Saturday, April 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Famous Mural About Punjab Comes To Surrey

Darpan News Desk, 28 Jan, 2015 02:34 PM
    An awe-inspiring mural from renowned Indian graphic artist and designer Orijit Sen is making its home at the Surrey Art Gallery for 6 months. From Punjab, with Love is a digital reproduction of Sen’s famous 75 metre long fibreglass and acrylic mural at the Moshe Safdie designed Virasat-e-Khalsa Museum in Anandpur Sahib India.
     
    The Surrey Art Gallery is presenting a nearly 10 metre long digital print that represents this astonishing tableau of Sikh and Punjabi history done in a highly detailed miniature style.
     
    Long considered the gateway to the Indian subcontinent, the Punjab is a vast geographical area with a long and storied history. Sen’s epic mural renders this culturally rich region in compelling ways that blend busy human populated landscapes with a diverse natural world of flora and fauna that is increasingly under threat from modernization. 
     
     
    The mural from Punjab, with Love blends history and the everyday with festivals, weddings, women washing clothes, shopping, cooking; men ploughing the fields, tying turbans, riding motorcycles; children flying kites, enjoying school life, playing sports—a panorama of traditional and modern Punjabi life.
     
    Orijit Sen writes about the inspiration for the mural: “The parallel realities of the past and the present seem to bring to their [Punjabis’] everyday existence a special something: a sense of life that is lived in the here and now, of joys and sorrows that are experienced and expressed without reservation; something that remains open-hearted and generous, and laughs in the face of troubles.
     
    It is a special something that I have set out to capture through my artworks, which I hope serve at the very least as a reflection and affirmation of the irrepressible, indomitable Punjabi spirit.”
     
    About the Artist:
     
     
    Orijit Sen studied graphic design at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad. He is considered one of India’s first graphic novelists with River of Stories published in 1994 and often works in a miniature style combined with his own distinct graphic style.
     
    Sen has done several exhibitions and museum design projects in India, the United Kingdom, and Russia and is a co-founder of People Tree, a centre for design, crafts and sustainable living based in Delhi.
     
    This exhibition is presented in partnership with Indian Summer Arts Society, with support from the Province of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University.
     
    Photo Credit: Nick Siu and Indian Summer Arts Society

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Lock your kids' smartphone if they ignore your call

    Lock your kids' smartphone if they ignore your call
    Parents, please note. If your kids ignore your calls, use this app to lock their smartphones immediately to get their attention back....

    Lock your kids' smartphone if they ignore your call

    'Wrong policies will make 1 bn more people poor by 2030'

    'Wrong policies will make 1 bn more people poor by 2030'
    Almost one billion more people globally may face extreme poverty by 2030 if world leaders fail to make concrete decision on inequality and climate...

    'Wrong policies will make 1 bn more people poor by 2030'

    Sexual objectification ups fear of rape among women

    Sexual objectification ups fear of rape among women
    The rampant sexual objectification of women can heighten their fears of being raped, a significant study says, adding that making sexual objectification...

    Sexual objectification ups fear of rape among women

    Some youngsters will rape if nobody would know: Study

    Some youngsters will rape if nobody would know: Study
    A shocking study in the US has revealed that one-third of college-going youngsters might rape a woman if they could get away with it....

    Some youngsters will rape if nobody would know: Study

    Sex good for health of species

    Sex good for health of species
    Researchers from the University of Toronto have found that species which reproduce sexually rather than asexually are healthier over time because...

    Sex good for health of species

    Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science

    Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science
    A new research has found that men are less likely to agree with scientific evidence of gender bias in science, technology, engineering and mathematics...

    Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science