say too much or predict too far ahead so let's see how it goes! My project is always centered on the topic of humanity. With the rapid growth of technology, I want to capture and document the trace of human.


Alicia Chen-26/100-HuesnShades
click on the picture to see it large


Where all can my readers find you?



Alicia Chen-35/100-HuesnShades
click on the picture to see it large


Portraits and description courtesy - Alicia Chen
I have photoshopped it into boxes for convenience of display here.

To read about other interesting artists and what they have to say click here.





21 Days in my Art World #3

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Continuing Tara Leaver's challenge...

If you have missed out on the first and second, read Post1 andPost2 here.

Day 10 - Artist Hands 

When one creates its like holding hands with God - I read that somewhere. I can’t agree more. Not just art but in every small things that we do in our daily life. Learn and practice to polish the skills...keep on creating! One of the greatest gifts is that we’re able to express ourselves (though not totally as I would want to...still learning) through paints and brushes or pen and paper or in some creative form that we would want to.

 ArtistHands-HuesnShades


Day 11 - Turning Point

I had to think a lot over this as I do have lot of turning points... most of which was a leap of faith!!!! Right from my first major group exhibit in Dubai to moving back to India...my move to Kochi and finding my tribe there...to my first curated-coordinated show to “Repercussions”...getting an invite to the National Conclave to getting selected in the Annual Kerala State Exhibition... there’s so much for gratitude...particularly to all those who believed in me! I am amazed by each milestone that I’ve crossed - God, family, friends and well-wishers!! Love you all! And again, I do have miles to go before I sleep!!!😊

Blue-EyeoftheSoul-detail-HuesnShades
 “Blue” (detail), “Eye of the Soul” (detail) 


Eye of the Soul-invitation-HuesnShades
Invitation of the show


Eye of the Soul-article-HuesnShades
Article that appeared in the local newspaper, 'Mathrubhumi'

Day 12 - Current motif

Current motifs! It’s tough to answer!After some serious thought, I must say I don’t have a motif that I adhere to all along...unable to pin-point on one. But Eyes! Yes, that’s one aspect that I like to work on... the joyous glint, the gleam and the flicker, the unsaid stories of love, loss and longing, the unexpressed narratives all find its way there... they are the windows to the Soul!

Eye-Current motif-HuesnShades


Day 13 - Process Insight

My process insight varies with each medium. I wish to share about acrylics for now- a couple of things that arrest my mind right now when I think of process insight. I love working in layers varying between washes and undiluted acrylics (a kind of impasto feel). Washes go mostly in the background as under-painting, Sometimes even in the last layer depending on my subject. I like the feel of the gooey-mushy acrylics on my hands...the warmth, the texture, the lusciousness of it!!! I like the raw, unrefined and unpolished edges of the forms that gives a rustic look. 

 Detail-HuesnShades
 Detail

Song-of-the-glow-worms-HuesnShades
Song of the glow-worms 

Chameleon-HuesnShades
Chameleon

Day 14 - Sold

For a full-time artist selling ones artwork is as essential as air to breathe! Else you are a dependent artist! It is these sales that boost the morale of each artist and urges us to create more and keeps us going!! To think that someone loves your work and would like to have it in their cozy space is such an awesome feeling. It makes the art of creating all the more meaningful! .
Sharing a couple of sold works...some customized-commission and gallery ones.
.
I don’t yet have an online shop. Most of my sales happen either through this blog or Facebook. Yet to make a sale through Instagram. 😊


Sold-paintings-HuesnShades
The first two are glass paintings
the third and fourth are commission works
the fourth is a triptych and is a really large one


Fridge-magnets-HuesnShades

These were a couple of gallery sales...

Fusion work-Abu Dhabi-HuesnShades


Eye of the Soul -series-HuesnShades


Eye of the Soul series-study-HuesnShades
Eye of the Soul series study

Day 15 - How I name my paintings

I love to write poetry. So most of my paintings have my own micro poems as its title. Sometimes I just feel the titles while doing the work. Else I resort to poems, lyrics of songs or even movie titles, though I haven’t taken the last two yet. But while curating I choose a theme/title first as in “Eye of the Soul” & “Repercussions”. 



Repercussions-series-HuesnShades
Acrylics on canvas, 91.44x60.96cms

“We carry death, die
Thousand deaths fallen dummies
Ready to be dressed.”



21 Days in my Art World #4 - Final post!

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The final post of Tara Leaver's 21 days in my art world...You can see my #1, #2 and #3 here.


