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A graphic novel by architect Gautam Bhatia takes an unflinching look at contemporary India
The people in architect and author Gautam Bhatias Lie: A Traditional Tale of Modern India are small,colourful and not nice to know. Bhatias latest book is a graphic novel,a deeply disturbing account about the rampant corruption in the country,female infanticide and government apathy. The book satirises the current state of the country,especially the last 30-40 years or so. The narrative has magnified the misdeeds of a corrupt government and its leaders. It is an exaggerated view of people driven to grotesque levels of greed and indulging in heinous acts of depravity and barbarism. If their lives are a lie,so is this story, says Bhatia. The idea was to begin exaggerating the situation to an extent where one can laugh and cry,but the discomfort will linger, adds Bhatia,58,who began working on the book in 2008.
The artwork is detailed in terms of design and colour. Unlike other graphic novels of the day,Lie is text heavy and Bhatia and the three miniaturists have mastered a fine balance between telling the story through words and images. With the subject matter that we were dealing with,one of the reasons behind creating a graphic novel is to have maximum impact. One cannot get away from an image,it will stay in the mind longer than words, says Bhatia. The Rajasthani miniature style,he says,lends itself to a graphic novel rather easily. Much can be accomodated into a panel,it serves the purpose of the narrative by being able to create a contrast within a page, says Bhatia.
The book is a part of Desh Ki Awaz: A Colloborative Arts project that is supported by the Ford Foundation. An exhibition featuring the art work from the project will take place at New Delhis branch of Alliance Francaise on March 26.
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