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the mysterious
woman:
the
images of
ancient temples
A
photo exhibition
of art by
Rajavelu
Paintings
will be on
display till
12 April 2006
the coffee connoisseur
51
Circular Road
The Gallery
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The
Mysterious
Woman:
the images
of ancient
temples
She
is both welcoming
and threatening;
strong, yet
vulnerable;
and she is part
of nature.
This is woman
as portrayed
by Rajavelu,
who has been
painting in
India since
the 1960s.The
artist’s Indian
heritage is
apparent in
the paintings
and the way
he has expressed
his ideas
and feelings.
The images
of ancient
temples, of
goddesses
and heavenly
maidens come
immediately
to mind.
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At
first glance
many of the
paintings
in this exhibition
appear simplistic,
naïve even,
in their line
and structure,
and in the
bold use of
colour. However,
to dismiss
the images
in this way
is to do them,
and the artist,
an injustice.
So
too is it
unfair, as
some have
done, to criticise
Rajavelu’s
work as explicitly
erotic, a
charge he
neither defends
nor disowns.
The criticism
implies that
there is something
wrong with
the erotic,
when in fact
the erotic
exists everywhere
in nature
and in life.
As the artist
states: “I’m
in love with
life”. Rajavelu
has, as have
generations
of artists
before him,
taken the
mystery of
the feminine,
the eternal
woman, as
his symbol
of both the
erotic and
life.
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It
is this that
we need to
consider when
we look at
the work,
and accept
it on those
terms.
The
mysterious
aspect of
woman is explored
through her
voluptuousness,
her open,
welcoming
stance. It
is through
her sexuality
and receptiveness
that she both
entices and
threatens.
She opens
her arms to
receive, but
at the same
time she looks
away, her
eyes never
meet those
of the onlooker.
She both accepts
and rejects
– she is as
contradictory
as life.
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Her
juxtaposition
to an animal,
most often
a horse, serves
to enhance
and highlight
that contradiction.
The horse,
considered
the noblest
of beasts,
a symbol of
civilisation,
the masculine,
acts as a
foil to the
primitive
nature of
the mysterious
woman. She
has turned
the world
upside down.
Animal becomes
civilisation,
human becomes
nature.
And
before anyone
points the
finger and
makes accusations
of the debasement
of woman by
reducing her
to raw nature,
consider this!
Great civilisations
have risen
and eventually
they fall.
Nature engulfs
them and their
manuscripts
and monuments,
those great
marks of civilisation
are eaten
up and destroyed
by time –
nature’s greatest
ally.
What
remains? The
promise of
something
new; the enticing,
welcoming
smile of the
mysterious
woman!
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For
more information
or to arrange
an interview with
the artist, contact:
Claude
Verly (+65) 6479
2445
claude@art-management.com |
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