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MORNING GLORY---RISING SUN Painting

Baljit Chadha

India

Painting, Airbrush on Canvas

Size: 36 W x 36 H x 2 D in

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About The Artwork

RISING SUN .PAINTING IS MADE WITH MASKING TAPES N SPRAY Right Insticts It is essential we realize that our response to art depends on a great deal of touch memory and that this information comes to us through our eyes. Added to this is the principle of gravity which gives us a sense of balance and cohesion. We are quick to recognize anything that is top- heavy, lop- sided or in any way unbalanced or incoherent. Finally we are governed by rhythm: the regular rhythm of the human- beats, of breathing, of succeeding days and nights and as indeed of all the other vital rhythms as those of the oscillating atoms and the planets etc. I believe the work of B.S Chadha responds to all that which is rhythmic, vital and structural in the world, and this means that the artist instinctively bears witness to the basic physical principles of root reality. His work may or not be short on technical rigour as in peak moments of art craft, yet his instincts are sounds. And these are the true substance of his spirals, curvilinear forms and other variations, especially those got up in commanding reds and allied hues. An artist of this genre does what in another art form, like the dance, the dancer does. There is sheer joy in describing circles and the figures of whirling eights. As a craftsman of the finger- tips, Chadha appears to be in constant search among the myriad forms, structures, and variations of color in nature that reveal to us the particular aspects and degrees of rhythms and structures to which human sensibility responds. Each artist is a specialist in looking one way or another, and B.S. Chadha has his temperament gifted with special aims, ideals, visions and methods of works, and which must be understood if they are to be respected. It matters not if Chadha is �well known� or not as an ace art marksman. First things first, for his heart, in matters of art, is in the right place. His offering quickens the pace of our blood stream from to time, and which also means the interplay of muscular tensions and relaxations in our body and its sensors. When this happens to happen to our physiology our spirit also comes alive. The choice works of Chadha, do precisely that at a good many moments. So draw your own conclusions! Keshav Malik Art Critic New Delhi I painted an Eden of flowers divine �The sun shone in between, and all the little white flowers sparkled. � I went on painting at the risk and peril of seeing the whole show on the ground at any moment -- it's a white effect with a good deal of yellow in it, and blue and lilac, the sky white and blue.� Letter to Theo van Gogh, c.11 April 1888 by Vincent Van Gogh The intensity, poetics and singularity of joy that Van Gogh brought to the art of painting flowers remains unrivalled in the annals of art history. In terms of adjusted prices Van Gogh remains the highest priced artist for his paintings of flowers. His �Irises� were priced at more than $100 million (adjusted) and his �Vase with Fifteen Sunflowers� for more than $ 75 million (adjusted). Before Van Gogh flower painting was a part of Still Life painting tradition. But he changed it all. A man who painted seriously only for two years of his life changed the way we look at flowers and sunflowers specially. Of other artists who loved to paint flowers the name of American Georgia O�Keeffe comes at the top. Matisse painted flowers largely as part art decorativ style. His flowers carry the flat two dimensionality but are saturated with pure colours as per Fauvist tradition. True to his Pop Art style Andy Warhol painted flowers as silk screen portfolios of flat colour surfaces reminding about the unreality of �representation�. Artist friend Baljit S. Chadha has a lasting honeymoon with flowers in his artistic expression. He paints some times with frugality of a Zen master. I can understand that as he had his early training in painting in Japan where he lived and studied as a teenager and had the benefit of the tutelage of great Japanese masters. But his present series on flowers nonplussed me with wonder and joy. He has in the present works a new dimension and a new personality of flowers that I have not seen before. This is because he has distilled the expression from his inner joy and happiness that is the essence of flowers per se and not from their forms. His flowers have a nearly expressionistic, abstract persona. He uses a watercolour like free flow of colour and tonalities to invest his work with a sensual poetry. His works are acrylic on paper and therefore amenable to idiosyncratic overflows that lends a fresh charm to his oeuvre. Another landmark quality of Baljit�s new works is that they are rendered in fiery shiny glazes. As we know glazes are traditionally done in oil paint medium. But Baljit has worked them with acrylic colour and without the use of pure impasto. The colours diluted with water float and embrace each other and still have lustrous intensity. Baljit Chadha has created a fresh stylistic edifice and his creative expression jumps from the visible-familiar to spiritually felt flowers in a divine Eden. Viktor Vijay Kumar Director Curator European Artists� Association Germany A Rose is a Rose is a Rose is a Rose (Gertrude Stein, from the poem Sweet Emily, Geography and Plays, 1913) A