Tuesday, December 06, 2011

From the oven to my ears!

This project was a discovery and then an addiction. After buying couple of terracotta earrings, I was curious to try baking my very own. I purchased the oven-bake clay, earring hoops and 'finding' rings and set about my experimentations. After burning a few, breaking some more, forgetting to bake with rings etc, I had the process nailed down! Well, the colors came from my acrylics.

Now I sport elephants on my ears ;) Well, mostly elephants, couple of jumkis (labor-intensive!), a pair of white birds and then some random shapes.

More to come - hot from my oven!

Monday, November 07, 2011

Fetching water.. just an excuse to see Him

Indian Ink used to be my favorite medium for the longest time in my childhood and Appa handmade the pens for me to use with the ink(which I still have and treasure) I recently discovered the ink pot sitting there incognito with my paints!



I used a wash with the ink for most of the painting of Radha and Krishna except for the finer details when I used my fine brush and the handmade pen-nib. It was interesting to note that I resisted the temptation to use a Sharpie. I have come to realise that 1. Sharpie drawings have this kind of metallic shine when viewed from an angle and 2. One cannot use a wash over a sharpie. 3. There is a charm in using Indian Ink! No it is not the same as Black Paint - acrylics or poster or oil :) You will know once you use it!

Radha is fetching water just as an excuse to see Krishna. For me, painting Him is just an excuse to experience Him also :)

Wednesday, November 02, 2011

Resting in Silence

I have always seen Buddha in meditation or walking in grace but then I saw him resting... and felt rested. The original photograph of this resting Buddha is a statue and I have attempted to give it a similar feel in the pencil sketch. On retrospect I figured that a Banyan tree in the background would have been apt. Hmm.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Ram and Sita?

Ram and Sita? I dont know!! Maybe yes, maybe just a man and woman...the truth is as interpretted by the perceiver. This was a request from Meena which tickled my ego very much :) 

I painted this in grey, black and white acrylics on a 36 by 12 canvas. Infact this canvas warranted a trip to Dickblick shop in Oakland which opened my eyes (and credit card) to many other art supplies. 


Thursday, October 13, 2011

Caught in His grace!

'O Arunachala, the moment I thought of Arunai [the holy town of Arunachala] I was caught in the trap of your grace. Can the net of your grace ever fail?'


The trip to this temple town is imprinted in my mind and I hope and pray that many more such visits will follow (The travel blog about my Tiruvannamalai trip is in my Sulekha blog) I started the above "painting" with acrylics and then added pastels to it. It is in 3 tones and the foothills with the town of Tiruvannamalai and the 4 Gopurams of Arunachaleswar Temple are in silhoutte. The sketch of Bhagawan Ramana Maharishi was my introduction to Him. When a friend asked me to draw Bhagawan, I did so attracted to those eyes in every stroke. The sketch is with her now but the devotion remained.


Thursday, September 22, 2011

Feeling the Blues!

As you may have noticed in my previous blogs, He allures me in different ways and painting Him is a joy and I can smile for days afterwards. Again He came as a friend asking me to paint Him and it was almost like He painted Himself.

Blue hues remind me of only one - Krishna. A teacher told me once why Krishna is symbolised in a blue color - the sky is blue - why... The sky is infinite and so is Krishna. Infinite..
I painted just His hands playing the flute on one side of the board and nothing more (see below). But the mind said that it was not enough and so on the other side I painted Him playing the flute. I know you will question me why I could not take another board and start fresh but sometimes I just dont think too much :( For a change, I did paint His eyes, His lips, His nose, His hair....I close my eyes and I see His serene face.