Day 16 - Smallest painting

I am comfortable working in small format and I love it! My smallest are ATCs (Artist Trading Cards), of which I don’t have the images. This is the image that was readily available right now, from the Folk series that I had done 2 years ago. It’s a Madhubani painting and is 5x5 in.

In case you are interested in looking at my ATCs from 2009, you will find it HERE.

TwinPeacock-Madhubani-HuesnShades


Day 17 - Largest painting

As mentioned above, I am more comfortable working small scale but since my first curated-coordinated show I started working on bigger pieces. Not very huge though. My biggest in canvas is probably this one which I can’t yet reveal in full.😊 I had done a wall mural in my daughter’s room when in Dubai, don’t have a picture though. That’s my largest!!!

Waiting-detail-HuesnShades
“Waiting” (detail), 
acrylics on canvas, 91.5x91.5 cms.


Day 18 - Celebrate 

Art in India is rich and diverse. Each region/state has its own traditional/folk forms that one is mesmerised by the simple-looking yet complex details that go into it! I am a huge fan of our treasure trove and there’s always a phase when I go back to the roots just to have a feel of that richness and extravaganza that makes our arts so special!!!

Madhubani-temple-mughalmotif-HuesnShades
 Details of Madhubani painting, 
my own attempt at Sree Padmanabhaswami temple
and Mughal motifs

Kolam-and-GoddessSaraswathy-HuesnShades
 Kolam (Rangoli) and Kerala mural painting


Day 19 - From the archives

I had been drawing since a child so I don’t actually remember my earliest drawing nor do I have a picture. It must surely have been scribbles! 😊 
I started archiving when I started blogging in 2009. And if I go back to that time I was engaged in a couple of mediums like digital art, folk art, glass painting, mixed media and acrylics. Art no longer was just a hobby, it turned into my passion. I took art seriously and started working every day...that was in 2011 when I was in Dubai. Since then I try to do art almost every day. 

There's no specific reason for selecting these...I was at a loss to pick from my archives...so these are random choices. All these dates back between 2009 to 2011.

Houseboat-Faces-SongoftheLotus-HuesnShades
 The 'Houseboat'picture is one of the first pictures that sold, bought by a dear friend Soji in Dubai.
'Faces' and 'Song of the Lotus'

Girl-and-Lagoon-Digital-HuesnShades
digital works

The girl was my first profile pic that I had used way back in 2007 - 2009 in Orkut, blog and some sites.
The second I had done for teaching a poem on Lagoon while I was working in a school.


Day 20 - Favourite technique

The raw unfinished look with textures and bright colours is what attracts me the most. I keep experimenting with different techniques and different mediums though. I love the burst and blooms of watercolours and acrylic inks...the dribble and drip of acrylics, the texturing too...love the lines and curves of the pen as well as charcoal. So many options... 😊




Day 21 - Big Dream

Finally, the Big Dream! Of course, there are many!!! Become financially opening up independent totally as an artist, taking art workshops particularly for kids (love interacting with them)... able to travel and be inspired by the changing locales and people and gain more experience and insight, be represented by a gallery, engage in more productive and proactive art, be an eternal learner...take up residencies where I can devote myself entirely to it....and some I can’t reveal right now as they’re still seeds!😊


From “Eye of the Soul series” - study-HuesnShades
From “Eye of the Soul series” - study. Sold.

Thanks a ton Tara Leaver for this challenge as it really opened up so many aspects for contemplation and discourse and to understand my own process as I seriously pondered on it. It is the first time I am writing and posting on all these aspects. It was also wonderful to see so many artists and their varied styles. It’s truly an amazing community!💕🙏




Super Blue Blood Moon - Unto You

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31 Jan was our Super Blue Blood Moon day! None would have missed it. In fact, the whole world was over it. This takes me to the question, Are you a moon person? A moon-gazer? I am one. Even when it's uneventful I keep peeping at the moon. So it's no surprise if I watch the whole episode of the Lunar Eclipse, my daughter was with me too...I think almost everyone must have done it. After all, such events happen once-in-a-blue-moon, right? 

In our part of the world, it wasn’t blue or Super! However, the Super Blue Blood Moon day did have its effect on me... Almost during the whole event, I was on my balcony watching the different phases the universe was playing with! I couldn’t capture a single picture properly!! So here's  how I Played with the Blood Moon! Yesterday I experienced my own science and magic of the Universe! In the second picture, you would see a much red moon as I was trying to see that effect. They bent into a curve, lined up... all for my sake! 😊😊😊

Couldn't help writing this...just a few thoughts.
 