contemporary, timeless perspective of a subject dearly beloved to artists, poets, horticulturalists and beings throughout epochs, flora depictions range from botanical illustration (for example, the German Baroque naturalist and illustrator Maria Sybill Merian, d. 1717) to Old Master still-lives, from illuminated manuscripts and miniature paintings, to classic East Asian ink paintings, to Surrealism, Fauvism, to pop-art and graphic media. Flowers have always fascinated artists owing to their pureness, and provided a wonderful way for them to express themselves. Traditionally, flowers in life and in art imbue their appreciators with symbolic sense. The still-life in this day and age has lost much of its memento mori or vanitas meaning, and many contemporary artists shallowly forsake the intense discipline and attention to detail required by this genre for mere technical slights of hand and machine. Fortunately, there are still devotees of the love for the rose! FLOAT ON COLORS In the floral work of Baljit Chadha, his pathway began with basic flowers, in pen and ink due to the inspiration of classic sumi-e (ink painting) during his sojourn in Japan. He understood this as the simple, basic embrace of nature –“to pluck a flower and paint it!” Pursuing this spirit further, he declares that “I do not believe in straight lines, rather a spontaneous use of colour.” He is more known in artistic circles to date in India for his abstract paintings. This series, thus introduces his 11,000 flower oeuvres. Earlier he added colour and then fexicol to bind the ink. Currently, he has incorporated the following materials into his process: watercolour, acrylic paint, as well as oil and wax pastels. This melange enables a broader depiction of the living element of his floral subjects, such that these blossoms spring to life off the standard sized Chinese imported paper upon which he steadfastly works. From the most mannered to the most abstract, passing through each field, medium, technique, genre and school of painting, the realms of flora bespeak individual expression. Such iconic images abound as the Iris and the Sunflowers by Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890), the Water Lilies of Claude Monet (1840-1926), the pop art flowers based on photographs with a simple motif by Andy Warhol (1928-1987), and fecund depictions by Georgia O’Keefe (1887-1986) who synthesized abstraction and representation in her myriad paintings of natural elements. One of the great painters of flowers, the Belgian painter Pierre-Joseph Redoute (1759- 1840), court painter for Marie Antoinette, eventually emphasized the aesthetic over botanical accuracy or depiction, having been inspired by the Dutch masters (Jan Breughel and Rachel Ruysch). Ruysch (1644-1750) was the most celebrated classical female flower painter. [For reference, the seminal tomes by Sam Segal of Flowers and Nature: Netherlandish Flower Painting of Four Centuries (1991) and Jan van Huysum, 1682-1749: The Temptation of Flora (2007)] In China, bird and flower painting constituted a special genre from the 9th century onwards, rising to great levels in the Song dynasty (960-1279 A.D.). It heralded a marvellous deployment of ink and brush. The individual finesse of the artist conveyed the spirit (qi) of plum blossoms, peonies, chrysanthemums, bamboo, pines and cypresses, each symbolic of aspects of existence. In 2004, the BBC Four hosted a four part series entitled Painting Flowers examined personal artistic themes associated with different species/genres of flora. The following year, the Flower Myth exhibition in Switzerland at the Fondation Beyeler examined the evolving approach to floral representation from the late 19th century to the present day. Ulf Küster, one of the two curators of the exhibition, maintains that "Any painter reveals his true self by painting flowers.” Chadha incorporates his personal embrace of abstraction within the depiction of the ‘divine flower’. Thereby extending the spatial component and fertilising the surrounding air with colour and stroke. His idiosyncratic method, reminiscent of spin/ action painting, is to squeeze the paint from plastic bottles. A pansy, gladiolas, lilies, asters, hyacinth, to cite but a few, each painting is unique. In spirit they are homage to Chadha’s passion to paint. Just as for the Old Master painters of still-lives and floral subjects, each flower imparts his personal connection and interpretation. The Mother of the Sri Aurobindo Society also penned a tome on the significance and meaning of flowers. Chadha earlier had photographed flowers all over the world, as part of his journeys and daily life. The kinetic nature of his paintings departs from the photographic lens. In consideration of the palette and use of materials, Chadha’s works bear a shimmering sensibility akin to that of stained glass, a sort of translucence reflecting his rhythm of life. One which he shares with the facets of nature he so consecrates on a daily basis, a true immersion in this realm of his natural imagination. For Chadha, this lexicon of intimate and universal beauty celebrates the diversity and complex, ever startling web of interconnectivity of life. At its core, a true marvelling of the adavaita, non-duality of humanity and the natural world which surrounds us, one which we must heed to protect and admire. Elizabeth Rogers February 2011 Baljit Chadha The flower form can justly be dubbed the heart throb of the art world. This universal vocabulary is