Local artists to recreate Sittanavasal murals on canvas
Lotus ponds, elephants and dancers painted on caves more
than a millennium ago may make a re-appearance in drawing rooms of 21
century households, thanks to a team of city-based artists who have
taken up the task of recreating murals of Sittanavasal on canvas.
Sittanavasal,
a cave temple, was an abode for Jain saints, excavated around the
seventh century. The paintings here are regarded among the finest
examples of murals in caves and said to resemble the works in Ajanta and
Ellora. “When we talk about talk about cave paintings in India, we
immediately think of Ajanta and Ellora. But closer home we have
Sittanavasal, whose frescoes resemble the famous caves in Maharashtra,”
says Suresh, proprietor, Kalanjiyam, Tiruchi-based art gallery that is
sponsoring local artists to take up the project.
“The
monument has been the focus of maintenance and restoration only
recently. Many of these paintings have been vandalised by shepherds and
sundry visitors and only traces of some paintings remain,” rues artist
Village Mookaiya, who earned his sobriquet owing to rustic themes of his
paintings. The paintings have been done using vegetable dyes and
include lotus ponds, birds, women dancers.
“These
paintings are yet to come to light as few visit the site and photography
is not permitted,” says Kumar Shankar, an artist who reproduced three
works, exhibited at a city expo recently. Kumar along with the team
hopes to familiarise art lovers and households with the works of
antiquity. Around 30 paintings have been planned, according to Mr.
Mookaiya. Apart from recreating the murals, the team comprising four
Tiruchi-based artists would sketch the Jain stone beds and caves that
Sittanavasal is known for.
The paintings have been
done on acrylic as it dries faster than oil colours, said Kumar . “I did
a small pencil sketch on the spot and did the painting later. As the
paintings are barely visible, they can be recreated only by artistes who
have studied them and possess in-depth knowledge of anatomy and
techniques used,” says Mr. Kumar, a Kumbakonam Arts College graduate who
spent time researching the murals. The artistes have invested a touch
of imagination in the choice of colours.
“I was keen
on reproducing the murals on canvas but I did not have the opportunity
or backing to do so until Kalanjiyam offered support,” says Kumar,
underlining the necessity of support for local artist.
Keywords: cave temples, Sittanavasal murals, Tiruchi artists
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Tiruchirapalli/from-cave-temples-to-drawing-rooms/article4315663.ece
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Tiruchirapalli/from-cave-temples-to-drawing-rooms/article4315663.ece
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