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"The aim of every artist is to arrest motion,which is life,by artificial means and hold it fixed so that a hundred years later when a stranger looks at it,it moves again, since it is life." So said Williamson Harrison Faulkner and this is part of my inspiration too. I aspire to create art that will be enjoyed by generations to come. My works can be seen and bought at http://www.usharamachandran.com/
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Artscape - Episode 124 - Usha Ramachandran
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Saturday, October 26, 2013
The New Indian Express write up on my one man show at Durbar Hall.,Ernakulam
Etching the rhythms of life
By Aswathy K - KOCHI
Published: 02nd October 2013 10:19 AM
Last Updated: 02nd October 2013 10:19 AM
Who said once you have crossed your sixties, you should sit at home and spend your retirement life idly relaxing on an easy chair...For those who think ageing is a hurdle to fulfil your passions, 63-year-old, Usha Ramachandran is an exception. The homemaker-turned artist and sculptor gave wings to her artistic bend only three years ago. She is on a full reign of her dreams with her solo exhibition of sculptures, paintings and sketches at the Kerala Lalithakala Akademi, Durbar Hall Art Centre.
Titled ‘Rhythms of Life’, the exhibition showcases the myriad facets of everyday life and ordinary moments in extraordinary frames. “Through ‘Rhythms of Life’, I want to bring into play life’s different moments that we often fail to notice in our daily life,” says Usha Ramachandran.
Usha through her paintings and sketches finished in charcoal, pastel and soft pastels has deftly captured some heart-touching slices from life. Be it the burqa-clad women’s charcoal sketch or the charcoal and pastel sketch of a group of men gathered in the veranda of temple, or an everyday scene where an ‘Umma’ is waiting anxiously for her husband who doesn’t show a slightest botheration for his wife and smoking away his beedi. “The temple scene is inspired from my childhood memory. Earlier people used to gather at temple courtyards for chit chats. Now, it is hard to witness such a scene. Through the burqa-clad women’s sketch, I wanted to show how these women express things just through their eyes,” explains Usha.
Usha who doesn’t like to name her creations says, “Giving titles will only limit one’s imagination. If I give names to my paintings, I am imposing my expressions on the people. Art lovers will then be restricted to my title.” Of the 37 paintings on display, an acrylic on canvas catches the attention. The painting of a father and his son shows the intricate relationship and bonding between the two. “The painting is done with knife. This father is an ordinary man but his son has many aspirations. Though he is a common man, he shows the strength of an extraordinary person who is ready to walk that extra mile to fulfil his son’s dreams,” she describes.
Moving on to Usha’s sculptures, which are mostly in bronze, they show the aesthetic simplicity and technical brilliance of an artist whose life is driven by art. “My sculptures are mostly in bronze though I like to work in wood, terra cotta and fibre glass too,” says the artist who was born in Thalassery and now settled in Thiruvananthapuram.
Be it a newspaper photograph, books, cinema or people that she comes across, inspiration breathes in from everywhere for her. The ‘Dreamcatcher’ portrays a girl who is running with all her might to catch her dream which is fingers away from her as a butterfly. “She is running after her dream and is focused on realising what it is. Completing this art work was challenging as the sculpture is standing on a single toe. It was difficult to balance the whole weight of the piece on a grounded leg,” she explains. The 31 sculptures on display shows her love for live actions and movement. Be it the 57x23x40-cm sculpture titled ‘The Diving Save’ where a goalkeeper is in mid-air with one hand on the ball or 36x40x40-cm bronze wonder titled ‘The Surprise Kick’ where the artist shows how an unexpected kick by a small football player catches a tall well-built player unawares, all the images are frozen moments of the live high action moments. “Some of the sculptures were recreated after I saw the newspaper photographs. ‘I Can Fly’ which took one-and-a-half-months to finish was inspired from Shobana’s dance posture. From the actual dance posture, I brought in some changes suiting my sculpting,” says Usha, a mother of two.
Other awe-inspiring sculptures from the collection are the more contemporary ‘The Laptop Boy’, ‘The Book Lover’ and ‘The Bird’s Fascinating Tale’. “The ‘Laptop Boy’ is about the people in the current generation who don’t have time to speak to those sitting next to them but can sit hours and hours glued to their laptops,” she adds. The exhibition is on till October 6.
