INDIA NOW

Taj plinth art


The Celebration of the India Now in London,  July 2007 was launched with  the journey of a replica Taj Mahal floating down the Thames. The Taj was built by Art Director Bijon Das Gupta and I painted  the plinth on which the Taj rested.

My experience

As an Indian-born painter, living and working in London, I find inspiration in cities and their people.
The launch of India Now meant I could use the plinth to show side by side the two places closest to my heart - India and London.

I used impressionistic strokes of oil colour, and chose river views of the Thames near Battersea Power Station and further along, the Millennium Wheel, Westminster and Big Ben - all recognisable elements of a city vibrant with colour and spirit.
When it came to representing an Indian city, I had no doubt that Mumbai (Bombay) would be the most appropriate. Its similarities with London become more striking each time I look - the buildings, the boom and the buzz!
I set off each day to work from a studio in Battersea. The four panels making up the sides of the plinth were 25 metres in length apparently, and had to be ready in three weeks.
In theory it seemed fine. But it was only when I physically saw the large MDF boards lined up against the wall that I realised the scale of the project and what would be involved.

And so, the studio became my home for the next three weeks. I worked out it was the coffee and the dark chocolate that gave me energy. My music also kept me inspired if I began to flag, and my last resort was a straw mat from India that became my new bed in case I needed a rest.
Soon the empty panels were becoming cityscapes and were filling up the studio - and my excitement began to mount.
But with three days left to go, I ran into a hitch. I wasn't sure what to do with the fourth panel and what it was going to show.
By this stage there were enough buildings and river views. But something important was still missing - it was the people of course!
And so, the presence of Londoners and Mumbaikars, a power that makes both these cities so great, evolved to fill my last and final panel.

It was a great opportunity to be involved with this project and I enjoyed every moment.

For further press coverage, visit

http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/content/articles/2007/07/25/india_now_plinth_art_feature.shtml

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