Artist Bharati Sagar on her tryst with Nature
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From A Tryst With Nature by artist Bharati Sagar

From A Tryst With Nature by artist Bharati Sagar
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

As much as she loves working with new media, Bengaluru-based artist, Bharati Sagar, is happy to return to her water colours, dry pastels, charcoal and oil to capture her heartโ€™s delight โ€” Nature and people. Her latest solo show, A Tryst With Nature, follows her experiments with metal dust and citric acid on canvas.

โ€œI did three shows with metal dust, and though I found it quite messy, I donโ€™t think I will give it up. Two pieces in this show too, have been created with that medium. I also wanted to return to my previous work,โ€ says Bharati.

โ€œI love meeting new people and children โ€” that is how this latest series came about,โ€ she adds, talking about the 20-odd pieces she has created over the past two to three years. โ€œI had begun some of them before Preserving Magnificence (her previous show on endangered species), and picked up from where I had left off.โ€

Artist Bharati Sagar

Artist Bharati Sagar
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Also read: How artist Bharati Sagar attempts to preserve magnificence through her art

The canvases in A Tryst With Nature have been executed in the artistโ€™s unmistakable style โ€” whimsical and dreamlike, with an Alice-in-Wonderland quality. According to Shirley Mathew, curator of the show, โ€œBharati is an accomplished artist and her way of handling portraits is quite different from others. They are wistful, poetic, and endearing, with a romantic appeal.โ€

Bharati says she draws her inspiration from memories and the happenings around her. โ€œMy grandchildren were traipsing in and out of the house, and those phases registered with me. I brought out my recollections in different ways,โ€ says the artist who is constantly sketching.

And yet, as unsophisticated as they may look, most of Bharatiโ€™s works carry a simple message on behalf of Mother Nature if one cares to acknowledge it. For instance, Where Have All The Flowers Gone is about the environment, depicting a child holding onto the globe, wanting to protect it, while surrounded by wilting or dried flowers.

Boy and Bird, Dialogue from A Tryst With Nature by artist Bharati Sagar

Boy and Bird, Dialogue from A Tryst With Nature by artist Bharati Sagar
| Photo Credit:
Special Arrangement

Unlike many artists, Bharathi believes in titling her work. โ€œI would like to leave some direction for viewers so they have an understanding of whatโ€™s going on in my mind. Having said that, Iโ€™m open to their own interpretations as well.โ€

The artist, who fell in love with art and drawing as a child, says it was a compulsory subject in school and she developed a strong hand at figure drawing there. She went on to enrol at the Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Fine Arts and Architecture in Hyderabad. โ€œIn those days, if you got more than 80% in your entrance exam, you went straight up to the second year and that is a good memory for me.โ€

Bharati, who is happiest in her studio, says, โ€œFor me, art has been a form of devotion and meditation.โ€

A Tryst With Nature by Bharati Sagar will be on display at MKF Museum of Art till July 2, 2025. Entry free, Mondays closed.

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