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Extravagance Curbed
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| Text by Anita Nair | |||||||||
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Published: Volume 16, Issue 10, October, 2008
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In sculptor Dimpy Menon’s world, there is no room for glut or even immoderation. Excess is trimmed. Anita Nair finds herself fascinated by the holy matrimony of content and form
To enter Dimpy Menon’s world, there is no need for an introduction. There is no ‘take my hand and I will lead you through what I see and how I feel’. Here is an artist who shapes like the ancients did the literature of the form. In the beginning is a thought. A rogue thought that shrugs off the commonplace and waits. There will arrive a moment when it will be allowed to inhabit a form. Elsewhere there is a slow amalgamation of copper, tin, zinc, phosphorus and sometimes small amounts of other elements. Bronze too waits. The thought finds itself fashioned in clay. A flexible mould that captures every detail of that vagrant thought. And yet, the thought isn’t complete. Wax shells the thought. Now it is the turn of the wax to wait. Call it divine ordination that says every grain of bronze has the name of the sculptor and the body of the thought cast into it. Call it sheer coincidence that a thought and a mass of alloy come together. Such is the nature of all creative process. Molten bronze is poured into the shell, displacing the wax. Later the shell is broken and the sculptor now will not let the embodied thought alone. It is teased and laboured over; it is coaxed and cajoled slowly until the thought has a structure. A tautness. A dynamic energy. A heart. A story. A holy matrimony of content and form.
A mother and child stand by a gate. A bird perches at the edge of the gate. Its head cocked. There is a story here. Of lessons from nature. Of a first flight. Of a shedding. Of letting go. Containing emotions. Freezing the moment. A grounding. If these symbolise Dimpy Menon’s earlier works, what we see now is an evolution. A passage that only an artist of Dimpy’s calibre will dare take. In work after work, we see how Dimpy Menon controls her art with a caution. There is passion. And there is energy but as though Dimpy Menon is bound by the laws of another of her artistic pursuits.
From contained moments, we see a new volatility, a flexing, a reaching out. An amalgamation of her twin prowess now captured in bronze. Precision and fluidity. This is an artist who has mastered her medium. If there is tension cast into the muscle of a dancer as he leaps in the air or in the stance of a couple as they perform an arabesque in supreme co-ordination, so much so that one can envision the years of rigorous training that must have gone into the dancers’ movements, then you see how Dimpy Menon erases out all energy and mettle in another sculpture of a man wrapped around a rock. Subscribe to Verve Magazine or buy the Verve issue on stands now!
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