Dalhousie Kalam
Chander P Mahajan Art is not just a visual documentation of the current times but also a historical representation of the times gone by. Manjit Bawa* of Dalhousie gifted me a painting sometimes in 1977; an abstract art using shapes, colours, forms and gestural marks to achieve its effect. I admired a unique mix of colours and pleasing bright reflections. The artist left the painting untitled. I perceive the strokes of brush touching the infinite on a canvas too little to suffice the expressions. As if, colours are taking a ride one on another to grab upper layers of images. I like to look at it time and again. Nature's palette is everywhere we look. It can also be purely imaginative, as unusual and dreamlike artwork with a deeper spiritual meaning. Artists pour out their emotions through the process of painting. In her childhood home land, Priya Monga has created many a painting. It is difficult to make a choice; though in focus are the dramatic landscapes with varied terrain, towering hills and forests, deep valleys and rugged country roads.