Sunday, September 25, 2011

इंतज़ार...

One of my abstract works which has been subjected to much speculation to the few who have seen it. i wonder why...
Open to your interpretations.
Well, the wait continues... =)
Intzaar [2010] (ink,pencils and charcoal on paper)

the beginning of intzaar
[apologies for the low quality photographs]

it's been on my mind so felt like sharing it: DJ Cheb i Sabbah song- kese kese



Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Blind Sculptor aka Waking Dream III

Into figurative these days and loving it...
Human body is one of the most amazing creations...so much to explore...
some of my first figures... ~desiring perfection.



written on 1.3.11
 
PS:Expressing gratitude to 'Aks'... who has currently been an 'inspiration' to love and embrace myself which at some point of time in my life seemed unattainable. My only hope of unconditional love in this delusional world.
[a song dedicated to aks- saathi-midival punditz and ustad sultan khan ]

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Áftab Ámad Dalil-i Áftáb




Love, The Hierophant

'Tis heart-ache lays the lover's passion bare:

No sickness with heart-sickness may compare.

Love is a malady apart, the sign

And astrolabe of mysteries Divine.

Whether of heavenly mould or earthly cast,

Love still doth lead us Yonder at the last.

Reason, explaining Love, can naught but flounder

Like ass in mire:Love is Love's own expounder.

Does not the sun himself the sun declare?*

Behold him! All the proof thou seek'st is there.

~Rumi


* The line is a literal translation of the persian analogy 'Áftab Ámad Dalil-i Áftáb' meaning the appearing of the Sun is proof of the Sun and thus metaphorically implying that love indeed needs no explanation. The existence of love, is proof of Love. heh! it's a sort of cyclical reasoning! A-scientific but then as i mentioned before, it has a feel factor attached to it! Hence, according to me, it's completely futile and a waste of time to define love objectively, as humorous it is, to read physicists debate on the existence of the sun!

Silver Dollar.                                        9.7.11

Monday, August 29, 2011

The Great Masturbator-Dalí

The Great Masturbator,1929, oil on canvas, Salvador Dalí

Certainly  this composition allows us vivid insight into Dalí's sexual fantasies, which were often violent, and his fear of the dangers of carnal love, which is symbolized mainly by the grasshopper. In contrast, the lion's head inscribed in the masturbator's face-at the point where it merges into the female body- with its lolling tongue and wildly rolling eyes stands for the impossibility of controlling erotic lust. Dalí's fear of sexually transmitted diseases is manifest in the fellatio that does not take place between the naked woman and the male torso in front of her face, whose penis appears to be strangely "abstract". Dalí took great care to point out that the contours of the face with its elongated nose were inspired rock formations at Cap de Creus. This painting came into being while the artist was under the influence of his first passionate encounter with Gala, and it mirrors Dalí's yearning for and at the same time deep-seated fear of a union with this fascinating woman. After all, at that point in time Dalí professed to have only masturbated and never performed coitus.
All of that is evident in The Great Masturbator. But the painting itself, as smooth and fine as alabaster, is much more than a subjective avowal-just as for Dalí sexuality always meant more than purely individual,psychological libido. To him, eroticism, beyond all conventional morality and also beyond physical satisfaction, was a protective wall against the certainty of death, making it a life principle par excellence. Like other means for attaining "enlightenment of the soul", sexual passion served as a hallucinogenic medium, with the help of which transcendent experiences could flow into the painting. It is for good reason that in Dalí's later thinking eroticism became the "royal path to the soul of God" because as he put it, it is inherent in all molecular structures.
The translation of erotic sexual fantasies into pictorial compositions and suggestive visualizations- more often than not with obsessive zeal- therefore become a highly effective method of laying a foundation for "shared dreaming". What could be better suited to creating  common ground between the artist and the observer than their common existential experience of eros!

