Home / News / Opinion / Article / Destination Kudal: Until Corona subsides

Destination Kudal: Until Corona subsides

Mumbai-based visual artist Sumeet Patil has been locked in Kudal village for over a month. However, that hasn-t stopped him from being part of the statewide stay-at-home poster art initiative

  • WhatsApp
Listen to this article :
Sumeet Patil, 30, visual artist and resident of Naigaon was in Kudal, Sindhudurg, when the national lockdown was announced. He has been working from there ever since. He is seen in an under-construction house in Kudal, where his paper creations lend signi

Sumeet Patil, 30, visual artist and resident of Naigaon was in Kudal, Sindhudurg, when the national lockdown was announced. He has been working from there ever since. He is seen in an under-construction house in Kudal, where his paper creations lend signi

picAs a student-practitioner of visual arts and a short filmmaker, Sumeet Patil, 30, was always fascinated by pareidolia, the tendency and professional habit to see human faces in inanimate objects. Not that he made a living out of the practice, but it recurred as a theme when he pursued tree photography, or when he spent after hours around his BDD chawl residence or even when he made music out of unconventional objects outside the studio space. He saw thought-provoking human faces in rusted locks, discarded TV sets, bloomed flowers and broken belts. Little did he realise that this preoccupation would be one of the key themes of his posters designed to dissuade people from venturing out during the Coronavirus pandemic outbreak. Patil is one of 700 artists currently sculpting innovative visual messages persuading people to stay at home in Maharashtra.

Patil hasn-t been at his home in Naigaon for over one-and-a-half months. He is in scenic Kudal in Konkan—not as a fun-seeking tourist, but a Mumbaikar unable to circle back because of the statewide lockdown. He had come to Kudal for a recce to finalise shoot locations for his upcoming feature film that looks at a blind girl-s journey. The full-length feature stems from a 22-minute short, which he had shot in Kudal. In fact, he was walking through possible shoot locations along with the visually challenged protagonist Shabnam Ansari. But, just as he wrapped up the recce, the Janata Curfew was imposed on March 22. Soon followed the nationwide lockdown. Patil, along with his camera and laptop, became a long-standing guest in Kudal. His hosts—percussionist Vivek Kudalkar and singer-paramedic expert Trupti Damle Kudalkar—have extended their mango-cashew laden wadi to Patil, Ansari and the crew, who are now executing multiple awareness initiatives during the extended lockdown. Patil has, in fact, featured Ansari and four other visually challenged artistes situated in different cities in a video which underscores the willingness of blind artistes who depend much on human touch to embrace social isolation as the need of the moment. Kudal offers restricted mobility for Patil, after due precautions laid down by the local police.

How do you like the new new mid-day.com experience? Share your feedback and help us improve.

Read Next Story
Misery's new name? EMI

Trending Stories

Latest Photoscta-pos

Latest VideosView All

Latest Web StoriesView All

Mid-Day FastView All

Advertisement