Monday, December 31, 2007

Deja vu


Since the past two weeks, I have not been able to post on the blog. The above work is done about two weeks ago. I can say that I have utilised this time to collect experiences which will help me in my new work. Travelling to deserts, cities and beaches, I hope to create new work with new vigour.
This above blue landscape though done before can relate to what I have seen after. I think its quite exciting that sometimes what you have created is what you will see later... Hee hee, quite silly but it’s a thought that sometimes in the depth of your mind are images which can relate to approaching sights and experiences. (The landscape I saw was greyish in the day and blue-ish after sunset...)
Happy New Year my 3For Darlings!!

3 comments:

Archana Prasad said...

hey...have you guys read Murakami? He's a lot into parallel worlds...dream, reality, dream - he keeps taking you in and out and in until you no longer know where you are. Dont know why this is connected - but I thought of him when you made that comment about images so deep in your sub-conscious that you feel like you've been there when you see a corresponding image in the real world.

pooja said...

very nice work. very very nice. good feeling, intense. when i look at it, i get a sense of night.. deep skies and the blackness looks to me like crows - birds in the night/twilight. i know you're thinking sea, but isn't art a highly subjective, and isolated experience? well, viewing it?
actually i think that its an isolated experience - period. yes, you talk about art, compare etc etc. but when it comes down to creating, you're all alone. you, and your thoughts, and your canvas.
i really see you evolving in this piece. i like the direction its going. quite mature. a coming together of study and instinct. its where you really want to be ultimately - isn't it?

Nirali Lal said...

Yes, I think art is highly subjective.
What I paint after I see, is not what I have seen.
I think it combines with what I felt.
Like parallel worlds of the 'seen' and 'felt'.
This I think is Art