Tag Archives: Shibu Arakkal

Creative collaborations

The father-son duo may not share the same calling, but are not averse to sharing notes on their respective artistic pursuits

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It was going to be different. This meeting. Artist Yusuf Arakkal, famous for his all-black attire as he is for his intense paintings, was dressed in pristine white kurta pyjama. “Don’t I look good?” he asks, leading the way to his large studio bathed in white light from huge north-facing windows. Paintings worth colossal amounts of money are stacked against the wall — some still await the maestro’s final touch.

Shibu, Arakkal’s only child, walks up to one of Arakkal’s paintings — an unnamed abstract — and wipes away a disturbing speck of dust. He then stands back and looks — not at the painting, but at the spot that he’s just cleaned. “I had no interest in art,” he says.

Arakkal cuts in: “In fact, I was worried that he would become an artist. I didn’t want him to be one. He would’ve been subjected to unfair comparisons.” There’s a reason behind Arakkal’s fear.

It was 1983. Arakkal was bestowed the National Award in Delhi along with Shamshad Husain, son of the legendary MF Husain. “After receiving the award,” recalls Arakkal, “we were walking back together when we overheard an artist say, ‘Baap ka beta hai isliye award le gaya.’ (He is THE father’s son, that’s why he took the award). That was terribly unfair to Shamshad.”

Arakkal never wanted Shibu to be subjected to such derision. He needn’t have worried.

Shibu’s calling was different. He wanted to become a photographer, but he didn’t know it at that time. Back then he wanted to be a football player, cricket player and also “an IAF pilot”.

He was a curious child, remembers the father. When he was two-years-old Shibu ripped off the film from his father’s Praktica camera and declared: “There is nothing to see.” Arakkal laughs, remembering the incident.

When he was in the eighth standard, Shibu was enamored by his father’s photographer friend, Regis Richard’s tiny camera. “It was almost like a spy camera,” recalls Shibu. He bombarded Richard with questions. And before he left the city, Richard gifted Shibu his Asahi Pentax 110 camera. “It was my first camera. Ever,” says Shibu.

However, Arakkal was convinced about his son’s talent as a photographer only when he saw a photo of a tiger clicked by him for an inter-college competition. “I looked at it and knew at once that this boy understood lighting,” says Arakkal, whose paintings are renowned for their artistic show of light and shadows. Shibu won the competition for the next three years in a row. “He had begun his journey that led him down an arduous route reserved for artists,” explains Arakkal.

The Arakkals discuss their works with each other freely. Shibu’s panoramic work from his series Passing By occupy pride of place at the Arakkal’s home. Jostling for attention is his baby portrait done by Arakkal during an eclipse when a four-year-old Shibu was more inclined to peer at the sun. “It was a way to keep him indoors and still by asking him to pose for me,” says Arakkal.

The duo might not agree on many things in life, but they firmly believe that to be an artist one has to have in-depth technical knowledge. As an art student at the Chitrakala Parishad College, Arakkal remembers his teachers sending them out “into the world to do live sketching” — 50 sketches a week and 10 watercolour paintings were the norm. The first thing he did after graduating in 1973 was to destroy most of his works done as a student. “I didn’t want to be burdened by those works and wanted to start afresh,” he says.

He then painted eight paintings — and several collages and collographs — depicting abstract and religious themes — and had his first solo show at the Alliance Francaise in 1975. It was a sell-out. “Today, students regularly hold solo shows even while learning art. There is a big hurry,” feels Arakkal. Shibu says the same is true of his world. “Half of the photographers have not seen a dark room and many do not understand the depth of photography.”

Father and son share the creative realm but their approach to it is different. “I am not emotional like him,” says Shibu. That could be because their early, impressionable years were diverse. Arakkal, from the royal Arakkal family in Kerala, had run away from home at 16. He wanted to be an artist. For two years he roamed the streets of Bangalore — unwilling to let go of his dream. “If I am an artist today, it is because I was stubborn about my dream,” says Arakkal. “He is the most stubborn person in our family,” laughs Shibu. His two-year-old daughter Zarah, he says, displays her grandfather’s stubborn streak. “Probably taking after him,” he says.

When Shibu recently won the Florence Biennale Gold Medal (2013) for his Constructing Life, Arakkal’s heart swelled with fatherly pride. The son had made a place for himself under the sun, away from his father’s colossal shadows. But there were detractors. Some of them commented that Shibu got the award because his father had influenced the jury. “Dad wanted to clarify but I told him not to,” says Shibu. “I rather focus on my work than answering them.” Arakkal nods in agreement. His son has indeed charted his own path.

