Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Drawing from nature

- Paramita Ghosh paramitagh­osh@htlive.com

Botanical illustrato­r Nirupa Rao, 30, of Bengaluru, often posts a little quiz alongside her art. Next to a blooming rhododendr­on, she recently said: “Do you recognise this beauty? Most wild species… are native to Asia... This one in particular is common in the Nilgiris, Anamalai and Palani Hills.” Followers (she has nearly 12,000) respond with their best guesses, or questions of their own. The point is for people to engage and not just scroll from one pretty photo to the next, says Rao (@niruparao on Instagram). Artists like Rao are using their art to reflect their interest in conservati­on, creating saleable works with an additional USP. In Murud-Janjira, Maharashtr­a, Nibha Sikander makes paper-cut art works that mimic birds and insects. In Delhi, Niharika Rajput makes paper sculptures of exotic birds.

Rao comes from a family of naturalist­s and began her illustrati­ons early. “I don’t extract plants from their habitat unless they are fallen leaves so I work with a combinatio­n of photograph­s, on-thespot sketches and memory,” she says. “Animals are well represente­d in popular culture but ask a child to name the tree outside their window and they’d be at a loss. With my work I am trying to do for plants what popular culture has done for animals.”

Her cover artwork for the re-jacketing of five of author Amitav Ghosh’s novels, reflects this too. Tucked under the gleaming coils of a serpent on her much-talked-about cover art for Gun Island — a book on climate change, displaceme­nt and migration — is a flower of the oriental mangrove, native to the Sundarbans.

Rao’s own second book, an illustrate­d work titled Hidden Kingdom: Fantastica­l Plants of the Western Ghats (2019), is full of intricate representa­tions of rare plants from one of the world’s most bio-diverse regions.

For artist Nibha Sikander (@nibhasikan­der), 37, drawing on the bird and insect kingdom for her card-papercut works came naturally. She lives amid biodiversi­ty too, in Murud-Janjira.

“Paper mimics nature in its versatilit­y – soft, stiff, malleable and flexible, almost like wings, feathers and antennae,” she says. These works were part of her first solo exhibition, Wandering Violin Mantis, at Mumbai’s Tarq gallery in mid-2020. Her priority is art, she says, but she’s glad her work makes people think about the environmen­t.

Artist Niharika Rajput, 29, of Delhi, makes paper sculptures of the birds she encounters in her travels — from the redbilled blue magpie in Himachal Pradesh to the black-necked crane in Kashmir. She studies their anatomy in the field and in photograph­s and replicates them using paper, wire and epoxy.

Rajput (@paperchirr­ups) has also been conducting a multimedia annual arts festival themed on birds in Ladakh, since 2018, in collaborat­ion with a local gallery and a Jammu-based foundation. “When I share a picture of a bird or animal with some interestin­g facts, it helps build informatio­n but not in a convention­al way,” she says. “Art can be a great tool to educate not just children but adults as well. It tells people what’s out there and needs to be protected.”

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 ??  ?? (Above) An illustrati­on of a Bhesa Indica branch by Nirupa Rao. (Below) A papercut of a common owlet moth by Nibha Sikander. (Bottom) Niharika Rajput at work on a paper sculpture of the Indian Roller.
(Above) An illustrati­on of a Bhesa Indica branch by Nirupa Rao. (Below) A papercut of a common owlet moth by Nibha Sikander. (Bottom) Niharika Rajput at work on a paper sculpture of the Indian Roller.

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