Australian artist chronicles the Ganga’s journey
July 16th, 2010 - 1:07 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, July 16 (IANS) Contemporary Australian artist Kevin Pearsh has chronicled the 2,500-km journey of river Ganga from an icy cave in Gaumukh to the Ganga Sagar in West Bengal in a series of 21 large format canvases.
The seminal exhibition, “Ganga 21: The Story” that opened at the Indian Council for Cultural Relation’s Azad Bhavan auditorium Thursday in the capital, divides the journey of the river in three segments, “a walk along the bank of Ganga”, “a drive across the Gangetic plains” and “a boat ride through the Ganga”. The medium of the work is in oil.
In the spring of 2006, Pearsh completed his first phase of hike from the massive ice cave of Gaumukh to the temple town of Haridwar.
In October 2006, he covered the Gangetic stretch from Haridwar to Varanasi and to the border of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
Pearsh completed his third and final voyage from Buxar in Bihar to the delta in Bengal and Ganga Sagar in the spring of 2007.
The canvases are serialised in numbers to narrate the birth, ebb and flow of the river that is considered the country’s lifeline for centuries supporting great civilisations along its banks.
The works documents geographical features of the river in its course and maps pilgrimage routes in details.
The first canvas depicts Gaumukh flanked by icy Himalayas that sweeps up in formidable slopes like a shield around the cave. Pearsh describes Gaumukh as the “spiritual source of the Ganges”.
Eighteen kilometre down is Gangotri, the glacial swathe of ice where the river is said to have touch the earth for the first time. The composition highlights a cluster of stones leading to the river with a priest guiding the viewer down the steps.
The locale moves to Devaprayag in the third canvas, where the feeder rivers of Bhagirathi and Alaknanda meet to become Ganga. The river then flows to the foothills of the Hiamalaya at Haridwar.
The subsequent canvases capture the river on the plains, its broad meandering curves, peopling the water-scapes with figures and bustling activity.
The last three compositions in the sequence are realistic in their depictions of the river in its deltaic flow as it lashes against the eroding mud banks of Bengal villages, past the ancient islands of Kahalgaon to Ganga Sagar where it meets the sea.
The palette is close to life with raw daubs of paints giving the river its blue and aquamarine photographic quality.
Pearsh, born in 1961 in Melbourne, studied in Perth and Zurich. At the age of 23, he contributed to the permanent collection of the Tate Gallery in London.
In 2000, Pearsh began to work on his aqua-series (water compositions), inspired by his visit to China and later in Morocco.
Ganga 21 will travel to the Rabindranath Tagore Centre in Kolkata Aug 7.
- Of Ganga Maiya, the river that washes away all sins (Letter from Haridwar) - Jan 18, 2010
- Here are some facts on the river Ganga - Mar 25, 2012
- Magsaysay award winner Rajendra Singh kicks off tour for Ganga conservation - Oct 01, 2010
- Cities replacing countryside on new Indian artscape (With Images) - Apr 11, 2011
- Gangetic river dolphins on road to recovery? - Nov 11, 2011
- BJP to campaign for Ganga - May 25, 2012
- Spiritual group prepares to clean entire Ganges - Jun 17, 2012
- Bihar task force report on Ganga dolphins soon - Jul 20, 2011
- Protesters demand clean Ganga, Yamuna - Jun 18, 2012
- 135km stretch of Ganga in Uttarakhand gets green shield - Nov 02, 2010
- Indian ethnic art show attract London visitors - Jun 20, 2011
- A clean Ganga could enhance dolphins' presence in the river, says expert - Oct 11, 2009
- Bihar to set up dolphin conservation task force - Apr 21, 2011
- Centre approves Rs 7000 crore project to clean Ganga - Apr 28, 2011
- World Bank loan to clean the Ganga - Jun 13, 2011
Tags: australian artist, azad, bhagirathi, bihar, boat ride, canvases, ebb and flow, final voyage, ganga sagar, ganges, gangetic plains, geographical features, haridwar, massive ice, pilgrimage routes, river ganga, spiritual source, swathe, temple town, west bengal