October,
2001
This
water color was executed during the week of September 11. The
North Indian singer in this water color accompanies himself with
the swarmandala, a modification of the santoor, which came into
use around 1942 by singers. It was popularized in Bombay by a
Pakistani singer Bade Ghulam Ali Khan who was originally a professional
sarangi accompanist and then after some years began to sing himself.
Like most sarangi players he could sing well using extraordinarily
fast singing patterns. The sarangi accompaniment serves the purpose
of a musical decoration which fills up the spaces between the
vocal phrases. However singing with the tanpura alone without
the harmonium or sarangi accompaniment requires a tremendous concentration
which leads to a certain degree of spiritualism with the help
of microtones which the tanpura produces.
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Blind
Singer with Swaramandala #0108
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The
drone instruments had a very traditional purpose. The original
drone instrument was the tanpura which in the hands of a very
good player and tuner could resonate into 13 notes and 24 srutis
(sub notes). Singing with the tanpura enhances subtle musical
phrases. It also exposes faulty singing. Unlike the tanpura, the
strumming of the swarmandala drowns out the weaknesses of the
singer. Mostly this instrument is tuned to the exact scale of
the particular raga which is being sung. In this scale there may
be many other ragas with different constructions - different combinations
and permutations. A North Indian concert instrument which looks
like the swarmandala is the santoor which is played as a solo
instrument. This instrument differs from the swarmandala in that
the wires are struck with hand held hammers and therefore has
the capacity to accurately retain the raga system.
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Detail of Blind
Singer with Swaramandala
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In
my painting the musician is blind so he has no alternative but
to strum the swaramandala. He copies the texture of the sarangi
in his voice but sweetens it up by means of the swarmandala. It
didn't matter which raga he is playing he could just strum it.
I thought it was a banging instrument - no technique needed.
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I
started this painting with an abstract expressionist painting
with no subject matter like all my other paintings. Non-subjective
white paper can be manipulated, maintaining its non-subjectiveness
by mere application of restrained but floating colors. Then I
make vague linear drawings allowing the forms to float to the
surface. While the painting is still wet I float the vague drawings
allowing them to become partially suggestive of a subject matter.
Then using all the techniques at my disposal I gradually mix the
subjective with the objective. These vague drawings suggest subjective
or objective visual ideas. The way in which things come out is
like magic - like pulling a bird out of a hat. The painting is
never complete. I stop because at that particular moment I feel
I can not go any further. Later on, perhaps months or years later,
I might work on it again - unless of course the painting is sold.
Then the process is ended since the painting is not my property
anymore. Just as in playing music I stop because I feel I have
exhausted all the probabilities of that particular raga. Painting
is an unending process. There is no such thing as a finished painting.
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The instruments, sarangi and swarmandala, surrounded by sculptures
of musicians and dancers from the artist's collection.. |
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