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They have been restoring works of art for years now. However,it is for the first time that the team of restoration artists at Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH) is showcasing their artwork on gallery walls. The exhibition celebrates the silver jubilee of the organisation that has been conserving Indian heritage.
While some artists showed a preference for contemporary art,others quoted tradition,and as the chief guest Krishen Khanna observed,Some of the best art has come from experimenting.
The youngest of the lot,Nagamurti Pareet,24,has rendered a canvas that captures the destruction of a 100-year-old heritage site,the Taj Mahal Hotel in Mumbai,that went up in flames during the 26/11 terror attack. I have painted a crow flying towards the Taj. It appears like a bad omen,but it also has a wing of green,which signifies hope. I wanted to depict how the destruction wrought by the attacks are being salvaged, says Pareet.
The teams restoration work in Ladakh has led 28-year-old Joyoti Roy to take some arresting black-and-white images. I was inspired by the face of children in the hilly terrain. Their relationship with the harsh landscape sculpts their features and builds their character, says Roy. Pankaj Sharma has chosen to muse on the female mystique,celebrating qualities of receptivity and acceptance on the outside. I have never claimed to be able to figure out women,but they continue to fascinate me, says Sharma. We hope to make this an annual event, says SK Misra,chairman of INTACH. One can look forward to more from the backroom team.
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