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INTERVIEW WITH CONTEMPORARY INDIAN ARTIST SEEMA KOHLI

The contemporary Indian art and Modernist Indian art scenes are particularly exciting today. Laaysa Artu2019s highly curated collection of Indian art includes paintings by emerging contemporary Indian artists, as well as prints byestablished Indian Modernist artists.<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>

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INTERVIEW WITH CONTEMPORARY INDIAN ARTIST SEEMA KOHLI

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  1. INTERVIEW WITH CONTEMPORARY INDIAN ARTIST SEEMA KOHLI Seema Kohli is a distinguished Contemporary Indian art or artist and one of the most respected women artists, a true living legend. Known for her intricate and surreal depictions of women, her hard-won confidence and inner peace shine through her paintings that celebrate feminine power. I have been lucky to get to know Seema personally and professionally. She is open, authentic, and bold, and I hope this excerpt of our recent interview translates to the amazing experience of speaking with her. Sonia: Tell me a little bit about your journey as an artist. You call yourself a self-taught artist, right?

  2. Seema: I say all artists are self-taught because being an artist is about the individual language. Institutions are important for us to understand the mediums, and you can get inquisitive and have a dialogue with so many different people and artists. I did attend South Delhi Polytechnic, Triveni and I owe a lot to those institutions and most importantly the institution of the family. But, becoming an artist is a very internal journey and you have to explore within yourself and learn your own language. In one of your books, you write about how you married young and how you felt ‘subservient,’ that you only painted in the night time. What was that time in your life like? It is a very personal statement that I made there — ‘subservient’ — I can’t blame anyone for that. At the time, it felt very important for me to play these roles and play them right. But this obstructed my art because I was somebody’s wife, somebody’s daughter, somebody’s daughter-in-law, somebody’s sister-in-law, and even somebody’s mother. It is only later that I realized that being a mother was a liberating kind of experience, because I think children are the first critics, and they really help you grow. They are the ones who push you to the boundaries. So what I meant by subservient was that I was obstructing my internal growth as an artist and my expression as an artist. I was very careful with what I was drawing, how much time I was giving to art so that it should not affect my duties as a housewife. It came to a point where I had a breakdown and decided to leave my marriage.

  3. Faith and a little madness got me through. I just knew I was free to paint, I was so happy to get up and have tea with my canvas. I felt that I cheated on my art by not giving it respect, and now that I had got my opportunity, I shouldn’t leave it a moment. I was happy that my fate and my ancestors blessed me with this time. But you weren’t angry with anyone. The moment you are true to yourself, the bitterness goes away. You understand not only yourself but also the other — there is nothing to be bitter about because everyone plays their role according to their own ‘samskaras.’ And somewhere along the way, you discovered how to be true to yourself. When I was painting before, I would think a lot about it and do a lot of sketches. Now I don’t do any sketches at all. Whatever I feel like from within, I let it just flow, and that’s how I know I’m more at peace now.

  4. You mentioned your fate and your ancestors. Can you talk more about that? My grandfather was a spiritual and awakened soul. My father was too, and the whole family atmosphere was congenial. We didn’t have a temple in the house, but we knew a lot of mantras. Once when I was 3 or so, I couldn’t sleep so I learned Gayatri Mantra, and it became a habit. I was lucky to have a very secular upbringing were we didn’t have a prejudice towards any religion or the sense of belonging to a particular religion. How can the story of your journey be useful to other artists? Artists have to accept certain aspects of themselves that are selfish, but this is not a negative thing. Are you honest to yourself, doing something for yourself? By the time you are creating something of your own, you are also giving something to society, to others. The fragrance of society is art. But not all are artists or can be artists. Is there transparency between you and yourself? When you wake up, do you see yourself in your paintings? If there is a difference, then you need to work on it.

  5. Seema is also currently the subject of a major solo exhibition at the Museum of Sacred Art in Brussels, on view through December 2019. This in-depth exhibition highlights her creative achievements across more than 200 paintings, murals, films, installations, performances, and sculptures. Visit our Facebook for a video from the opening reception in June, in which she explains her painting of Krishna becoming one with all animal forms.

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