Unto You


You rose in the eastern sky
With a silver crescent of a ring and a blood red hue
Was it anger or passion that you wore
Couldn’t decide for it could be both.
Night after night you rose above
Spread a silver blanket across
Urban and rustic dwellings alike
But did it matter to sapiens at all!
You are taken for granted, O nimbus One!
The world has bulbs, lights and all it needs
To light up this realm...
Yet, there are a few who miss you
When you don’t make your appearance
Who keenly watch the ever-changing phases
That you seem to be a master after all...
Is that inconstancy that you speak for?
Or is it the change that you vouch for?
The ebb and flow of life that you offer?
Anything that He learns or just suffers?
Like it or not, you do influence
In the wails of a lunatic and the howls of the wolves
Like the waves on the oceans and its undercurrents.
Not to mention artists and poets
Who have attributed countless allegations.
You are a witness – silent and surreptitious
Of past, present and the future...
The world sleeps when you are up
You see the real man in all his ‘grandeur’
Night after night the ghosts enter
To clamour and create chaos,
To loot and plunder, to lust and revel,
To make sacrifices, to celebrate death,
To reign a world that you no longer recognize.
Still, you embrace one and all
For you still live with the hope of a new-found
Land where dreams blossom in little children
And is strewn across the cerulean sky
Where flowers and saplings grow in secret spaces
Waiting for the eminent rays followed by your dews.

#deepagopalsunil


This is actually the progression of my painting of the moon and then I added it all in one frame with Photoshop. 

My-Super-Blood-Moon-in-curve-HuesnShades

My-Super-Blood-Moon-HuesnShades

My-Super-Blood-Moon-in-line-HuesnShades

This is another Moon post that you may like if this is not an overdose!

So how did you play with your moon???!!

Linking it to the Awesome girls in Paint Party Friday! Thank you for the feature on PPF page!!! I am over the Moon!!!!







Shivalingapoo - And when the fragrance fills the air

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Have been in love with this tree (Couroupita guainensis ) for some time now!!! Can’t get over it... there are some other trees too! But Shivalinga poovu or Nagalinga poovu, the flowers of this tree are so mesmerising and captivating that every time I walk by it to the temple nearby, I seem to stand still. The fragrance reaches even before you cross the gate. I inhale it deeply trying to make it linger for long! The hues, the uncommon shape, the texture is all so alluring!! I am always transported to Sree Raghavendra temple in Bengaluru. That was where I first fell in love with these divinely fragrant blossoms!!! I was 8 years old then.

I still remember the lush green garden with low hanging branches with fragrance in the air (not only of the flowers but also the incense from the temple) that each time I entered it, it would get me into a dream-like existence with prayers in the background. That vast expanse (or so I imagine) that I left many years back is still fresh in memory maybe with the romantic, the nostalgic adage that very often evolves and gets attached to it with passing years particularly with something from childhood. The strong-hued colors, the rich texture, the exceptional shape, the intoxicating fragrance are all so engraved, to stay forever with me. I was afraid to touch it though, as a kid, as it was considered that there would be a lot of serpents around the tree and to vouch for that the exotic flower did have a serpent-head-like form in its center.



Couroupita-guainensis-HuesnShades
Couroupita guainensis
from the nearby ashram compound where is situated a temple


Shivalingapoo-or-Nagalingapoo-HuesnShades
Shivalingapoo or Nagalingapoo


shivalingapoo-HuesnShades
shivalingapoo
...this is nowhere near its true self


shivalingapoo-first phase-HuesnShades


shivalingapoo-sketch-HuesnShades


Here, the colours aren’t true, I have tried a variation in colours. I haven’t been able to quite catch the exact beauty of the flower. I think it’s a "lesson" again...but hey, I will keep trying! I feel it's unfinished too...will work a little more on it.

Linking to the gorgeous ladies in PPF...thanks Eva and Kristin for hosting it.


Top Ten Art Kisses

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Top post on IndiBlogger, the biggest community of Indian Bloggers


“See the mountains kiss high Heaven
And the waves clasp one another;
No sister-flower would be forgiven
If it disdained its brother;
And the sunlight clasps the earth,
And the moonbeams kiss the sea -
What is all this sweet work worth
If thou kiss not me? ” 

Percy Bysshe Shelly, Love's Philosophy




Since it's "that time of the year", why not revisit some artworks that would inspire some more love? This is my Top Ten Art Kisses, not entirely in this order though. 


Rodin himself described the subject of The Kiss as: 
"... a theme frequently treated in the academic tradition, a subject complete in itself and artificially isolated from the world surrounding it; it is a big ornament sculpted according to the usual formula and which focuses attention on the two personages instead of opening up wide horizons to daydreams."


