How artist Maredu Ramu gives ‘street art’ a whole new meaning
The Hindu
Artist Maredu Ramu A Walk Through The City
“There’s nothing mysterious about my work. I paint what the common man will understand — scenes from day-to-day life — which I capture by observing my surroundings,” says Hyderabad-based artist Maredu Ramu. “Like most artists, I am influenced and inspired by my surroundings.”
“Autorickshaws, tea shops, Hyderabadi biryani and special Irani chai — there is no planning. I paint as I see them and it is usually what makes one smile,” says the artist, talking about the spontaneous nature of his process.
A picture is worth a 1,000 words and Maredu’s paintings negate the need for elaboration. In every piece, one can see Nature striving with civilization — trees burst into bloom at drab construction sites, while brilliantly plumed birds perch on autorickshaws as man tries to make sense of the chaos he has created.
Using bold brush strokes and bright colours, Maredu vividly captures the fading innocence of a world he once knew. “I began to notice the change in my surroundings; how the ancient rock landscape of Hyderabad was changing into a concrete jungle. This had an impact on me and I began to capture every instance of this encroachment in public places I would come across, with my work.”
Hailing from an agricultural family in Peddapalli in Telangana, Maredu says he was not too academically inclined as a child. “I was only interested in drawing,” he laughs, adding that it was his art teacher who saw beyond his doodling and encouraged him to take up art for his higher studies.
His pursuit of a Masters in Fine Arts from Central University In Hyderabad, exposed Maredu to the sculptures of Mohenjo-daro and the classic beauty of Raja Ravi Varma’s work as well as European masters such as Van Gogh. He also became aware of the gradual shift in art over the years — from a world of brush, paint and canvas to digitisation.
Maredu says as part of the college curriculum, all students had to try their hand at various media and he took a liking to acrylics.
National Press Day (November 16) was last week, and, as an entertainment journalist, I decided to base this column on a topic that is as personal as it is relevant — films on journalism and journalists. Journalism’s evolution has been depicted throughout the last 100-odd years thanks to pop culture, and the life and work of journalists have made for a wealth of memorable cinema.