Nature - Nature`s Way
by Aditya Sharma
The canopy of trees sheltering
the building in which celebrated
painter Sidharth’s studio
is located, offers a refreshing sight
on a scorching summer afternoon.
On entering his first-floor studio,
I am riveted. Paintbrushes
– hundreds of them – are lined
neatly on tables and racks, tempting
me to pick one up and essay a
landscape. In a corner, I see several
rows of small plastic jars containing
powders and liquids of different
colours. I hazard, “Do you
also practice medicine?” My query
brings a smile on Sidharth’s lips.
“They are not medicines but organic
colours, which I use in my paintings,”
he remarks. The artist is well
known for collecting all manner
of organic material ranging from
trees, leaves, barks, berries, loam,
lichen, herbs, lava, coral, pearl dust,
moon rock, pollen, stamens, iron
ores, to source his colours from.
No wonder his studio could double
for an apothecary’s shop.

The artist at work
Bespectacled with a grey brush
moustache, and a square build,
there is something thoughtful yet
stable about him. His unassuming
presence conceals his considerable
achievements and unconventional
and idealistic philosophy.
His paintings are suffused with his
humanistic and holistic perspective.
An ardent lover of nature, he
is a critic of present-day consumerism
that he fears is despoiling the
earth and all in it. His recent Delhibased
exhibition, The Decorative
Cow, is a thoughtful exploration
of the present-day debasement of
the cow, traditionally a subject of
reverence and worship.

A bucolic age
An artist of repute, he has held
18 solo shows and participated
in 80 group shows in India, UK,
Sweden and the US since 1976.
He has received several awards
for his work including from the British Council. His works
have been acquired by the India
Government Museum, the British
Council in Delhi, the Punjab Lalit
Kala Akademi and the Dusseldorf
Museum, among others.
Like most artists, he wears his
achievements lightly. His tone is
avuncular, as he invites me to make
myself comfortable. The studio is
tastefully designed. The many paintings
hanging on the walls infuse the
room with colour and vitality. On
a canvas in the adjacent room is a
finished painting; while a fresh canvas
is being prepared by Sidharth’s
young pupils. The hundreds of
books lining the shelves, the state-
of-the-art PC, the wide screen LCD,
speakers positioned at the right
places, smooth floor tiles, and velvety
white walls lend the studio a
unique charm. It could be nothing
but an artist’s place.
Early on, Sidharth decided to
take the path less travelled. “When
I was 14, I left my house and
became a lama at McLeodganj. I
had joined the monastery to learn
the Buddhist way of painting,
which is called as thangka. I lived
there till I was 20. Later, I studied
at an art college in Chandigarh,
and learned to draw from eminent
teachers for the next five years. Till
I was 40, I practically lived like a
lama. I travelled from one country
to another and learned to paint
from different masters,” he says.

The cow: a symbol of innocence
Having led a life of renunciation
for several years, Sidharth realised
there was nothing to leave and nothing
to keep in life, so why not live like
a normal human being? At 42, he
married and settled down to lead a
quiet, domestic life. “Enlightenment
is just imagination. If you believe in
God you have one set of feelings, if
you do not, you have another set of
thoughts. It’s important to live a life
full of love and compassion. When I
lived in the monastery, I spent some
rich moments with myself. Now,
I feel even more happy spending
time with my little daughter. I
feel it is important to live according
to nature.”
He shows me stills of his latest
exhibition on the cow. In one
painting, I see plastic waste inside
a cow’s stomach; in another, a cow
is shown lost in the maze of vehicular
traffic. What made him choose
The artist at work A bucolic age
the cow as the theme for his recent
exhibition? “A few years back, three
children from Britain came to my
house. They were shocked to see
cows roaming in our streets and
roads and queried, ‘Whose cows
are these?’ Their innocent question
set a chain reaction of thoughts in
me and I decided to highlight the
haplessness of cows through my
paintings,” he says.
“Instead of eating fodder,
they eat polyethylene. Instead of
grazing in the fields, they can be
spotted circling around heaps of
garbage. Instead of being treated
with respect, they are turned out
of the house by their owners, when
they stop giving them milk,” he
exclaims passionately.
Sidharth pauses for a while
before saying, “Isn’t it sheer
hypocrisy to see the cow in such
miserable conditions? On the one
hand she is Goddess Lakshmi to
us; on the other hand we treat her
like a stray animal.”

The decorated cow
Growing up in the Buddhist
monastery has shaped his preference
for simplicity. “We have
become a consumerist society,” he
rues, “We Indians are following the
footsteps of the west. The compulsion
to possess more and more
objects is fast eroding our spiritual
ways of living. Today, people take
pride in possessing a mind-boggling
number of cars, wardrobes,
footwear, and mobiles. They do
not realise the precious time they
waste in trying to chase happiness
with goods. Mindless consumerism
also leaves an enormous mountain
of waste products in its wake that is
hard to dispose of.”
Apart from painting, Sidharth
also sings and composes music.
Recently, he sang in a music video.
The song’s lyrics were Lao Tsu sayings,
translated into Saraiki Punjabi!
After living in almost every
country of the world, Sidharth
has discovered that India is the
most comfortable place to live in.
“There are definitely more possibilities
for living with simplicity
here than in the rest of the
world.” However, if given a second
and third choice, he would
opt to live in Turkey, and Japan.
“In both these countries, people
are friendly and creative. Despite
the onslaught of foreign cultures,
they have managed to keep their
unique individuality,” he says.
Interview over, with a sigh I step
out of the artist’s unique world and
into the desert land of Delhi’s
consumerist culture.
See more articles on Nature at: http://www.lifepositive.com/articles/Nature
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