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Murali Nagapuzha - Life on the Corner - a profile by Anita Nair Life on the Corner
He paused near a thechi plant [ixora coccinea]. “Do take good care of this one,” he said “We hardly see the native species anymore. It is hybrids everywhere now…,” he said. He raised his eyes and they swept across every little mound and dip as he said “You should leave it as it is. All this wilderness is just beautiful!” I smiled then. For a few minutes, I had worried that almost like everyone else, he would recommend a waterfall by a rockery, sweeping lawns and neat borders and fruit bearing trees. But this…it was exactly what I had hoped for from a man who painted as Murali Nagapuzha did. That was not an interpretation of European life, but simply life on the corner. Assyrian art represented the local reality--men hunting lions. Egyptian art showed everyday life. Everything has to start at the beginning, and that beginning is completely local."
So this then is the world of Murali Nagapuzha. Part memory. Part nostalgia. Part a deep abiding love for the wonder of the everyday. Add to this the man that Murali is. A composite of many experiences that turned the indignant scrutiny of the conscientious being into an indefinable lode of artistry. When these come together, the world that disturbs Murali Nagapuzha and the world that he has an intimate understanding of and identification with is amalgamated and absorbed to create a whole new artistic dialect. In this dialect, the vowels are less rounded and the consonants independent. Pause at the childhood series – where in a bucolic setting children frolic and a cow grazes. The hues of the hibiscus and the variegated leaves of the elephant yam are all familiar. Endearing images echoing with the poignancy of nostalgia. We all know that feeling but then what takes the breath away is the washing line of whiter than white clothes where a brassiere fluttering in the breeze is inserted with a certain and casual cheekiness. Never was art more alive and more resolute. We see this again and again even as angels hover offering excess and more excess to a landscape already saturated with excess or as fish ache to bite and be part of that already laden fisherman’s catch. As with the cadences of a new dialect that builds itself on the solid syntax of a much used language, Murali Nagapuzha’s work has the resonance of familiarity. We think we know and that we recognize it. Only at first. Murali uses the familiar to entice the eye. Then it is Murali’s world we are privy to. In the Basheer series we are first introduced to the Basheeresque motifs: goats and wondering little boys in ‘half trousers’, clandestine meetings and an ‘umma’ and ‘moplah’ -all positioned in the background while in the foreground Basheer in his armchair waits. This is a Basheer who like Murali draws from the familiar rather than concoct the new. It is both biography and artistic philosophy. Murali Nagapuzha’s art works with sentiment but at no time are we to dismiss it as sentimental. It is vulnerable in that it allows itself to be perceived as childlike but that is its strength. A child’s innocence, a child’s lack of duplicity, a child like playfulness and a child’s wonder – ‘the eternal sunshine of a spotless mind’-. In a world, where being accessible is considered being popular and hence less worthy, Murali Nagapuzha takes a risk. Not just is his realm figurative but his artistic motifs are drawn from a landscape that is now part of every tourist brochure that celebrates God’s Own country. And yet, without being banal or kitschy, Murali Nagapuzha’s artistic terrain marvels at the Kerala contours and colours and makes it his own. To follow Murali there is be enchanted. It cuts off all escape routes and makes it impossible for us to turn away from his mindscape. What more could an artist aspire for? Contact Murali Nagapuzha at nagapuzha@yahoo.co.in
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Ramachandra Guha - History's Footman Mahesh Dattani - The Invisible Observer TR Mahalingam - God at one's fingertips Murali Nagapuzha - Life on the Corner
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