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> Columns> Sunday Read / by Jayanthi Madhukar, Bangalore Mirror Bureau / April 12th, 2014

Bangalore to biennale

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Photography took Shibu Arakkal to Florence. He returned with the Lorenzo il Magnifico gold for digital art, finds NIRMALA GOVINDARAJAN

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The time when Shibu Arakkal first looked at the world through his camera was also the time when he got hooked to it. “I never dreamed of being a photographer,” he confesses. Still, Shibu continued to fool around with his father Yusuf Arakkal’s very serious German single lens reflex camera. “He had paid quite a bit for it those days and it was always loaded with film. I would sneak into his studio, take one or two photographs and quietly put it back. When my dad got the role processed, he would always wonder how there were a couple of pictures he didn’t remember having taken.”

The first time Shibu put his camera to use – constructing a friend’s fashion portfolio, it went on to fetch her several modelling assignments.

After this recognition, Shibu’s momentous tryst with the camera began. “That first shoot got me deeply curious about photography and helped me decide what to do with my life.”

So Shibu’s world came alive through people and stories until recently in end 2013, when he went on to bag the prestigious Lorenzo il Magnifico gold prize for digital art at the Florence Biennale. “Dad always worried about what I would end up doing with my life given my long list of ambitions. When I got hooked to photography, I knew that this wasn’t just a fling. Two decades since, my camera and I have looked at the world, analysed and interpreted life around us, as my method of learning about this world and the things in it. Also to grow as a person and gain that bit of wisdom, which is somehow more important than just intelligence. What I photographed over the years has become my life’s journal and I have been conscious that it is by what I will be known, long after I am gone.”

Going for goldWith lifetime achievement awardee Anish Kapoor, the award and the work that got it
Going for goldWith lifetime achievement awardee Anish Kapoor, the award and the work that got it

“Selection into the Florence Biennale 2013 came with certain confidence that I had the work worthshowing on such a stage. I had been working on the series Constructing Life for nearly four years when I had decided to can it half way through, realising that I needed to come back to it when I was a bit more mature. This body of work seemed to have a destiny of its own. The emotion, which the works from this series carried, was hence extremely powerful.”

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Then came the moment in Florence when Shibu’s heart was heavy and light at once.

“Although the Lorenzo il Magnifico Gold Prize was being talked about in regard to my work from day one at the Biennale and knowing how strong my work was, I was also very aware of how these things are decided by people who also have subjective views and opinions. So when the award was announced without prior notice, it was entirely surreal, a moment, which I wasn’t fully conscious of, being thrown by the fact that I got awarded in a category above what I had entered. It however made the extremely trying times in my career and the very difficult actual process of executing the work, truly worthwhile.”

Back from the Biennale to life in Bangalore, Shibu explores India, reaching out to the world through what he does best – photography in an era of click on the go.

“It is a very real and satisfying life. Besides, Bangalore is home. It is where I was born and raised. I have resisted settling down abroad purely because of my love for it. It is ground zero and Bangalore has been extremely good to me in terms of recognition, patronage and support for my work in general. It is a place where I can be fearless in any sort of experimental work that I put out and be quite assured that it will be received for what it is,” he says as he readies for a day in his life – between his work, riding and the joy of being a dutiful father to his four-and-half-year old daughter.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus / by Nirmala Govindarajan / March 13th, 2014

Artist ‘constructs life’, bags global honour

Bangalore :

Constructing Life, a digital artwork by Shibu Arakkal, son of noted artist Yusuf Arakkal, has won first prize at the prestigious Florence Biennale.

Based in Bangalore, Shibu said the event saw the participation of 475 artists under the categories of painting, sculpture, art on paper, video art, digital art, photography and installations. “Although, I applied under the photography category, the international panel of jurists awarded me under digital art due to the technique execution of my work”, he said. Shibu received the Lorenzo il Magnifico gold prize in digital art for 2013.

“Since none of us was told about the nominations, the winners were in for a pleasant surprise at the ceremony on December 8. My work measures 8 feet x 6 feet, comprising 12 panels. It’s a digital photo giclee print on canvas,” Shibu explained. The awards were presented by brothers Pasquale Celona  and Piero Celona, president and vice-president of the Biennale.

Describing the artwork, he said: “Our daily lives and quality of life are not only signified by the physical buildings we inhabit but also speak about our tastes, culture and sophistication. One of our most serious endeavours in life is to create one such dwelling to exist and flourish in. Sophisticated and design-minded buildings are visually very different from the hard and weather-beaten appearances of the people who construct these structures. And yet there is such character in their form and faces! It is these ideas that have taken root in my mind to create portraits of the construction worker in a series that will question our ideas of what ‘interesting’ is.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Bangalore / by G S Kumar, TNN / December 17th, 2013