Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kerala Painter's Work Draws Huge Response In Victorian Parliament

Darpan News Desk, 25 May, 2017 01:12 PM
    A Kerala NRI painter's work on a 50-metre long single canvas titled "Pride of Australia" was on display at the Queen's Hall in the Victorian Parliament and fetched accolades.
     
    This is the the first time an Indian artist has got this opportunity.
     
    The painting by Sedunath Prabhakar, settled in Melbourne, showcased portraits of 50 prominent Australians drawn from a wide and varying cultural, social and political spectrum. 
     
    The 50 Australian greats, whose portraits include Donald Bradman, first lady Prime Minister of Australia Julia Gillard, Captain James Cook (explorer), John Monash (Army Commander who took part in the First World War), Patrick White (Nobel Prize winner in literature), Emily Kame Kngwarreye (aboriginal artist), swimmer Ian Thorpe and footballer Tim Cahill.
     
    The two-day exhibition of Prabhakar ended on Thursday evening, with all those who saw it appreciating the single canvas work.
     
    Colin Brooks, speaker of the Victorian Parliament who extended the invite to Prabhakar, after going through the painting said Prabhakar has done a lot of research to select the 50 as he has included Australia's first Prime Minister Sir Edmund Barton and it was in this hall that Australia's first parliament had its sitting.
     
    "By holding Prabhakar's exhibition, this clearly shows how this country promotes the talents of those who have come from other countries and this will certainly be a morale booster for all talented people," said Brooks.
     
    Consul General of India, Manika Jain said she felt proud of being an Indian after seeing the work of a fellow Indian getting huge appreciation from the Victorian Parliament.
     
    Prabhakar, 43, hails from Kidangoor in Kottayam district. He did his graduation in Fine Arts from the prestigious Baroda School of Arts. He was in an ecstatic mood after getting accolades from everyone who came and saw his work.
     
    "I feel excited and deeply satisfied," said the artist, and added that his next major work is to get ready 60 paintings that tell the tradition of Oman and the cultural developments of people and the nation under the rule of Sultan Qaboos. The exhibition will be held in November in Oman.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Conservatives Plot Political Assault On Harjit Sajjan With Symbolic Confidence Motion

    Conservatives Plot Political Assault On Harjit Sajjan With Symbolic Confidence Motion
    Conservative defence critic James Bezan says he will table a non-binding motion in the House of Commons expressing a loss of confidence in Sajjan, and which MPs will have a chance to vote on.

    Conservatives Plot Political Assault On Harjit Sajjan With Symbolic Confidence Motion

    Advance Turnout Spikes 70 Per Cent In B.C. Election As Voters Flock To Polls

    Advance Turnout Spikes 70 Per Cent In B.C. Election As Voters Flock To Polls
    VANCOUVER — Elections B.C. says the number of people who turned out to vote ahead of election day this year is 70 per cent higher than last time.

    Advance Turnout Spikes 70 Per Cent In B.C. Election As Voters Flock To Polls

    Search Crews Recover Human Remains Off B.C. Highway Where Man Disappeared

    Search Crews Recover Human Remains Off B.C. Highway Where Man Disappeared
    DEASE LAKE, B.C. — Human remains have been discovered off a British Columbia highway near where a 70-year-old Alaska man went missing last year.

    Search Crews Recover Human Remains Off B.C. Highway Where Man Disappeared

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election
    VANCOUVER — Voters in British Columbia go to the polls on Tuesday. Here are 10 things to know about B.C. politics:

    Ten Things To Know About The British Columbia Election

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    NANAIMO, B.C. — British Columbia's political party leaders have been frantically crisscrossing the province, making their final appeals to voters who might still be swayed before casting their ballots Tuesday.

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint
    The woman, Meenakshi, 28, had in June 2010 filed a complaint alleging she was gangraped by a Rohtak resident and his two brother-in-laws after they gave her lift in their car.

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint