Continued
from part 3
Part
4
What
purpose does art serve or what purpose does it have to serve?
Enlightenment, awakening, entertainment, stimulation are some
of the answers. After these states are reached and these purposes
are served, art has the ability to go one step forward and render
the state of pure joy. Bliss is what is also known as. Once
that state is reached, the lines between between who is driving,
what is being driven ceases to exist, meaning, the question
whether the art is motivating the artist or whether the artist
is exhibiting his art becomes irrelevant. It is that state when
one would have a tough time between differentiating between
the driver and the driven. As is with anything, the state of
transcendence is inexplicable - words fall short of explaining
the meaning, emotions fall short of expressing the feeling.
It becomes a paradoxical situation to have it to explain to
someone and make them see the purpose of the art and what the
end result of such a progress could be, if both words and emotions
fail to come to the rescue. To embark on the journey of the
pursuit for perfection, to start with the process of finding
pure joy, to set forth on a mission to dig deep into oneself
and come face to face with bliss, requires one to have that
one essential ingredient, FAITH, without which the pursuit become
purposeless, the process is devoid of the desired result, and
the mission become pointless.
Viswanath's
movies, apart from the drama that is built around, are about
the preservation of the legacy, pertaining to the ageless and
timeless art, and handing them over, in word and in faith, to
the subsequent generations. Sankara Sastry, an cold person with
a tough heart, eventually dies in peace, when he realizes that
his art is in the safe hands of Tulasi. Balu, an aimless and
rudderless burned out artist, rests in peace, after passing
on whatever he had gathered over the years to Sailaja. While
the rest of the movies deal with reservation, Swarna Kamalam
deals with the pains and trials of realization. Meenakshi has
a tough time realizing what is in her hands is much more worthy
than she is running after. The eternal battle of materialism
versus spirituality (in a broader sense) rages on in her mind,
while she gets drawn more and more towards the glitz of the
former than endure the rigors of the latter. And it is at this
point that faith takes over. Faith - a trust in the institution
of art, that it would certainly offer all that it has promised
and much more, a belief that regardless of the hurdles, the
end goal could be reached with enough perseverance, a dogmatic
approach that has been handed over by the earlier generations,
who have proved beyond any reasonable doubt that it works. Viswanath
has made the point of Meenakishi's realization, the point of
her believing in her innate art, a sudden one, that is as abrupt
and as sudden as someone finding the path of faith.
Swarna
Kamalam has the unique distinction among the rest of his movies,
in that the movie is completely about a person finding her true
inner calling. Viswanath does not deviate from this path of
self-realization and makes Meenakshi go through the same path
as several before have trudged, before reaching that point of
eternal joy and enormous satisfaction. By pointing out the different
phrases of disinterest, denial, disgust, slowly transforming
into deep thought, deep churning and eventual embracement, by
indicating the metamorphosis of the personality of Meenakshi,
from a hot headed typical angst ridden youth to a mellowed down,
level headed understanding personality (depicted in a subtle
way through her early morning make-up procedures), Viswanath
lays down the path that is more personal and one that is fraught
with self-doubt and guilt. It would not start getting better
until it turned absolutely worse, quotes a proverb. Right at
the point of the lowest ebb, right at the point of total and
complete darkness, right at the point of absolute doom, where
the surge to the better takes place, where the pursuit of light
takes shape, where the will to wrest control takes root, does
every artist realize that what had been accompanying him/her
all through out in all his/her travails is not what is around
him/her, but what is inside of him/her.
Chandrasekhar
finds himself in a thankless position. His love for Meenakshmi
is consumed by his stubbornness to make her see what is right
for her. His admiration for her art is usurped by his undying
passion for making her realize the true purpose of her gift.
Caught between his unrelentess approach, continuing the tradition
of her father, and his mentoring instincts, continuing the tradition
of the guru-shishya parampara, is the tender feelings that admires
her, adores her, respects her and loves her. In comparison to
his previous movies, Viswanath makes the mentor on the same
level as the protégé thus bringing in the ego
element into play. Meenakshi spites Chandram's motives and takes
it out on her art during her dance performance. Meenakshi resents
Chandram's intentions and takes it out on her art by completely
reneging it for a professional opportunity. Viswanath does not
make it clear whether Chandram's advances are guided by his
feelings for her, or whether they seek an ulterior motive of
her mending her ways and getting back to her roots. A glance
at the three gurus in Meenakshi's life, her father who claims
the role of her tutor, Chandram, who assumes the role of the
mentor, and the American born Odissi dancer, who triggers the
realization process, and one can safely conclude that Viswanath's
idea of self-realization is not of one that occurs instantly
overnight, be it through a song or be it through a few words;
instead it is a path that is long drawn out beset with detours
and troubles, but one that ends in answer for the purpose of
art - one of pure joy, one of pure bliss.
(Cont'd
in the next part, Viswanath - the wordsmith)
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