The National - News

Gigantism is Indian pair’s forte

For the father and son sculpting team of Ram and Anil Sutar bigger is always better. Their latest commission will take the pair to new heights in creating a statue twice as tall as the Statue of Liberty, Amrit Dhillon, Foreign Correspond­ent, reports

- Foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

NOIDA, INDIA // Outside their workshop, a raucous debate rages about whether India should spend US$500 million (Dh1.83 billion) on a statue to honour a 17th-century Hindu warrior. Inside, the two men sculpting the bronze figure work in silence in their vast, high-ceilinged studio outside New Delhi.

“Is there a controvers­y about it?” asks Anil Sutar, 59, sitting in the adjoining office, looking surprised. “We don’t pay any attention to politics. We just get on with our work.”

Anil and his father Ram are the sculptors in the eye of the storm. Ram is the famous one.

At 92, he still works eight hours a day, is totally alert, and has a face that looks 15 years younger. Apart from a recent knee replacemen­t, he is in great physical condition.

In 1994, Anil returned from his studies in architectu­re and urban design in the US to join his father, who is the sculptor to whom state government­s and politician­s turn when they want to build a larger-than-life statue.

The pair are thrilled by the Shivaji commission. At 210 metres, the statue off the Mumbai coast will be twice the height of the Statue of Liberty. Another monumental statue that they are halfway to completing is that of Vallabhbha­i Patel, an important figure in the Indian freedom movement and the country’s first home minister after independen­ce. That statue will be just a few metres smaller than Shivaji.

For critics, these statues are part of the “sectarian” Hindu nationalis­t agenda of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which involves projecting Hindu historical personalit­ies.

The BJP feels that Patel has not been accorded the same eminence in public consciousn­ess as the Nehru- Gandhi dynasty which heads the rival Congress Party.

As to Shivaji, he is idolised by many Hindus in north India as the warrior who fought the Mughals (the Muslim emperors who ruled India before the British) and who created his own kingdom in the western state of Maharashtr­a of which Mumbai is the capital. Ram waxes philosophi­cal about the criticism. “The same things were said about earlier landmark buildings. The Eiffel Tower was criticised. If people had worried about how much the Taj Mahal would cost, it would never have been built.” Ram came from humble origins and grew up in a Maharashtr­a village where his carpenter and blacksmith father hammered, chiselled and carved all day.

He learnt early how to carve and work with metal. His high school art teacher, Shriram Krishan Joshi, recognised his talent and urged him to study at the famous J J School of Art in Mumbai. Ram had no money but his teacher paid. Later, Ram got a job restoring ancient Hindu statues in the Ellora and Ajanta caves and his career was off to a good start.

Over the decades, he has created about 200 statues, mostly in bronze. Some are in parliament, including a nearly 5-metre-high Mahatma Gandhi statue in a meditative pose. But easily his most famous pieces are the bronze busts and statues of Gandhi that have been presented by the Indian government to countries around the world and installed in 350 cities.

The father and son thrive on size. Gigantism is their forte. The bigger the statue, the better.

“Size inspires us both. We would love to create the world’s ninth wonder, a mile-high stat- ue, perhaps in a place like Dubai or Abu Dhabi. We’d make it of stainless steel and it would be a monument to human progress,” says Anil.

Their foundry can currently handle 10,000 kilograms of casting a day. Work on Shivaji, yet to begin because the design has only just been approved by the Maharashtr­a government, will require 2,000 people working around the clock to finish it by the 2019 deadline.

The statue will sit atop a 22-storey building housing a museum, library, auditorium, cafes and shops.

Six lifts will take visitors through the body of a horse up to Shivaji’s chest where there will be viewing windows for them to look across the Arabian Sea and the Mumbai skyline. For Ram, the most absorbing phase of a project is conceptual­ising the facial expression.

“I have to capture the essence of the person. With Shivaji, I had to bring out his chivalry and powerful personalit­y. The horse too has worked out well – it has movement, it is fluid and dynamic,” he says.

What about the criticism in some quarters that a national competitio­n should have been held for the project, if only to throw up, perhaps, new talent? “Why would you do that when everyone knows the quality of work we do, our designs and capacity?” says a bemused Anil.

“If you want an actor for a role, you wouldn’t audition Amitabh Bachchan, would you?”

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 ?? Mustafa Quraishi for The National ?? Left, father and son sculptors Ram and Anil Sutar with a mock-up of their planned statue of the 17th-century Hindu warrior Shivaji at their Noida studio. Above, working on a bust of Italian astronomer­mathematic­ian Galileo.
Mustafa Quraishi for The National Left, father and son sculptors Ram and Anil Sutar with a mock-up of their planned statue of the 17th-century Hindu warrior Shivaji at their Noida studio. Above, working on a bust of Italian astronomer­mathematic­ian Galileo.

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