Tuesday, May 26, 2009

My Early Days

I am drawing since the age of 2 1/2 and my parents did not think of them as just scribbles, but scribbles with balanced color schemes, fearless strokes, expression of her zeal for art. That striked them to posses each scribble of mine very carefully. I slowly inherited the mechanism of assimilating color & composition, from my father. Now I have specialized in drawing Abstract form of Ganesha, Landscapes, Mother and Child, Cartoon Characters, Landscape & Sceneries, and recently dress designing for my imaginary characters . My favorite artists are Piccasso, Van Gogh, M.F. Hussain, Anjoli Ela Menon, Dhiraj Chowdry and the list goes on… as I get to know about more and more artists.

















I handle all media – Acrylic, Watercolors on board, canvass, Oil pastels, pencil and recently digital too. Apart from painting I also engages herself in other forms of art like – clay modeling, sand art, tile painting, glitter art, tube painting, digital art, Carnatic Vocal and keyboard playing.
I am an active participant in any painting competitions and in all school events. My Painting titled “Women” was published in the “Kaleidoscope” column of Hindu Young World on 14th July 2006. I won prizes among Top 5 winners during Mylapore Festival Painting Competition, in which one was live sketching of the Mylapore tank at the age of 6.


































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Friday, May 22, 2009

Précis about me

I am 8 ½ years old and I have held nine exhibitions. My 4th show was inaugurated by Tamil Nadu Governor Shri Surjit Singh Barnala on the occasion of World Peace day. I have won International award for my peace drawing for two consecutive years. I am the “Youngest Corel Certified Designer” certified by Corel Corporation (International).

I am is a recipient of ‘Youngest Achiever Award’ awarded by The District Youth Service Team, Rotary International District 3230 for the year 2008. It was followed by a live painting performance in BIG F.M. I also received “BIG CHUTTY KUTTY” award on Children’s day awarded by BIG F.M, following a live chat show talking about my achievements. My work of art was selected by the renowned playschool in Chennai and was auctioned for Charity.


(my mummy is hosting this blog as I am below 13 years of age)

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Media Coverage

Published on May 13, 2009



Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Metro Plus Chennai

Virtual canvases

Eight-year-old Varuna showcases her digital art works


“Her works say a lot of things. It’s a whole new philosophy”. After asking S.Varuna about her influences, cinematographer P. C. Sreeram acknowledged that he has learnt a lot from the eight-year-old.

He inaugurated Varuna’s ninth exhibition (incidentally, on National Technology Day, May 11) “Tiny Pixel” at the Adyar Boat Club. Varuna showcased her skill in digital art as mediapersons and personalities from the film industry watched.

The young artist has used the techniques she applies in manual arts in these digital works.

Ask her about her works ‘Swimming butterfly’ or ‘House in the sky’ and she replies that “artists are dreamers. Everything that is impossible, we will make possible.”

She grew up with her father’s paintings and then committed herself artistically and even socially, to spread the message of peace.

CELINE LEMAIRE




Published in Chennai Times, Times Now on 18th May, 2009




Published in Indian Express on 14th May, 2009

Eight-and-a-half year old Varuna’s exhibition is a series of digital art pieces by the young artist SHE began at the age of two and a half and is now 8 exhibitions and 8 and a half years old; Varuna clearly has it in her genes. With an artist for a father and an encouraging mother, it is not so much surprise that the kid’s artistic streak has been honed and directed at a stage so early. Tiny Pixels, her latest solo exhibition was inaugurated at Boat Club on Monday by cinematographer P C Shriram.

The exhibition was a series of digital art pieces by the young artist. Also on display were the artists’ tools, a Mac, a graphics tablet and the Coral Paint software. Varuna took her seat and demonstrated the tools and let out the secrets of her trade. “She began painting early in her father’s studio and ever since we realised she needed the encouragement. She paints both manually and digitally”, says Kamala, Varuna’s mother.

“She also wants to try other technologies for the purpose of art”, she adds. The work is imaginative and to say the least, representative of a child’s world, where no real boundaries are kept to, where everything can be given wings and dreams don’t see a stop. There are also pieces with mosaic work and a few sketches using simple strokes like a Ganesha.

Varuna herself seemed quite delighted and proud of the collection she held for the display. Art it appears is close to her heart. “I paint whatever I am thinking. I usually spend at least an hour painting everyday”, she tells us. Sridhar, her father, himself says, “I have taught her the basic techniques, but I leave the rest to her and her imagination”.