the leitmotif of the artistry of Baljit Chadha who has so far completed about 12,000 flower paintings and thus made a name for himself in World Records. More recently, his fine compositions of flora, both realistic and conceptualized, is making its way to the Arts Festival in Qatar, where it will become the basis of an installation, spreading the message of harmony and spiritual healing in a world torn asunder by terrorist menace, natural disasters, and human suffering. His floral message of universal brotherhood was the apt idea that the festival curator Ravinder Kalsi was striving for, giving Chadha’s creations a space to blossom and unite the world in a garland of friendship. The fascination with the floral form for Chadha began about two decades ago when as a teenager sent to Japan he began to imbibe the essence of Japanese culture. This quest had brought him in contact with artist Ms Ohta Miyoko, who instructed him in the technique of ‘sui-sai’, or the making of water colour paintings free hand. ‘We plucked flowers from a garden and then painted them,’ he recalls. Back home, Chadha realised that the experience had not just equipped him with a technique but also left an indelible mark on his sensibilities. ‘I was involved with flowers most of the time; whether it was by painting them, or even shooting flowers with my camera. Even when I went on a recent trip to Hemkund Sahib, I spent a long time flowers around the area and those shots have been added to my inventory of flowers for future paintings.’ The floral art that Chadha creates is not a factual reproduction. There is a wistful familiarity linking them to nature no doubt, but most often they are perceptions of the angles and the momentary splash of colour that permeates his mind at sight of a flower. The spontaneity of his production has to match the flashing impact of the form on his mind and that is what has led Chadha to devise a way of creating art speedily. ‘I squeeze colours from push tubes on to the paper and then swirl the paint into the form that has impacted mentally. I finish each art work with a coat of lustre and my paintings are completed. Of course, my sketch book, papers and camera, are always near at hand. The dining table has a few sheets ready for use. I carry my camera in my briefcase wherever I go and even sketch while travelling. In this way, the preliminary work of flower making is already registered on the sheet. Then, in my studio at home, I work at completing each work. Immediately after making the art work, I click images of it and post it on the internet and let the whole world share in the joy of my creation.’ To fulfill his target of 12,000 paintings for the oncoming show, Chadha has fine tuned his work life to the discipline of a soldier. ‘I start work at my painting studio each morning at 4.30 a.m. This gives me time to create quite a few paintings each morning, provided the drawing and other preliminaries have been done on them earlier,’ he explains. And on days of dysfunction when the creative Muse is impossible to awaken, Chadha resorts to mind cajoling rather than abandoning his work. ‘I tell myself a painting can never go waste. A work appears a reject because one’s mood suggests it to be so. So instead of throwing it away I hold back the work and many a time, at a later date, I have been able to alter it into a new form, that has pleased me immensely.’ Although it is the eclectic spread of floral forms that defines Chadha’s art, he insists that it is not the flower that satisfies intrinsic creative urges that he his fulfilling through them. ‘The mind is constantly working at making newer happenings. I have thus worked on other subjects, such as Eternal Circles/windowas of hope . The work took me into the by lanes of old Delhi in search of ideas and materials for my creations. I recall once when holidaying in Shimla, I opened the window of my hotel room and looked at the scenic setting all around. The idea of opening a gallery for a living struck me and once back in Delhi I worked at the idea and ran an art gallery for several years. At another time, as a garment exporter, I was fascinated with the idea of using Kalamkari forms for printing on voiles to be made into garments. The project fetched me a golden trophy for best display and design t n interntional garment fair in newdelhi in 1994.> Currently Chadha’s preoccupation has moved to the next level. As his floral creations are being readied for an art show, Chadha has become involved in finding the ideal way of displaying his art. ‘Since 12,000 works would require a kilometer of space when laid out side by side on a wall, I have been toying with the idea of making an installation with them. One idea is to place the paintings between two sheets of glass or acrylic and create a tree form with them. This would make it easy to handle the works as the exhibition is being planned as a touring exhibit and carrying 12,000 paintings calls for super efficient logistics. Meanwhile work on a catalogue recording date wise, the creation of each transient floral idea, is an ongoing project. ‘That will be a limited edition print and can be shared and enjoyed with the art fraternity residing in different corners of the world,’ he surmises. Thus Chadha’s art is a matrix of multiple issues. While production is central to his scheme of things, a connectivity of events links the phases of present past and future into a holistic form in the workings of artist Baljit Chadha. Ms Majmudar Art critic

