Bakula Nayak

Bakula Nayak

Here I am writing of an artist, Bakula Nayak whose work is a love story with elements of the fairy tale and whimsy. And I can only think of what a lovely person she is. Shall I tell you of the artist, her journey, her work or her home? It’s been days since we met and the post is pending as I wanted to include her video, which is yet to happen. But even after so many days, I can still feel her exuberance, her positive vibes and her creative instincts. Having visited her home, seen the books she loves, the artwork she chooses to display (none of her own!), her notepad of sketches and ideas, her love for the ordinary and the extraordinary, I can see why I am so muddled and lost for words. Bakula is the fragrant flower who spreads the joy of love through art, but has a sad place in her heart from where soulful poetry flows.

Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Bakula Nayak – An Artist’s Journey
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Two cozy rabbits – Art by Bakula Nayak

I first came across her artwork in Facebook, which had a lovely pair of birds having tea and her trademark was the vintage paper she used as her base and inspiration. One good thing about blogging is that you lose all inhibitions you would otherwise have. So I immediately connected with her and wanted to meet her. When I meet someone like Bakula Nayak, it makes me very grateful for my work. Otherwise how else would I have met such a wonderful person? Luckily we have a connection and she shares her life with me. Having lost her parents, she treasures their love letters she came across a long time after. Having only seen them as an ordinary couple who never publicly expressed their love, she tells me that it was a revelation for her. Seeing all her drawings treasured by them, brought it all back and she started drawing after a gap of nearly twenty years.

Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Birds! Seeing this my child asks me if they are her mummy and daddy? A child’s favorite subject…And yes they are her parents!
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Birds, tea and a garden. All that Bakula loves.
Flashback -Though her first love was always design, she could not attend the interview at NID as her father was against her leaving Bangalore. With limited options she completed Architecture, but decided to study design in the US after her engineering. “It wasn’t easy, especially as I had to follow the heavy Southern accent, use the internet and live alone in a foreign country.” But she did manage and came back to be with her mother who was suffering from cancer. Her mother’s only wish was to see her daughter married and Bakula relented. With just a few emails she knew that she had found her soul mate in her husband and they got married. Her mother’s health improved dramatically after the marriage and she lived for some more months happy that her daughter was finally married. She talks of happier times, the drawing competitions she would prepare for, the prize that she received from Rekha (the popular Bollywood actress) and rolling shields. Her mother would always encourage her to conceptualize and plan before she started drawing. She had to draw events from the newspaper such as Indira Gandhi’s cremation and that habit helps her plan her sketches even to this day. She extends the same encouragement to her children and I saw one of her son’s painting which was awesome.
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Bakula Nayak’s workspace
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Motherhood
Inspiration –Bakula Nayak finds inspiration everywhere. Her Unplugged series is a witness to her curiosity and attempt to bring the extraordinary to the common man in a simplified and child like manner so as to render it accessible. Tyagayya unplugged, Sangam unplugged, In Adoration of Krishna are her unplugged series where she decodes and demystifies. What connects me to Bakula is that each of these unplugged series is her personal journey, her understanding of the each of these subjects “which picked her rather than the other way around”. I feel the same way with my blog posts, they are my journey, my learning and experience which I share with all of you.
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Interpretation of the Pichwais . Art by Bakula Nayak
UnpluggedTyagayya was one of the greatest composers of Carnatic music  who wrote musical compositions in Telugu using that which he found in everyday life. Bakula Nayak happened upon the translation in English and rendered it in watercolours. This series sees Rama and Lakshmana sharing a moment of brotherly love but as birds. The Yamuna in another painting is shown in all her splendor as a kind mother who loves all the flora and fauna around and in her. I loved this elaborate painting. Nauka Charitham shows Krishna as a bird, where he works up a storm so that the Gopikas who were teasing him will have to ask his help and be humbled. Sangam unplugged is Tamil poetry on love and war. In Bakula’s words she “only knows Love” as a mother, an artist and a lover. With any tragedy in our lives, it becomes difficult to keep our faith in God and her faith was shaken with the death of her parents. ‘In Adoration of Krishna’ explores her relationship with Hari and the more formal settings of the Pichwai paintings find their place on Bakula’s canvas showing aspects of motherly love with a cow and calf, and divine love with a pair of herons. With the final painting, she says that she just could not do it and Hari had abandoned her. It is this creative honesty which is so much a part of Bakula that endears her. Her signature style of whimsical on vintage paper is usually presented in collaboration with artists from other spheres.
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Romantic love -An interpretation of Romantic love. Art by Bakula Nayak
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
The Yamuna river forms a part of the Tyagayya Unplugged series
Collections –She collects anything and everything vintage. Right from matchboxes, matchbox holders, frames, mirrors, photos to aftershave lotion bottles fashioned like cars. I loved her collection of antiques and her ‘vintage stash’. But off course with Bakula, it’s the birds you see everywhere.
Vintage collection- Bakula Nayak
Bakula Nayak’s love for all that is old
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Bakula Nayak – An Artist’s Journey
Bakula shows me a passage from a book that she is reading and it’s all about the ‘creative surplus’ in an artist which creates an interaction and ‘impels the artist to love and understand the world for its own sake.’ With inspiration, Bakula dips into books to understand and love the world. Bakula Nayak is an inspiration to explore all that is within you waiting to be explored and let free. It is not just her art, but her courage in exploring an aspect of herself which had not seen the light for twenty long years. Her courage in fighting back when her health is not great and losing herself in art which only shows love. Her poetry is a small window to her soul but she chooses to assert with love. Her home is a reflection of her personality and I have some lovely glimpses from her home. But that is for another day. Until then stay inspired. Light up from within.
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey
Bakula Nayak – An Artist’s Journey
Bakula Nayak - An Artist's Journey

