Sunday, February 27, 2011

Black and white are equally pretty in art



In a world dominated by colour, can you think in black and white?




As you cruise south on the IT corridor in Chennai you would have perhaps noticed a mural titled 'Mother and Child'. It was created by contemporary artist Asma Menon for Tamil Nadu Road Development Company Limited (TNRDC) few years ago. Apart from murals and installation, Asma is known for her vibrant colours and intriguing canvases.

Featured as Artist of the Month by Cholamandal Artists Village for this month, on February 26th and 27th, Asma dwells on printmaking and the influence and impact of this medium with the aid of a slideshow. In her exhibition titled 'Absence and presence of colour' Asma presents her etchings and black-and-white works.

The works take the viewer into the vortex of the "reading of the cards". The journey is of clairvoyance. Stark black-and-white line drawing against vivid borders is akin to a stage set for the unveiling of the answers to one's queries. Or is it! How often is one motivated to think in black-and-white in a world dominated by colour? But this exhibition does.

The art village, established in 1966, gives art aficionados a chance to understand the artist firsthand and her expression and the whys governing it. Located in Injambakkam, nine kms from Chennai proper, the art village's creations have been shown in Europe, the U.S. and South America. Several skilled craftsmen and artists live in a commune-type arrangement and create art as a matter of fun and pride.

Asma's creations reflect her bubbly personality and most of her oeuvre is brimming with a busy feel that needs to constantly communicate. Her strength seems to lie in packing a lot of elements on a crowded canvas much like a busy Chennai street during rush hour. Her symbolic streaks inform while yelling for attention.

A B.Sc. graduate in Visual Communications and M.A. in Fine Art from Chennai's Government Arts College, Asma has had her share of solo shows in several cities of Europe ranging from France to Spain to Italy and to the Middle East and Far East, Egypt, Malaysia, Japan and the Republic of Macedonia.

Some of Asma's composites occasionally mimic caricatures as an inevitable compliment to her sense of humour. Or is it all planned like an exit line of a play? Her persona is represented in the blend of hues that she teases the onlooker with.

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RAJ S RANGARAJAN

(A New York based independent trend writer, Raj S. Rangarajan reports on the art market and auto shows and reviews films for media based in New York; Toronto, Canada; and India.)