The Hindu (Bangalore)

Vistas of a journey from queen to commoner

- Ruth Dhanaraj

There is something about royalty that piques our interest — from what they eat and wear to what they do and where they go, no matter how mundane it might seem when the rest of us indulge in the very same activities.

Now, for the rst time ever, the Raja Ravi Varma Heritage Foundation is holding an exhibition titled Daughter of Providence, that showcases the life of Maharani Sethu Lakshmi Bayi, the last ruling queen of Travancore and Raja Ravi Varma’s eldest granddaugh­ter.

According to Gitanjali Maini, Managing Trustee & CEO of the Raja Ravi Varma Heritage Foundation, April 29 was the 176th birth anniversar­y of the royal artist, Raja Ravi Varma and the exhibition was inaugurate­d on that day to mark the occasion.

“Every piece in the Daughter of Providence display has not been seen before — whether they are photograph­s from the family or paintings of the Maharani and her husband. Most importantl­y, the collection includes a Raja Ravi Varma painting of the Maharani as a baby, somewhere between the age of two-and-a-half and three,” says Gitanjali.

“The entire exhibition has been mounted around this personalit­y, right from the time when she was a toddler, her time as a regent and to the last picture that was taken of her,” she adds.

Gitanjali believes one of the advantages of managing a legacy is the opportunit­y to pick up on elements and facets. “For instance, Ravi Varma knew very well his granddaugh­ter was going to be adopted into the royal family and he attended her coronation too. Those connection­s have not really been told by the Foundation or anybody in the art world prior to this. This is the USP of the show because we’re trying to nd connection­s and in‡uences of people who made a dierence in the world.”

The Sandeep & Gitanjali Maini Foundation was recognised as the o«cial foundation for anything related to Raja Ravi Varma on February 29, this year.

Gitanjali says photograph­s from the family have been printed, restored and mounted with captions and stories for the bene t of viewers, on 10 walls arranged in a “‡ow through” pattern.

“The Foundation wanted to do something meaningful, in an angle never done before using our historical relevance to the artist. By taking the history route with this exhibition, you are able to see the relevance of the works on display. That’s how we planned this show — a chance for people to look at art in a historical way and feel content about what they’ve learned.”

Daughter of Providence was conceptual­ised by the Foundation with historian Manu S Pillai lending to the research and documentat­ion of the exhibits.

The exhibition will be on display till May 30 at the Raja Ravi Varma Heritage Foundation, Mezzanine Level, 38 Maini Sadan, 7th Cross Lavelle Road.

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