"Discovering a Channel"
Little
did Mrinalini Singh know her squiggles on the back pages of notebooks
to fill the boredom of school would lead to a serious hobby of
painting that one day would win her recognition as an
It was an eventful journey of many years.
Born in Shimla in snowy northern India, e enjoyed art classes
in school. Her father was in the army and frequently on the move.
"My childhood impressions are marked by a sense of loss,"
she recalls. "I lost touch with my friends in every transfer.
Make new friends with each fresh beginning, meet new people and
lose them again - it became a rule. But every change also opened
a new world to enrich my experience."
She attended school in Lucknow and college in Calcutta. She got
married just six months before final examinations and completed
her degrees in history and political science 10 years later from
University of Delhi. Her husband, Hemant Krishan Singh, Indian
ambassador to Indonesia, is a diplomat with a career that keeps
him hopping. Apart from stints in India, they have lived in Portugal,
Mozambique, USA, Nepal, former Yugoslavia, Switzerland and Colombia
before arriving in Indonesia early this year.
Home, she says, is wherever she's living, in each place she's
been active in efforts to benefit the disabled and downtrodden.
As a president of the diplomatic women's
association
of Colombia she was instrumental in setting up charity homes in
Bogota. She refuses to be typecast. "I am beyond set ideas
and fixed mindsets," she asserts.
She rediscovered herself in the early '90s with a reborn passion
for art. Her first exhibition of watercolours in 1992 in New Delhi
gave her confidence. Further, she painted botanical illustrations
in watercolours. Now she paints flowers, which she perceives as
an opportunity to fill the canvas with energy, passion, beauty;
love and spontaneity.
In her youth, she'd wanted to join Shanti Niketan, the renowned
art school founded by Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore. Though
she didn't, he remains her inspiration. "Tagore is my guiding
light, mentor and inspiration. I admire his ease with words and
brush," she says. "He had a worldly outlook and always spoke a
universal language. He was a great voyager when travel was difficult
and uncommon. The circumstances in my life have provided me an
opportunity to see the world and to stimulate my creative spirit.
I too aspire to speak the universal language of fine art, where
the artist remains silent. Art is a channel that connects to my
inner self, the means of self-discovery leading me through my
spiritual growth. It's an essential tool for my inner journey."
During her three years in Colombia she met Armando Villegas, one
of Latin America's leading contemporary artists. Working with
him in his studio helped her develop her skills.
She
also studied psychometry, the metaphysical science of analysing
people through their choice of flowers. Now she explores every
energy-related therapy and believes in synchronicity, where the
coincidences in life are linked with significant connotations.
Mrinalini means lotus and she signs her paintings with a lotus
symbol. She dreamed of a lotus with a yellow aura just before
her last exhibition in Bogota and painted that vision. That canvas
is now a most precious possession. She relates the structure of
flowers to the Mandala, a cosmic symbol used since ancient times
to carry positive energies.
She participated in a group exhibition in Gallery Lingar in Kemang
and a solo show in Koi Gallery. She has tried her hand at sculpting
in recent months under the guidance of Dolorosa Sinaga. She is
also taking lessons in human drawing from Teguh Ostenrik.
Besides Hindi and English, she speaks
French, Portuguese, Serbo-Croatian and Spanish. She plays golf
and tennis and is eager to try her fingers on guitar. During a
two-year stint in journalism, she contributed articles on travel
to a newspaper. She also makes quilts with striking designs. She
has a dream of having her own gallery. Her son Kunal, 25, and
daughter Diva, 23, are busy developing their careers in the financial
world of New York
Her eclectic home displays objects d' art she has collected over
the years. However, she says she could easily detach herself from
everything and, with just a canvas, paints and brush, leave for
Timbuktu.
Published
in Indonesia Tattler, Sept. 2003