“Make me immortal with a kiss.” 
Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus


Gustav Klimt painted "The Kiss" (1907-1908) at a time when his career was on the down slide. But with this painting, he achieved fame and success like never before. It was bought even before it was finished by the Beldevere Museum. It's one of the most reproduced paintings which portrays lovers completely oblivious to the world immersed in their kiss, it beams with tenderness. It's probably the first time where the woman becomes the protagonist rather than an object of sexual desire in Klimt's paintings which were often accused of being pornographic. It is also one of his most conservative as well as they are fully robed. The fact that most caught my attention is that the painting has 9 kinds of gold leaves used in it and it does invoke awe in every person who actually stands before it. It is around 6x6 feet. Klimt was said to have been inspired by the gilded Byzantine mosaics of  Basilica of San Vitale when he visited Ravenna, Italy.


“Kiss me, and you will see how important I am.” 
Sylvia PlathThe Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath



What seems to attract me to Edvard Munch's "The Kiss" (these are two versions - 1897 and 1892) is that the lovers seem to fuse here. The faces melt into each other and one cannot be distinguished from the other. It is a matter of total surrender pushing aside all the ego...moments perhaps that is rare. One could also feel the movement - around the lovers in the left and the wind-blown curtain in the right. One could feel the air if one closely observes. Munch has a couple of versions of The Kiss and these were actually woodcuts.


“No one has imagined us. We want to live like trees,
sycamores blazing through the sulfuric air,
dappled with scars, still exuberantly budding,
our animal passion rooted in the city.” 
Adrienne RichThe Dream of a Common Language


The strokes in warm colours merged with the strokes in cool are scintillating in this painting, In Bed: The Kiss (1892) by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. Another aspect that makes it unique is the provocative and unconventional subject matter of Lesbian love. Again, there is this tenderness portrayed here by Toulouse who was constantly visiting brothels for his subject-matter and who was commissioned to make Moulin Rouge paintings. He has portrayed the genuine depth of universal love without making a judgment or being reduced to a voyeur. "I paint things as they are, I don't comment." Toulouse had once mentioned.


"You come to love not by finding the perfect person, but by seeing an imperfect person perfectly."
Sam Keen


Rene Magritte's "The Lovers II" (1928) is one of mystery, isolation and probably frustration which goes more with the modern times. The room one can notice is insignificant, nothing interesting happening there while the focus is on the lovers who are veiled. The intimacy and passion are disrupted by the veil and that is what is the most intriguing here.


“O, here
Will I set up my everlasting rest,
And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars
From this world-wearied flesh. Eyes, look your last!
Arms, take your last embrace! and, lips, O you
The doors of breath, seal with a righteous kiss
A dateless bargain to engrossing death!”
William ShakespeareRomeo and Juliet


The most famous star-crossed lovers sharing a kiss on their wedding night which was supposed to be their last painted by Frank Bernard Dicksee in 1884 was voted as the most romantic artwork in Britain. This Shakespearean story is so popular that it is ingrained in the hearts of the young (and old lovers alike) worldwide. Perhaps that makes it enticing all the more. I particularly love Juliet's flowing garb, the foliage and the distant perspective of the mountains and the sky, not to mention the grey-golden-yellow arch.


"A kiss can be a comma, a question mark, or an exclamation point."
Mistinguett


"The Kiss of the Sphinx" (1895) by Franz von Stuck is one where he portrays a femme fatale who grabs a man with her lion's talons while she ardently kisses him. It's eerie in the atmosphere it creates, bold and raw in colours to the point of engulfing the viewer and almost demonic and brutal its adherence. 


“Now a soft kiss - Aye, by that kiss, I vow an endless bliss.” 
John Keats


Tamara de Lempicka, "The Baroness with a Brush", was the queen of glamour and art deco. Her "The Kiss" (1922) is an amalgamation of cubism and neo-classicism. We are left to assume whether they are about to kiss or it had already happened. The only "colour", here, I feel are the faces of the lovers and the lady's crimson lips. They stand amid the bleak and grey surroundings that don't inspire love and yet they seem to be totally immersed in each other.


