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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, September 29, 2000 |
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Vivid depictions of life
HE CAN'T hear, he can't speak, so what? He can see and observe.
G. Prabhakar who obtained a first class Diploma in Applied Arts
and Painting in 1961 from the College of Arts & Crafts, Chennai,
began his career with H.S. Benson Advertising, Chennai.
He watched and observed the people around him. With a Max Beckman
Memorial Award for outstanding performance he went to the U.S.A.,
where he graduated from the Brooklyn Museum Art School, New York,
in 1967.
In all these years Prabhakar never gave up oil painting depicting
scenes from life around him, particularly of the middle class
people and their simple pleasures.
Men and women chatting in groups, children playing on broken down
cars, women doing household work, tending to animals etc., are
scenes which come with ease and with perception in his paintings.
With strong lines he delineates human forms, trees and
architecture, filling in colours with quick strokes rather than
in smooth layers. Door frames and furniture offer the geometrical
foil to the human forms. He has not allowed his stay abroad to
interfere with the Indianness of his themes or their handling.
He has also taught himself cartooning and caricaturing and has
won prizes. Prabhakar had displayed some of his paintings
recently at the Lalit Kala Akademi.
Realistic idiom
G. Manohar is quite at home both in water colours and oil
painting. He is fond of painting flowers and landscapes.
Flowers in cheerful bunches in both the media attract attention,
though they are more suitable for greeting cards.His landscapes
in water colour show rural scenes in a typical technique of the
medium. Landscapes in oils also picture rural scenes, wooded
areas etc., some of them in a very realistic idiom. But the
surprise at his exhibition at the Vinyasa Art Gallery till
September 30, 11 a.m. - 7 p.m., is the abstract work based on
Nature.
Some of these are quite interesting with quick strokes of impasto
in vibrant hues. Some of the landscapes (though one can recognise
the various elements), border on the abstract because of the way
in which they are treated, and these are the most appealing
features of the show.
LAKSHMI VENKATARAMAN
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