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The idea is to focus on workers who created the monument rather than the emperor who commissioned it. From a distance we see only a botanical pattern, but once we get close-up we can identify the guild symbols. The problem is that the floral paintings aren't attractive at all. The image above, of a work titled Closet Quarries, demonstrates what I mean. It isn't a low resolution picture, that's the way the thing actually looks. Compare it with the gorgeous precision of the hard-stone inlay seen on the marble walls of the Taj, like this lily.
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The best way to pay tribute to the artisans who decorated Mughal tombs would be to mirror some of their technical virtuosity. I realise it isn't easy to paint on rubber stamps, but surely part of an artist's job when s/he chooses an unusual medium is to master it. Reena has been working with stamps for a while now, and the images she has produced simply aren't as engaging as they need to be. The net result of the clumsiness evident in works like Closet Quarries is a failure to transmit adequately the underlying concept.
2 comments:
Reena Kallit's intension was not to replicate the Tag Mahal in detail but to remind us that many human lives were dedicated to making this magnificent structure a reality. Using the stamps with various symbols that identified these magnificent artisans gives credit where credit is due.
I saw this piece in Mumbai and Reena's intentions are successful as art and a message. Carol Blake
I understand what her intentions were, Carol. In fact, what you say about her intent is in my post.
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