Source: Salvador Dalí, Norbert Wolf

Monday, August 22, 2011

Ambrosia

Breathing Love

'I am a sky where spirits live.
Stare into this deepening blue,
while the breeze says a secret.
Like this.'
 -Rumi

It's almost as if i've come a full circle, literally and metaphorically. Arrived where i started from-myself!
From being a blind sculptor,the abstract tree, one of the 3 cats in a bin,the feather pen of a diary,a nosy boss, a compass, a demanding weaver,a lonely sharpener in a pencil box,a rigid sun,a hyperventilated designer, a confused foetus to an abstract painter or 'banwri'! Played many parts, created and destroyed, and at times, even rendered useless!
These past 4 years of my association with Centre for Creative Expressions,Karmic Research Centre (to know more:http://krcindia.org/ )has been divine. Not only because of the people i met there and connected to but because of it being an instrument or an inspiration to work with myself, which by the way i realized i love doing! It has been a subtly selfish journey,whether it be meditations,numerous theatre workshops (particularly 'Deewano ki  Mehfils') or just being ME, i.e. tangible and intangible, lower self and higher self,real and 'maya'...everything and nothing!
Me, who took up this path of being a seeker, exploring with expression and love, undeterred and courageous, with occasional bumps of fear and confusions, withdrawals and guilt, but the path still remains... LIT as it always was. . .
Resplendent with Universe's incandescent energies of all kind from the so-called negative to positive, learning to use each one of them with the right INTENT.Yes, my journey with the self(/centre) can be summarized with work around this one word. INTENT OF UNCONDITIONAL LOVE. Quite an abstraction! They're like some of the words and concepts (Meditation and happiness being another) which can't be described or explained or defined objectively! But can definitely be experienced. I do have an inkling and can proudly claim that i HAVE experienced them and have been privileged enough to realize them, allowing myself to be open to all kinds of energies involved in it, whether they are intellectual or emotional,(or again so called negative to positive)
And may be i would never be able to define such words in 'words' and may be i don't even want to! Coz i cherish those Moments! I go by experience...always have and i quite admire this quality about myself,otherwise i would never have had such experiences (which includes meeting/'working' with some amazing people that i have/am/will) Sometimes, words don't mean a thing, and that's where the 'experience' part seeps in. It's like a visualization that you see in your mind or a rythm that rings in your ears or a choreography that makes you dance! 
I'm not gifted with words(for better or worse?) but i am gifted (like numerous other children of universe) with the ability to experience this Intent and Unconditional Love and a vehicle to share it by inviting you to this indescribable and indefinable experience! and That... I often do... with eclectic approaches and techniques! Who would understand and feel this better than Aks, your reflection!? =)

PS: And yes, Love is a selfishly unselfish act, but it's definitely NOT a Commodity! It's not malicious or polluted either. It's difficult, yet it is essential! And one of the uniqueness of this Act is that you cannot ACT it out! Rather...you won't be able to! You won't be able to cheat or pretend or wear a mask! and still it is a theatre of life, and we all must play our parts! ;)

Khunuk ân kas ke chu mâ shud, hame taslîm u rezâ shud
Geruv-e 'ishq u junûn shud, guhar-e bahr-e safâ shud.
 
'Happy the one who has become like us;
who has become all surrender and contentment;
Who has become the pledge of love and madness;
who has become a jewel in the sea of purity.'
-Rumi

Hare Krishna!

Monday, August 1, 2011

Dream designer!

Salvador Dalí and Films

1929 : Un Chien Andalou (An Andalusian Dog) is a silent surrealist short film by the Spanish director Luis Buñuel and artist Salvador Dalí.
The film has no plot in the conventional sense of the word. The chronology of the film is disjointed, jumping from the initial "once upon a time" to "eight years later" without the events or characters changing very much. It uses dream logic in narrative flow that can be described in terms of then-popular Freudian free association, presenting a series of tenuously related scenes.
source : wikipedia

At the beginning, there's a famous scene of a man played by Buñuel sharpening his razor who sees a narrow cloud approaching the moon. Followed by the razor cutting through an eye. This has come to be regarded as a motif that stands for the optic nerve, and thus the destruction of everyday perception as such.
source:Salvador Dalí, Norbert Wolf
eyeball scene
To see the complete movie open the linkhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztVr7yx0pn0&feature=related

1930: L'Age d'Or(The Golden Age). A surrealist film collaboration of Luis Buñuel and artist Salvador Dalí.