The kiss itself is immortal. It travels from lip to lip, century to century, from age to age. Men and women garner these kisses, offer them to others and then die in turn. 
Guy de Maupassant, The Complete Short Stories


Amor and Psyche by Antonio Canova (1787-1793) is an "amor-dripping" work in sculpture which resides in Louvre, France. It depicts the just awakened Psyche supported by Cupid, the God of Love. Psyche who had passed into a fatal sleep was woken by Cupid's gentle prick of the arrow. Here, she languorously lies in Cupid's arms in a tender embrace most possibly followed by a kiss. The legend ends in their marriage with Psyche made immortal and assigned as the Goddess of the Soul. There is an interplay of textures here - the skin, the fabric, the hair, the rock, the wings, the quiver and so on. The sculpture can be viewed from different angles, there's no one perspective.


 ‘Alas, that love, so gentle in his view, Should be so tyrannous and rough in proof’
William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet


The passion, the romance, the total embrace was a forbidden one. Originally called Paolo and Francesca, Auguste Rodin's "The Kiss", 1884 sculpture was based on Dante's "Divine Comedy". It captures the moment of the first kiss by the "adulterous" couple who are brutally murdered, soon after, by Francesca's husband. They are trapped in the second circle of Hell. There's teeming energy here while the lovers' are unaware of their approaching fatal fate. This sculpture is a masterpiece as well and plays with different textures and can be viewed in 360 degrees.


“You and I, it's as though we have been taught to kiss in heaven and sent down to earth together, to see if we know what we were taught.” 
 Boris PasternakDoctor Zhivago


At one look it could be passed on as a comic strip but it is Roy Lichtenstein's "Kiss-V" of 1964 which is a hallmark of his innovative pop art with primary colours and Ben-Day dots. It is ambiguous as to whether the lovers are breaking up or reuniting but I would go with the latter! It's quite melodramatic a scene with eye-striking colours and intense display of emotion. The dramatic effect is distinct.



This list doesn’t show allegiance to any source, it is a potpourri of my own observations with what I have read in many websites of the artists', videos I saw, articles I read and the like. I haven't seen any of the artwork in person but someday I would love to! There are of course many more paintings that could be talked about. These are the ones that forged ahead as I thought this topic. You could leave me your favourites in the comments. I would love to see them too.



images: google art project, wikipedia, wikimedia, artists' sites.


From my sketchbook

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Today I am sharing a couple of works from my sketchbook. I am not someone who draws religiously in sketchbooks but I do draw in random papers and stack it. But recently, probably, with Inktober I have started drawing in sketchbook since it's easy to keep it organized that way. The first picture reminds me so much of Mexico, haven't been to the place yet. I would someday since it's the place of one of the most inspiring artists, Frida Kahlo. Sadly, I have come across sneers (particularly from men) when artists, particularly females, mention Frida as their favourite. "It's kind of cliche!" they say, but personally I feel that female artists tend to connect with the struggles, sufferings and the undying spirit Frida still carries in her. It's a struggle of love, loss, pain and overcoming them with her awe-inspiring, exalting and unabashed art.

The-Orange-Wall-HuesnShades


As I have mentioned previously, I am fond of making portraits these days. This is a portrait (with her due permission) of Eiko Hara, a Japanese model, whom I came across on Instagram. In case you would like me to do your portrait, please email me with a picture of yours to mail(dot)huesnshades(at)gmail(dot)com...just for fun!


Eiko-Hara-HuesnShades


A couple of months back I had gone to Paathirakunnumana around one and half hours from my place. It's a serene and beautiful place with Sarppakkavu, the sacred abode of snakes with snake deities in a traditional and natural setting. It was part of the traditional homes in South India and is almost extinct except in a very few, rare abodes. The air and the vibe there is so different and unique! This is a quick illustration during our visit.


Paathirakunnumana-HuesnShades


Another quick hand at a flower picture.


Arali-HuesnShades

Linking it to PPF and the gorgeous ladies there! They are awesome!!!


Madhu-An Obituary

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Madhu-An Obituary-HuesnShades
Madhu
27 years, From Attapadi,
Forest is my home. They usurped it and they call it their own.
Mentally challenged, they say.
I was lynched by a mob for stealing some rice to feed my hunger.
I died on my way to the hospital.
I am survived by my mother.


If only we would  – Live and Let Live!

“Kindness, quite simply, is the rent we must pay for the space we occupy on this planet.” 
("Who will cry when we die?" - Robin Sharma)

Our society had upgraded itself in all possible ways but has downgraded and hit the nadir unlike never before when it comes to being human! We usurp everything on our way and yet claim to be super-civilized. We create jokes at others’ expense!!! We, humans, as a race have become so uncouth, rude, impolite, mean and vicious. Why is compassion, gratitude, humility, generosity such a rare virtue these days?

What will be left for our children and their children -  our posterity? What values are we teaching them? Where are we heading? 



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