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M F Hussain paintings, MF Hussen
Hindu Gods Goddesses
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By: V Sundaram, IAS, Retd.
June 25, 2007
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In these columns yesterday I
had written about the abominably atrocious and perverse paintings of Hindu
Gods and Goddesses by M F Hussain who in my view is only a shockingly
stark symbol of religious perversity and cultural barbarism. Through his
obscene paintings he has caused a grievous hurt to the emotions and
feelings of all the Hindus of the world. The tragedy of India today is
that all Governments (more particularly the Governments of Kerala and West
Bengal!!) and a large percentage of no less irresponsible men in our
corrupt and decadent judiciary view his vulgar paintings as an integral
and legitimate part of his minority rights on the one hand and of
unassailable freedom of creative expression of an independent artist on
the other.
I have just finished reading a brilliant essay on the controversial
subject of art and artistic expression by Kishore Asthana.
Let me quote his words in this context: "An artist creates art from three
primary sources. The first, of course, is the heart. What emerges from an
Artists heart can indeed be called ART. The second is the brain. Sometimes
an artist creates art, like a student who writes an essay. This is
essentially poster-art and is deliberately crafted. This should be called
SmArt. Then there is the third source the organs of procreation. When the
primary motivating factor for art arises out of the artist"s genitalia,
then it can be termed FArt. Of course, in any work of art, there may be
different proportions of Art, SmArt and Fart"
All responsible intellectuals would always be champions of artistic
freedom, but within reasonable and civilized limits and not divorced from
the accepted tradition of social, spiritual and cultural values. So long
as these limits are respected, I am all for Artistic freedom. Whatever
arises out of the heart of the artist must be inviolate for he has no
discretion in it. We may criticize it but we do not have the freedom to
ban it. SmArt-work is deliberately created. SmArtistic freedom should not
be defended as vehemently, because, unlike Art, the artist has discretion
in creating SmArt. If it makes us think, we should appreciate it. If it
succeeds in raising our aesthetic sensibility, we should applaud it.
However, if it goes against the grain, we should condemn it.
FArtistic freedom is like telling us that everyone is free to keep letting
out either odoriferous or foul smelling farts in a crowded room and no one
should object to these because every artist must have freedom to create
FArt. In my view M F Hussain"s paintings are in the nature of foul
smelling noisy farts in a crowded room and that is why thousands of people
in India, and more particularly the Hindus, have expressed themselves
against the so called artistic FArts of M F Hussain, with many of them
dragging M H Hussain to several courts of law. The images of obscene
Mother India, naked Sita on Hanuman"s tail and spread-eagled Durga are all
examples of M F Hussain"s FArt. Likewise the explosive picture of Jesus
Christ drawn by Chandra Mohan in Vadodara on the cross is FArt, too.
I fully endorse the magisterial finding of Kishore Asthana: "I am not for
restraining anyone"s heart-born art, but I am against allowing people to
FArt in the crowded cultural hall that is India, in the name of freedom of
FArting."
The self-appointed moral police which objects to petty things is at one
extreme. The intellectuals, pseudo-intellectuals and artists who
automatically rise in defense of all FArt in the name of ARTISTIC FREEDOM,
without realizing that this term cannot be used for FArt, is at the other
extreme. Both are equally guilty of thoughtlessly trivializing our society
and making a mockery of our sensibilities. The UPA Government in New Delhi
is the strongest defender of such a debased and debauched form of ARTISTIC
FREEDOM
Apart from the disgraceful and irresponsible Government of Kerala which
has dealt a death blow to the soul and spirit of Raja Ravi Varma
(1848-1906) by announcing its decision to give the prestigious Raja Ravi
Varma award to M F Hussain, the mute Hindus of India have to suffer too
many Pseudo Secular intellectuals who too arrogate to themselves the role
of Omnipotent and Omniscient art critics like the Communist Government of
Kerala. In this context let me quote the luridly learned words of Vinay
Bharath Ram with clinchingly Pseudo Secular effect (!!): Why should I
defend M F Hussain? By doing so I am defending my own identity as an
Indian and Hindu. The controversies raised by his detractors over his
paintings being "obscene" are laughable."