See the complete movie in 8 parts

part1  part2 part3 part4 part5 part6 part7 part8 

1944: Spellbound . The Hollywood director Alfred Hitchcock approached Salvador Dalí who designed the famous dream sequence for the movie.

dream sequence-Salvador dali

PS: This dream sequence holds a special place in my endeavor of art and psychology.

2003:Destino (destiny)  is unique in that its production originally began in 1945, 58 years before its eventual completion. The project was a collaboration between American animator Walt Disney and Spanish painter Salvador Dalí. 

source:wikipedia

 destino


Monday, July 25, 2011

Virtual Reality

Sharing an interesting article on Salvador Dali.

Virtual Reality (article pg17-22. Source: Salvador Dali 1904-1989, Norbert Wolf)

Eating and painting as paranoid-critical , both existential and aesthetic forms of "communion" and communication: this is just one of the many effects in the panopticon of Dali's creation. To return to the question posed at the beginning of this text, how can one approach an artist and his works which are both, in their own way, "fed" by these and other similar "ingredients"? As the author of a text about Dali, it is tempting to try to keep pace with his "fantasticism", even if it is at the level of "delusion of interpretation" (this was a favourite expression of Dali's, which he discovered in the writings of Lacan,). As a result, however, readers would learn more about the author's own threshold of tolerance for libidinous and morally questionable material-about his verbal artistry and knowledge of vulgar psychology-than they would learn about the works of art. And the interpretation of artwork-be it that of Dali or any other artist-should not simply be reduced to an expression of a given author's psychological disposition.
It is probably impossible to completely avoid such temptations. The material with which Dali confronts all of his interpreters is simply too seductive. Its is too similar to a "Garden of Earthly Delights" (an association with a famous painting by Hieronymus Bosch in the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid), whose stimulants we succumb so often enough. Thus, it is all the more important to counteract this temptation by consistently sticking to more objective methods of analysis. With this in mind i propose-in addition to describing historical chain of development-drawing a comparison with "virtual reality". This constitutes a feasible guideline, one which at least supports an approach to the artistic-aesthetic category of Dali's oeuvre. The basis of this approach is as follows:even though it is true that Dali intended to employ superficial gags, artistic trickery, and elaborate trompe-l'oeils-occasionally in his early work and quite frequently in his later creations- it is nevertheless unjust to classify his entire body of work as charlatanism. Rather, Dali's true aim- at which he in fact succeeded- was to set the same process in motion over and over again: that is, the work of the imagination in the minds of his fascinated(and occasionally disgusted) viewers.
Now let us return to the key term "virtual reality", which can be explained by means if a statement by Jaron Lanier. Born in El Paso, Texas, in 1960, Lanier is anything but a contemporary of Dali's. He is a computer scientist and composer. He works with programming languages, video games, and a virtual reality system, one aspect of which I wish to single out for my comparison. Lanier has developed a pair of glasses that can simulate a three-dimensional, wide-angled image of a room on two micro-display screens. These are accompanied by a glove containing built-in sensors that deliver information about the hand’s position to a computer. The goal of Lanier’s invention is to use these instruments to enable a type of “shared dreaming”, a virtual reality in which a person’s subjective experiences may be shared with and perceived by others. In fact, several people can enter this same digital world simultaneously.
In the initial stage, these experiences are still completely pre-programmed. Lanier,however, envisions a time when they can be created and “coloured in” by a number of players working together. This would give rise to the exciting possibility of an exchange, of observing a subject through someone else’s “glasses”. This type of communication would then utilize a type of signal that would adopt the character of an actual event without being identical to the outer reality.
I am convinced that if Dali would have known about Lanier’s system, he would have been thrilled by it and would have proclaimed himself to be its visionary prophet. After all, as early as 1942, he had envisioned the possibility of “face masks for observing dreams in colour”.(Dali 1990,363)
It is true that Dali was continually attempting to place a systematic, objective value on his subjective and irrational experiences by presenting his audience with alternating views of various levels of reality-be the dreams, suggestions or shorthand for reality-than to a certain degree, he anticipated Lanier’s vision. After  all, Lanier’s goal is to divide the images seen through his glasses in such a way that user’ view of their actual environment parallels that which appears in the virtual world-that each one reflects the other, or that they have a progressive effect on one another.
The Phantom Cart,1933,oil on wood, 7.5 X 9.5 in Geneva,Switzerland,collection of G.E.D. Nahmad