Monday, September 05, 2011

A Burst of Colors in a Feather

We wandered into the Temple of 10,000 Buddhas in August (no, I did not add an extra 0 by mistake, it was 10,000 Buddhas and it was the most serene place ever!) and the campus was filled with peacocks. It is said Buddhists associate "openness" with peacocks since the birds display their entire plummage with pride and openness!! The beauty lingered in the mind and a few days back, a friend suggested an idea of Krishna and I wanted to do more of a symbolism rather than paint the Lord Himself. The peacock came back strutting into the mind and dropped a feather :)

I painted the peacock feather in bright hues with turquoises, cerulean blues, phthalo greens, violets and burnt sienna. Each stroke of the acrylic made the feather brilliant and vibrant and I completed it in 3 hours. The effect is beautiful from far and when one ventures closer, the squiggliness of the brush strokes are quite evident. I wondered later if the strokes could have been sharper and defined perhaps in oil or even with oil pastels; but acrylics have always been my first love in paints.

And then Krishna wanted to be obviously visually present there on the feather. Aditi suggested painting Him on the stem of the feather or inside the eye of the feather. But I added a 3D version by painting Him in black on cardstock, cutting the image out and you can see Him perched on top of the painting. To give you a sense of dimensions, the Krishna cutout is about 6 inches from toe to his peacock feather) I love this painting even more now with him playing His flute and it adorns our mantlepiece. May His flute music fill our lives...

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Checkerboard of Birds


Viggy says I am obsessed with this kind of checkerboards (remember the Ganeshas?) and with silhouttes (uh.hmm like the Krishna Lila tree). Something about chickening out of working on details but I loved the end result of my endeavour in these birds. Whats it about birds that is so alluring - the freedom, the ability to fly...At some point of time in childhood (which now seems so far away in the past!) I wished I could be reborn as a bird! Now after my dive into philosophy, nope, no more births!!

I got the canvass board (24 by 30) from Michaels on a sale and set to work with my acrylics. I painted the background of 20 squares - giving them special effects - like the green - second from top left and so on. Based on my resolve to paint seagulls, I painted the seagull first on the top left and did 2 more - the second on the second row standing on still water and the fifth on the second row . But the crow took over my imagination at the bottom left. The swan is also a favorite second on the bottom row and then the hummingbird on top right. The birds on the electric lines has been another of my cherished subjects though in such a small space I could not do much justice. Maybe on another canvass, another day! This painting just flew with my imagination hopefully in the right direction.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Pachydermed my tee

I had purchased these fabric paint pens (5 colors) sometime back but hardly use them (other than the Eagle theme tee shirt for Gau and Suchi's "I Love Taco" for which she used my pens) And then again I had purchased some white tees with an idea to paint sea-gulls (which is still the idea for future) and today I got the jutka to sketch an elephant. As usual this was no mammoth effort or anything, saw this kind of design by googling and a quick sketch in 15 minutes and I was done. If only I pay attention to detail :(
But I am actually proud of the end result - the dots around the design add to a nice effect. I gave it to Vijay though Viggy kept admonishing me that I should give choice to people and not thrust it on them :( Vijay liked it though!!

Saturday, April 02, 2011

A Playful Krishna

This one was easy and the effect is stunning. He is identified by a flute, a peacock feather and an attitude!! Vignesh may differ with this opinion as he questions me why I let people wonder what I paint! I would rather they wonder at what I paint :) Got it?




I cut Krishna's silhoutte in the black foam board (similar to what I used for my other Krishnas) and glued it to a Red Poster Board on which I used oil pastels to create a semblance of sunset ;)

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Music in Painting

The mother made way for her son :) that is a riddle only someone who knows what is "behind" this painting would understand!


In an earlier blog I had mentioned about wanting to attempt multiple Ganeshas on one canvas http://pushyram.blogspot.com/2009/08/phase-of-ganeshjis.html
I worked over these "ashta Ganapathis" playing different musical instruments using acrylic paints over canvas. 2 of the Ganeshas - the flute and veena are inspired from pics off the internet; the guitar and the Nadaswaram were concocted from my imagination; while the rest are inspired from statues. I enjoyed painting the backgrounds in various textures and patterns and at one point Ram thought that, that was it. It was tempting to leave it like that in vivid colors but Ganesha had already removed the obstacle and made up my mind :)