The campaign to beautify Bangalore’s prime public spaces just got sweeter for a couple of primates on Palace Road in Bangalore on Wednesday.
Photograph: Karnataka Photo News
Also read: A piece of culture to stop the spread of pissiculture
The campaign to beautify Bangalore’s prime public spaces just got sweeter for a couple of primates on Palace Road in Bangalore on Wednesday.
Photograph: Karnataka Photo News
Also read: A piece of culture to stop the spread of pissiculture
Beautiful photo, Hats off to photographer
I actually like the idea of having art like this on Blore walls. It is providing employment to the artists and looks better than movie posters and other political graffiti.
Photography is not about taking pics in high resolution camera. Timing is important. Good pic
Wish to know who is behind this campaign, a beautiful idea of painting on the walls around the city. Also, who are these unknown painters, who have done mostly a very good work. Is it happening only in Bangalore or elsewhere in other cities as well in the country?
This beautiful picture made my day. Karnataka Photo News. Please accept my congratulations.
The nilgiri monkey paintings looks so realistic. Kudos to whoever painted this.
Kudos to the photographer. Amazing timing.
Really good initiative by BBMP to paint these walls.
Some of the paintings were done by art students from Kem school of arts. A friend of mine was involved in it.
These painters have pulled off some ‘remix’ portraits elsewhere. When I mean remix, it is like old songs set with new score.
In Jayanagar 4th Block opp to Reliance jewelry, they did a portrait of Abdul Kalam, which looks like Sashi Tharoor with a mop of white hair and that of Gokhale looks like SP Balasubramaniam with a Marathi style Turban.
These remix artists however provide us such light moments during traffic jams.
Good pic.
On a recent visit to M’lore, I saw some Worli paintings depicting Yakshagana,etc. (DK culture) on a compound wall opposite Jyoti theatre – that was good too.
@Somebody, read in news paper that this art work is the brain child of BBMP commissioner Bharat Lal Meena.
Dear Mr T.S. Nagarajan, thank you sir, thank you for encouraging words