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George Oommen

About George Oommen

George Oommen is a Boston-based, Harvard-educated architect and painter whose art is inspired by the memories of a childhood spent in the spice coast of Kerala in India. His landscapes take viewers on enchanted journeys, reflecting the verdant views, serene waterways and sun-drenched skies of Kerala. Some of these journeys are mystical – like the collection entitled “Sacred Spaces Within You.” These abstract compositions are inspired by Indian temples “where pilgrims are conveyed from secular spaces to the inner sanctum of one’s spiritual self.” This spatial exploration reflects Oommen’s architectural background.

Oommen’s art is very versatile. It is tactile, emotional, spiritual and as sensual as the vivid colors of the silk saris that have influenced his Kanjeevaram series. His artistic explorations have created a unique aesthetic style that mirrors the monsoon and the rain-swept visuals of his imagined homeland.

Oommen had a retrospective at The Whistler Museum of Art in Lowell USA, Several Solo shows at Harvard University Cambridge MA, a solo show in Vladivostok Russia, sponsored by the US Consulate General, and at the Agora Gallery in NYC, Visions of Kerala in Delhi, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Trivandrum India, “Erasing borders 2012 and 2016” by the Indo American Council of New York and showing at Hammond Museum and Queens Museum of art in Queens NY. Sunaparanta Goa Center of Art solo show in GOA , Open Art code Paris Art en Capital with Salon des Artistes Independents The Grand Palais,, and Centro Cultural La Vaguada" in Avenida Monforte de Lemos, Madrid, Spain


Artist Statement

The art of George Oommen is nostalgic in the best unsentimental sense. His paintings evoke a kind of sheer unearthly beauty. They are inspired by a place on the planet, however. one of the impulses behind them is to evoke an atmosphere that is at an opposite pole from the austere ambiance of Boston where he resides most of the time.

For a few weeks every year Oommen goes to Kerala, at the southern tip of India, where he was born and raised. Kerala is not that well trafficked but is known far and wide as an earthly paradise. He immerses himself in the tropical climate and rich color and this supplies him with images and sensations to take back to New England and convert into paintings. At present Oommen is inspired by two main forces. The first is the stylistic one of Indian miniatures. This influence is felt in the compact format he often favors, a square within a square. Although as in the miniatures the emphasis is on line, an American viewer might be reminded of abstract expressionists such as Newman and Rothko whose compositions reflect geometry whose canvases evoke a limitless space. It is not surprising that Oommen's art has underpinnings of geometry for he is an architect and city planner and these are both rational disciplines. But his elemental images, even if they are details made grand or washes of various shades of green, hint at an unbounded hedonism.

The second main influence is a contemporary painter: Sir Howard Hodgkin, one of the foremost British artists. He is a painter who has gone to Kerala. Hodgkin mines everyday reality for his imagery which initially reads as abstraction. Likewise, something in an Oommen painting that might at first seen like an abstract exercise in achieving luminosity could turn out to be a near-precise description of light striking a river in Kerala. It is fascinating to contemplate the necessary existence of these paintings, for Oommen isn't a romantic on the order of Gauguin who foes to a tropical place to escape civilization. Oommen is deeply involved in contemporary urban life. His Harvard thesis was a project for housing homeless people in a bridge then being constructed in Calcutta. The Indian government was interested in pursuing Oommen's ideas but the bit of Gauguin in him was wary of "bureaucratic tangles."

Oommen's colors are especially intense. They are also very pliant allowing him to achieve either areas of dense color or especially runny washes. The secret is Oops Paint sold at home depot. Naturally it is marketed as house paint, but modern artists have always taken to varieties house paint. Oops comes in especially bright colors and, as the name implies, is very user friendly. The magical world that Kerala seems to be, and a wall of Oommen's works hung salon style makes a deluxe travel brochure, evoked with a paint that is aimed at the commonplace world makes it seem ever more magical and something that will occupy Oommen for the rest of his painting life in as search for the equivalent of precise sensations.

Already George Oommen has been a painter for several decades and he has explored many styles and attitudes. In a very real sense he is a complete artist: he is at a point where his work, though intensely retinal, has a wide range of meaning. Rooted in sensuousness, and realized in an everyday manner, Oommen's vision of Kerala, has given him a concentrated approach to art and enabled him to achieve a conspicuous spiritual dimension. A series was entitled "Sacred Places within You." And one can expect George Oommen to be preoccupied for some time exploring enchanted places.

William Zimmer, Contributing Art Critic To NY Times.