The write up on my one man show at Durbar Hall, published in 'THE HINDU' .
http://www.thehindu.com/features/friday-review/art/celebrating-the-ordinary/article5200878.ece
Updated: October 4, 2013 20:29 IST
Usha Ramachandran’s sculptures delicately cast the drama in movement
Usha Ramachandran’s sculptures are movements frozen in time. A man in windswept clothes stands with his upturned umbrella blowing away; another shields himself from torrential rain with a long leaf and a third runs from searing sunlight with a newspaper for protection. Usha’s people are usually busy with the business of life, and her works capture their split-second moments of beauty within the mundane. With 31 such sculptures, and 37 of her paintings on display at Durbar Hall Art Gallery, Usha says, “Variety lies in ordinary people.”
Observing life
Usha finds inspiration from the lives of people around her, from the news on television, and from newspaper clippings. “I like people; I like observing them. Their faces and expressions stay in my mind long after they’re gone,” she says. It’s usually strong visual moments that translate into her art. A series of sculptures feature sportsmen in action — a footballer dives in time to save the goal, and two others are caught midway through a powerful kick. “I hope to create some on tennis players as well,” says Usha. Besides the rippling muscles and engaged faces that define sharp movements, three of Usha’s pieces on display are physically mobile as well. The sculptures of a girl skipping rope, a man pole vaulting and a diver taking off from his board move back and forth when touched.
Usha also draws from the various cultures she has been exposed to. As wife to C. Ramachandran, who was in the services, she shifted house several times across the country and the characters she met then people her work now. “I’ve lived in Kollam, Kasaragod, Delhi and Chennai but I’ve been settled in Thiruvananthapuram for 25 years now.” ‘The Village Bard’, which features a man playing a simple bow and string nanduni, is drawn from the sight of temple singers near her current home; ‘Little Laundress’ depicts a young washerwoman Usha saw near Palakkad and ‘Papa’s Lift’ shows a farmer father, dressed in a mundu with a towel thrown over one arm, carrying his child atop his shoulders as they walk to the local evening shadow play.
Such familial love is a common occurrence through Usha’s work. Fathers sit fishing beside their children and mothers caress their newborns.
Usha’s own career as an artist began at 60, after her children were settled and her husband had retired. “You’re in a different world when you are creating. You need time, and concentration, which is difficult to get when you’re raising kids and have a household to run,” says Usha. With time on her hands now, Usha sculpts and sketches as inspiration strikes. “I first make a skeleton of the figure in wire, then I mould in wax, adjusting proportions as I go along. Once I’ve got the balance right, the figure is then cast in bronze.” While Usha prefers bronze over other materials as it gleams well and lasts long, a few of her works in fibreglass, and wood are also on display. For instance, ‘The Bird’s Fascinating Tale’ has a man cast in brown fibreglass with a bronze bird seated on his shoulder, whispering in his ear.
While Usha is currently prolific as a sculptor, her first steps into the art world were as a self-taught painter. Her works in charcoal, oil, acrylic and pastels of everyday people hang aplenty on the gallery walls. “My first solo exhibition, in 2009, was of paintings. There I met V. Satheesan who taught me the basics of sculpture, and by 2010 I had my first exhibition of sculptures - ‘The Bronze Age’. A piece from here was given the Honourable Mention by Kerala Lalithakala Akademi and that gave me immense confidence.” Thus motivated, Usha is currently on her eighth solo exhibition, ‘Rhythms of Life’. The show will be on till October 6 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Saturday, October 12, 2013
My solo show of Sculptures and paintings at Kochi Durbar Hall Art Centre.
Saying 'Thanks':). |
My daughter and a visitor. |
Rehaan's little painting on show.:). |
The Gate of Darbar Hall from 30th Sept 2013 to 6 Oct 2013. |
As you enter the hall |
"The strange tale the bird told" |
Sculptures |
Sculptures |
A couple of my works in acrylic. |
Rehaan Vijayarajan opening the exhibition to the public |
Sculptures |
The view from the door |
The Durbar Hall Art Gallery displaying my works. |
sculptures |
sculptures |
Sculptures as seen from the back of the gallery |
Friday, July 05, 2013
Wednesday, July 03, 2013
Agony.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Friday, April 19, 2013
Friday, March 29, 2013
My sculptures and paintings.
I have opened a new website for my paintings and sculptures.You can order sculptures from my website.They will be couriered to any address around the world.
You can interact with me from my website-
http://usharamachandran.com/
Hope to do that soon!
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
News paper clippings about "Rhythms Of life"
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-12-28/art-culture/36022573_1_sculpture-sculptor-dreams
http://usharamachandran.com/Wednesday, January 16, 2013
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An article that had appeared in The New Indian Express on my sculpture exhibition
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