I would like to know whether Vinay Bharath Ram and many other Pseudo
Secular intellectuals like him would show the same breadth of vision and
understanding towards the work of an unknown Hindu Artist called Kailash
Tewari from Bhopal. Two weeks ago several Muslim groups in Bhopal raised
their political and Islamic objections to some paintings of Kailash Tewari
displayed at an exhibition, which depicted Muslims as terrorists. The
paintings by Kailash Tewari featured Osama bin Laden and Pakistan
President Pervez Musharaff, with people in beard and wearing religious
caps attacking India and Parliament. Kailash Tewari said: "My exhibition
titled "The Face of Terror" depicts the truth. I am not talking about
Muslims, but unfortunately all terrorist turn out to be Muslims. I cannot
do anything about it. Bamiyan Buddha Statues in Afghanistan were destroyed
by the Muslims. The World Trade Center in New York was destroyed by Muslim
terrorists on 09/11. Even our Parliament was attacked by them. What can I
do if the attackers have names of Khan or Mohammed or Salim in their
names?"
The Pseudo Secular Media has a tendency to see issues of this kind in
liberal versus reactionary terms? Let me give an example. All Pseudo
Secular liberals would argue that MF Husain has the absolute and
inalienable minority right to paint a obscene Saraswati or Bharat Mata. At
the same time they would not extend the same principle to the Danish
cartoons. Their laughably "liberal" position is that Hindus should be
tolerant of the manner in which their gods and goddesses are being
portrayed by M F Hussain and they have no right to go to the streets to
assert their religious freedoms. At the same time, the ever-compassionate
Muslims of India have all the rights to go to the streets and loudly
complain about any visual representation of the Prophet Mohammed,
regardless of the country or continent in which such a blasphemous
anti-Islamic act takes place!!
Let me now turn my attention from the world of the absurd, and the ugly,
to the divine sphere of the eternally sublime and beautiful Indian art. In
order to understand the soul, spirit and ideals of Indian art, we have to
learn at the feet of that great Maharishi Shri Aurobindo. Let us tune our
ears to the sublime words of this Saint, Sage and Seer: "A good deal of
hostile or unsympathetic western criticism of Indian civilization has been
directed in the past against its aesthetic side and taken the form of a
disdainful or violent depreciation of its fine arts, architecture,
sculpture and painting. The Indian mind in its natural poise finds it
almost or quite as difficult really, that is to say, spiritually to
understand the arts of Europe, as the ordinary European mind to enter into
the spirit of Indian painting and sculpture. For the Indian mind form does
not exist except as a creation of the spirit and draws all its meaning and
value from the spirit. This characteristic attitude of the Indian
reflective and creative mind necessitates in our view of its creations an
effort to get beyond at once to the inner spirit of reality it expresses
and see from it and not from outside.
"A great oriental work of art does not easily reveal its secret to one who
comes to it solely in a mood of aesthetic curiosity or...still less as the
cultivated and interested tourist passing among strange and foreign
things; but it has to be seen in loneliness, in the solitude of one"s
self...a sense which modern Europe with her assault of crowded art
galleries and over-pictured walls seems to have quite lost. - have put
their temples and their Buddhas as often as possible away on mountains and
in distant or secluded scenes of Nature and avoid living with great
paintings in the crude hours of daily life."
In this decadent age, addicted to fact gathering, it is cold logic and not
sublime feeling that commands supreme respect. Calm, impersonal feeling is
the essence of true discovery. Our humanity is reduced by half- indeed by
much more than half-when feeling is eliminated from our quest for
understanding. Equating feeling with unbridled emotions, we have allowed
ourselves to be swept up in cyclones of confusion, calling the chaos
itself as meaningful. Emotions may be an obstacle to understanding. Calm
feeling or clarity of feeling, however, is the very essence of deep
understanding. Calm feeling is intuition. And intuition is that calm and
clear feeling which appears when both the intellect and the emotions are
lifted into a still, inner perception of the truth. Without intuition,
profound insights are simply not possible.
V Sundaram, IAS, Retd.
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M F Hussain paintings, MF
Hussen Hindu Gods Goddesses
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