Dali’s composition The Phantom Cart of which he painted two different version in 1993, serves as an example. A two-wheeled covered wagon rolls through the light suffused expanse of a barren plain in Ampurdan.  The apparition like town that is visible in the distance (possibly Girona) is integrated into the opening in the wagon cover in such a way that the silhouette of a church tower takes the place of the driver we would expect to see there. The journey and the destination melt into the depths of the perspective. So, too, do the reflected reality and the fiction that has been enhanced into a hallucinatory precision. The work as a whole remind us of Lanier’s bifurcated glasses and the hoped-for possibility of making an optical comparison between empirical experience and “virtual reality”- in this case, a somewhat ghostly one. It is certainly no coincidence that contemporary viewers marveled at The Phantom Cart; it captures the character of the Catalonian landscape in this region better than almost any other Dali’s paintings. At the same time, the piece owes its spectral tenor t the deliberate influence of “virtual reality”, embodied here in the church tower, which has been transformed into an active character.
The abovementioned concept of “shared dreaming” taking place within a creative process-something to which we might also apply the modern label of “interactive medium”-seems to me to be the primary goal of this style of painting that was so specific to Dali. At the same time, I disagree with those critics who take issue with Dali’s often hyperrealistic painting style, claiming that he leaves no room for his observers to let their own imagination take hold.
Dali never flirted with pure abstract painting. Futuristic and cubistic stylizations were the furthest extremes to which he allowed himself to go. He considered abstraction, particularly in its constructivist versions, to be nihilism or empty decoration. In his estimation, it does not fulfill the greatest commandment with which art is charged, which is to be connected with a communicable message or a “sharable” vision. This may sound strange given the cryptic nature of his compositions. On the one hand, Dali said, “How can you expect that the public will understand the meaning of images I transcribe when I myself-the person who creates them-no longer understand them as soon as they appear in my paintings?” (interview with Judson Hand in the Sunday News,April 11, 1976)
On the other hand. He emphasized that “the fact that I myself do not immediately understand my pictures does not mean that they have no meaning. On the contrary, their meaning is so deep, systematic, and complex that absolutely scientific knowledge is required in order to interpret them… They are the precise expression of a symbolic secret language of the subconscious”-and he Dali, was the recording device for that expression (Dali,XXVI)

As an alternative to abstraction, he presented a painting technique that was oriented towards traditional art intended for museums, the standards of old masters, and at times even the salon painting of the nineteenth century. He frequently bathed his scenes in a mercilessly glaring brightness. As he put it, he wanted to allow objects and figures to collide with one another “in the bright light of reality”. Art historian Uwe M.Scheede interprets this brightness as a metaphorical one: “It is intended to make the clash of objects that do not belong together clearly visible, thereby creating an inverse situation in which the illusory nature of reality is revealed” (Scheede 129)
Dali’s naturalism and hyperrealism- developed long before the American hyperrealism of the 1970s, which Dali greatly admired-increased the impact of the virtual exponentially. His artistic path thus overlapped in large part with that of surrealism, in the sense that its fundamental assumption was that surreality-that is, the supernatural-exists directly within the real world. Therefore, we could accurately classify Dali’s naturalism as “dream photography”.

Mecano's tribute to Salvador Dali- Eungenio Salvador Dalí   song http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6YKacFETUc