It was with a lot of excitement when my friend Sharika invited me to meet her Grand Uncle, the respected Artist K.V Haridasan. I wasn’t sure what I would say or do in the presence of such a distinguished personality. Within the confines of the Chola Village we were facing a tall gate on which was carelessly scratched K.V. Haridasan. I almost felt like I was back in my home in Kerala, where trees hug close to the house and whatever space is available is scattered with flower pots and medicinal leaves kept out to dry. It was like a small speck of Kerala transported into Chennai Coastline!
Once inside the house, we were chatting with his very cordial wife. Like most elderly people, he was very friendly and was busy catching up with his granddaughter about friends and family. As usual I made a beeline to the kitchen bustling over with tea making and stuffing myself with fruit cake :D As we were sipping our sweet tea, I couldn't help but notice a canvas that was carelessly stashed away in a corner. I was so tempted to touch the bold strokes that seem to try coming out of the canvas as if imprisoned within the confines of the material world. When I asked how he would explain his work, I was admiring his patience in explaining. Here was I, an ignorant fool trying to understand the emotions, experiences and imagination of a Man who spent his whole lifetime in a world of Colors.
Our artist was courteous enough to let us into his workshop where he keeps most of his finished and unfinished works. The whole place was scattered with discarded brushes, paints, broken crockery, old statues of wood and clay. I found the place was comfortable and cluttered (I only feel in peace if I live in a mess; clean houses always make me feel like I’m in a hospital.) There was a whole assortment of furniture including wooden doors, pillars that might have been salvaged from old houses. There were even glass topped tables that were supported by wooden buttresses, which once might have held up roofs. Even item had a story of its own, an identity to be revealed, and all those secrets was locked within the Artist's mind.
Strewn all across the place were specimens of rocks, all varying in structure and texture, which he was happily caressing with his wrinkled fingers. There was love in his touch and a glitter in his eye as he told from where he got them. When asked about the theme of one of his pictures, he was in a dilemma whether to explain or not. But then isn't it hard to express one’s innermost feelings. There is something so sacred and divine when connecting to one’s heart. Even though one may feel the need to communicate, there are so many things that stand at the tip of ones tongue. The moment it is uttered; the meaning, the exaltation of the feeling is completely lost. He just told us – “Art is not a profitable venture. But its important for us to bring color to the world in a way that we can. That’s all I do.”
As he escorted us through the Chola Art Gallery,I don’t know for most people; but for me when I look at a Painting or a sketch, its not the imagery as such that moves me. When I see the varying colors and curves on a canvas, it’s the mind behind the picture that captures my imagination. Each stroke on the canvas must have been triggered by an emotion of the artist, whose collective effect is what we see framed behind a sheet of glass. The Frozen emotion, a crystalized idea, a crescendo of sensations that reaches its climax. The ghost of that hand still lingers in the strands of the canvas, reminiscing in the mood that brought out Beauty in a life of the Mundane.
Check below link for more about a Man who painted his world!
http://mulledink.blogspot.com/2012/05/art-k-v-haridasan-tantric-circle.html