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Airbrush on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:36 W x 36 H x 2 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

MY THOUGHTS EVERY HUMAN MIND HAS A TALENT HIDDEN DEEP WITHIN. GIVEN AN , IT COMES OUT AND CREATE MASTERPIECES IN ANY FIELD. IF , IT BRINGS HAPPINESS, PROSPERITY,A SENSE OF FULFILLMENT AND MOTIVATES HIM OR HER TO ACHIEVE MUCH HIGHER LEVEL OF SUCCESS IN LIFE. IN THE LAST LEG OF JOURNEY OF MY LIFE , I DEDICATE ALL MY WORKS TO MY FAMILY,MY FRIENDS AND TO THIS BEAUTIFUL WORLD WHICH HAS GIVEN ME SO MUCH TO FULFILL ALL MY DREAM BALJIT CHADHA.FLOWERMAN • CREATED A WORLD RECORD The exhibition with the most paintings of flowers in the world www.baljit-chadha.artistwebsites.com http://www.youtube.com/edit?ns=1&video_id=fCTt1B51fJA http://www.1wra.org/index.php/Worldrecord/detail/id/1241 http://www.artpal.com/unime99/?i=615-2 This certificate is given by WORLD RECORD ASSOCIATION/ LIMCA BOOK OF RECORDS MY NEW SERIES ZEN MOKSHA FLOWERS/ MANN FLOWERS/MIYOKO FLOWERS /BALJIT’S IKEBANA • Each work tells a story – of travels and travails, • Each stroke builds thoughts - of beauty and Zen that prevails, • Each flower provokes silence – of depth and a true maze of mystical haze, • Each is not enough to fill my desire – the more I gaze, the more I craze- A PURE HEAVENLY GIFT FOR YOU FRIENDS N RELATIVES • THE PROCEED FROM SALE OF PAINTINGS/PRINTS WILL GO TO OLD AGE HOME IN INDIA. • THESE ZEN-MOKSH FLOWERS ARE CREATED WITH A SENSE OF GIVING INNER PEACE,TRANQUILITY, HAPPINESS, SOLACE AND A SENSE OF FULFILMENT, ONE-NESS WITH THE SUPREME. • I HAVE TRIED TO BRING THEASE ELEMENTS IN MY PAINTINGS,THE FLOWERS YOU SEE DON’T EXISTS, THE MOVMENTS OF MY HANDS,FLOW OF COLORS ARE THE GIFT OF ALMIGHTY GOD. • ZEN-JAPANEASE ZEN IS A SPIRTUAL INSPIRATION; THEY ARE PURE EXPRESSION OF ARTIST’S SPIRITUAL AWARENESS. JAPANEASE ZEN ART HAS ALWAYS BEEN MEANT TO TOUCH PEOPLE FAR AND WIDE. ZEN PAINTINGS ARE OF GREAT POWER, PURE, AND TOUCHING DEEP IN THE HEART, MIND AND SOUL. • MOKSHA- Freedom from life circle. Moksha is attained by dis identification with the body and mind, which are temporary and subject to change, and realization of our true identity Moksh is positive concept in two important ways. First it stands for the realization of the ultimate Reality, a real enlightenment.

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