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  Images of India  
Show Opened:  7/26/2004Online Art Show:  Images of India
Entry deadline has passed.
 

This show juried by:

John Seed

Juror's Statement:

I was captivated by the variety of artistic approaches presented in this show. It was obvious that the artists involved had great respect for the culture they were exploring, and the results have a pleasing multi-cultural flavor. One interesting note: many of the works were tinged with Surrealism, which seemed to give the Westerners of ebsq a way of approaching the sacred and profane in Indian culture.

Perhaps India should outsource some of the production of its traditional art to the artists of ebsq?

I found three works particularly outstanding. My choices are on an equal footing with each other, so there is no rank implied by the order below:

Aria Nadii: Love Spell

This work captures the unashamed eroticism of Indian art, and portrays cosmic love with sensuous immortals. The artist's use of the palimpest technique is nothing short of exquisite.

Divine Love by john christopher borrero

borrero has an assemblage style that brings to mind the work of Joseph Cornell. The fact that this work can be shown with either end up is a very clever way of suggesting the tension between the symbolic attributes of Vishnu and Sri Laksmi. The artist's extreme sensitivities to surface and symbolism make this work compelling and mesmerizing.

Shiva the Destroyer by John P Thompson.

This interpretation of Shiva, by way of a hilarious quote from Salman Rushdie is a masterpiece of scratchboard art. The style evokes both 19th century engravings, like those that might have illustrated an early edition of Rudyard Kipling's "Jungle Book" as well as Max Ernst's disturbing collages of the early 20th century. This work evokes the eternal, the Victorian and the cosmic in one stunning image.

Also two Honorable Mentions:

Rikki and Nagaina in the Cobra Burrow by Tracey Allyn Greene

An exquisite miniature in the tradition of Mughal painting which de-Disneyfies the imagery of Kipling's "Jungle Book." Take a close look: you won't be disappointed.

Indian Lotus by Linda O'Neill

This gorgeous watercolor evokes the calm of the Buddha along with the Lotus flower which symbolizes the birth of the divine in both ancient Indian and Egyptian culture.

- John Seed