NAT4National/ArtItaly-based
artist Kammie Soni in India to help challenged
children With ImagesBy Madhusree Chatterjee
New Delhi, Oct 28 IANS
Veteran Italy-based
designer-cum-abstractionist Kammie Soni, who left India over 40 years ago to pursue her passion - travel and art - is back in the
country to help challenged
children. Soni, who belongs to the generation of senior
artists like Kishen Khanna and Satish Gujral and is a
student of doyen Biren De, has worked for
international fashion houses like Valentino, Versace and Paloma Piccaso - legendary painter Pablo Picasso's daughter. The
artist, in her 70s, shares a special
friendship with Paloma, with whom she discusses her art. Soni, whose exhibitions My
Writings in Space opened at the Romain Rolland
Gallery in Alliance Francaise here Sunday, is
helping raise funds for the
Society for Child Development SFCD through its fund-raising wing Art for Prabhat.Art for Prabhat is an endeavour by 380
artists, sculptors and
photographers to educate and rehabilitate mentally challenged adolescents. Soni, who travelled extensively during her early years between 1962-68 before settling down in Italy, is one of the few of her generation who has stayed off figurative drawings. Her focus for the last 46 years has been abstraction - a riot of bright colours on the canvas used in diverse forms ranging from raw solid paints as three-dimensional surfaces to uniformly-toned background. As a result, her canvases, mostly in series representing human evolution and psychological processes, resemble swathes of brightly-coloured
textiles - which pulsate with inner joy. I do not like figurative drawings and human faces. I also hate linear patterns and straight lines. But I love
animals. I play with the colours of the cosmos, earth and nature. My art is all about spaces - no man, no barriers, no
religion and no
politics dictate my canvases, Soni told IANS in an interview. Her love for
animals had also prompted Soni to work for the
New York Zoo as a volunteer in the 1990s. The
artist says she spend hours in the
company of
animals, when not
painting. Soni has visited 24
countries in course of her frequent, short haul trips lasting three to four months. I cannot paint unless I travel. It helps me cull ideas from local
cultures, mores and terrains. Travel inspires me, she said. Soni is a votary of individual freedom and growth, which reflect in her works like Metamorphosis, Kaleidoscope, Conflagration and Surge. Every human being must decide for himself. Rules and regulations are meant to guide, she said, explaining the spatial alignments of her compositions. Soni
designs for leading
fashion houses in Europe to fund her art. An artist needs money to paint, she said. Her
designs have also been purchased by the Garden Silk Mills in Surat. I enjoy working for Valentino because they give me full creative freedom. Valentino's creations are also very feminine and graceful and they command the highest prices in the market, said the petite artist, clad in a skirt made of a 90-year-old family fabric embroidered by her mother, also an artist. Soni refused to
comment on the trends in Indian contemporary art, but said:I don't like the young contemporary Indian
artists. They do not know how to paint, but they definitely know how to sell. She is working on a new body of
paintings in India and will return to Italy in February. --Indo-Asian News Servioce mch/mv/mr 639 Words**28101132
Read the original article