The bird is lost in the melodies just as we lose ourselves in the beauty of these paintings. Art by Bakula Nayak.

Lots of Twinkles to all of you.

Happy Diwali.

Anupama

PS – Images of artwork by Bakula Nayak are her property and need her permission to be used.

Prabhakar Kini- Collector of Ganapathi sculptures and paintings

Prabhakar Kini- Collector of Ganapathi sculptures and paintings

Mr. Prabhakar Kini is an artist, an entrepreneur and a collector. Even when he doodled with MS Paint, he would come up with Ganapathis. He believes, “Whatever you do, do it well.” This philosophy is clearly visible in this varied collection of Lord Ganapathi sculptures and paintings. He is a collector of not just Ganapathis but also exclusive newspapers and magazines, swarovski crystal figurines and antiques (another post maybe??) But the kind of person that he is (a perfectionist), he realised early on, that he should have more focus and narrow down on his topic for collection. On so deciding, he felt that Ganapathi was an ideal for a collector. Ganapathi known as the ‘Vighnaharta’ is the remover of all obstacles and most of the artists begin with a Ganapathi painting. And as we take a look around the museum, we see that Ganapathi also lends himself easily to an artist’s imagination. With all the stories around Ganapathi, right from his birth to breaking Kubera’s ego, mythology is full of the playful tricks played by Ganapathi. Ganapathi is also a ‘foodie’ (as this generation would refer to Him perhaps) and these times are all about good food and good times.

Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Ganapathi with the cow, along the lines of Krishna
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Another beautiful painting
Having decided on collecting Ganapathi sculptures and paintings, Mr. Kini would always ensure that he added to his collection every month. Many of the pieces come from his regular contacts among antique dealers, some artists and ChitraSanthe organised by Chitrakala Parishat. Initially when he started out, he displayed them at home. When the collection outgrew the space, he shifted to a bigger apartment. But even that was not sufficient for the growing collection. That was when he decided to house his collection separately and is now available at Jayanagar, Bangalore at the ‘Ganesha Vaividhyam’ gallery. An inspiring person, Mr. Prabhakar Kini has an enthusiasm for life that is infectious. I always come away inspired. His collection reflects one man’s passion, dreams and achievements
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
A wooden carving from TamilNadu portraying Ganapathi in the Dashavatara
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Ganapathi in coconut and bamboo roots
Ganapathi was his mom, Parvathi’s favourite as he was her creation. Many paintings here reflect this pure love. He was also very learned, a scholar and a musician . The epic of Mahabharatha was written by Ganapathi as Vyasa dictated it and many of the sculptures here are based on this story. Ganapathi with different musical instruments and in different dance forms can also be seen here. There are no limitations on the materials used either. Right from brass, bronze, copper, wood, coconut, coffee root, bamboo root, granite, jaisalmer stone, marble, shells, conches, precious stones such as coral, jade, metals such as silver and gold, to the humble spare parts from a garage- you will find Ganapathi sculptures and paintings in all these materials and more. Though I did not mean to make such a lengthy video, I had to do justice to the collection and it just went on.
As for the paintings, there are some by famous artists and many by upcoming artists, some are not even signed but they all come together to make a beautiful whole. Mr. Kini has a wonderful collection of Ganapathi paintings in the different folk styles from around India. These include the Madhubani style, Pattachitras, palm leaf engravings, kaavi kale, paintings in the miniature style, with meenakari work, Tanjore style and the Mysore art style. He also has a Ganapathi painting in the thangka style with Ganapathi at the centre, flanked by Buddhas on all sides.
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Mr. Prabhakar Kini with his collection of Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
I loved this! The mice taking Ganapathi with a shade. This piece is in fibre.
Then off course there are some which were custom made. There is one Ganapathi sculpture that he saw in a picture and commissioned a rose wood carving from Kumta based on the picture, a pot that he asked the artist to paint Ganapathis on, a conch that he found on a beach in the form of Ganapathi. The tiniest off course is the one carved on a rice grain and needs a magnifying glass to view it. And then there was one in brass that I tried to move for a better angle, but it wouldn’t budge.
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Ganapathi riding the mouse
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Ganapathi in metal
Not limited to India, there are Ganapathi sculptures and paintings from Nepal, Thailand and Indonesia. There is a postage stamp from Nepal and a currency note from Indonesia. He also has a range of books on Ganesha. There are not just the traditional but also the quirky. A Humpty Dumpty Ganapathi, a Laptop Ganapathi, a Mobile Ganapathi, Ganapathi as Santa Claus, as an Englishman, a lawyer, a landlord, a doctor…ufff..The list is endless.
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
The quirky – Ganapathi as Santa Clause, Humpty Dumpty, Kangaroo, with a laptop and a mobile
Ganapathi as Krishna, Ganapathi in the Dashavatara (which is originally Vishnu’s ten forms), as a Yakshagana( a folk art from Tulunadu) character….there are just so many. You have to check out the video to see all of them and maybe visit the gallery with a prior appointment to see it yourself. Believe me, you need at least 3 hours to experience the beauty and soak in all the variety here. I am totally happy that Kinimam is related to me and I have visited the gallery on many occasions. And my dear readers, you are truly lucky to have had a glimpse of this one person’s love for Ganapathi sculptures and paintings on stringsofheritage. And I have to mention that Kinimam and his daughter Vidya Shanbhag (who is also my dear friend) obliged me every time I was trying out my non-existent photography and videography skills. Thank you so much for having shared your love for Ganapathi with me and my readers. May Lord Ganesha bless us all.
Ganapathi sculptures and paintings
Ganapathi in Fibre- As an Englishman, Buddha, a Musician
Lots of twinkles to all of you.

Have a great weekend.

Anupama.

PS- Those in Bangalore, and interested to visit the gallery may write to Stringsofheritage.