Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Life of Annikki - Another facet

 



In the past few weeks I have given you a glimpse of the success of the “Laughing Goddess” Annikki in a variety of fields. 

Cake designing - Edible Art 1

Other food designing - Edible Art 2

Drawing and painting

Interiors designing

Garden designing 

Crocheting

That is not the extent of the talents of this fascinating personality..

I give here her work as a researcher and an author in producing books on a variety  of subjects.



Her first book was about the last stages of her life in India. She faith in God was reinforced by this experience. So much so that when she returned tpo Finland she resigned from the Finnish church as she lived by her principles!



The second book was authored jointly with me on how to survive in Finland. This book was produced after 10 years of intensive research by both of us. There was no Google or AI those days so research meant physical research.






She then carried an intensive course of 4 years on Montessori Edication between 1991 and 1995 which she completed with distinction of 98%.


 


She then wrote her comprehensive book on raising a child the Montessori way applicable for children between 0 and 6 years.


She helped me design and prepare the Coffee Table  Book for the Golden Reunion of my school Class of 1959.



The next book she authored in two stages, first only in Finnish and the 2nd edition was in both Finnish and English on freedom of speech in Finland. In this she used her Finnish sarcasm tone fullest extent, butI was not competent to get the same effect with the English translation!




Then with me and Sriradhakrishnan Polsetti, she authored the book on Edible Art, both in English and Finnish. Here her photographic skills were also evident, a subject I have not touched upon in this series.



She jointly authored our book after our final visit to India.

Besides this she has authored many tens of articles on a variety of subjects published in many publications, especially our fortnightly newsletter, Findians Briefings, which had a circulation of about 80000 readers worldwide. 

I recently showed you in my previous blog, Face to Face - Kanha, one of her articles published in our Oulu newspaper, Kaleva

Because of many moves of residence in the last three years, I have lost many of her articles and also lost a lot of her research work on a variety of subjects such as music, religious intolerance, yoga, nutrition, and many more subjects covering all aspects of life.

Her hand written notes were all in shorthand Finnish so I was not able to understand most them, and she had lost the ability to decipher them. 

There is a saying that one whose TV size is bigger than one’s bookshelf needs to be listened to with great caution. 

In our case, Annikki’s bookshelf is 30 times mine on such a variety of subjects as religion, nutrition, gardens, recipes, interior designing, and filled with such great authors as R. K. Narayan and Jim Corbett. 

She has almost the entire collection of books by and about Maria Montessori and the Montessori system of education. 

She also has almost the entire collection of books by Ellen G. White and her prophetic works.

Like me, she grew up on the annual diet of the Manorama Year Book, so her general knowledge was vast. The difference between her and me was that I shouted  my "knowledge" from the mountain top but she used her knowledge in daily life to get things done!

She has been my friend, guide and counsellor on almost every important event in our lives. She has never been politically oriented but she stood for human rights and dignity of the human being.

When we had the recent spat with the O-India Ry, she very quickly advised me to terminate links as this association did not fit with our Guiding Principles

I had no hesitation in following her advice as she has never been wrong!





Saturday, October 07, 2023

Stages of the Art of Annikki Part 1

Ever since I restarted this blogging, many of you have been fascinated by the various stages of the art created by Annikki that have appeared on my blogs.

To show you the various stages she went through I thought that I would do a series of blog entries which focuses on some of the more distinct phases of her art.

She was a born artist and could gauge perspective by just looking at someone or something. She is horrible in mathematics so she said she was like a cat which never misses a jump from one point to another. 

Her art in the art school in London concentrated on drawing of models who posed for the class. 

Here are some examples of that period. All the art were pencil sketches

Annikki’s London Art School Class -1964







The first crayon work she did was the house that I lived in in London. I had left for a holiday in the South of France with my friends. Annikki had finished her studies in London and was going to Germany. She stayed in my place till she left. Sitting in the back garden she made a chalk drawing of the back of my home.

7 Woodchurch Road, West Hampstead, London

In Germany, she did not do much art as she was concentrating on her skills of learning the German  language. As she was looking after the three children of the Count and Countess von Schweiniz near Dusseldorf, she picked up German very quickly from them. (The Count was a heart specialist and one of his patients was the ex-Maharaja of Mysore who used to travel to London to consukt him.)

After Germany Annikki returned to Finland for a operiod and here she did some more pencil drawings and she did a duplicate using crayons.



Finnish forests 1965

When she returned to London she did not have much time for art. 

When we got married and moved to a small house in Shawbury (near Birmingham) near my research centre, she did get time to do a couple of sketches of me, and our eldest daughter, Susanna, with me.

Me - 1967

Susanna with me - 1969
 
When we moved to India, although looking after four children. Annikki continued her art with pencil, crayon and her most famous work, a combination of appliqué and embroidery with wool, she made for my mother, Zebras on cloth!






Our Indian  antiques


Daughter Susanna


Self portrait of Annikki with youngest son, Mika


My mother


Daughter  Joanna


Ramnagaram hills





Embroidered appliqué Zebras which took Annikki 7 months to make for my mother in Bangalore in 1979.

When we returned to Finland, Annikki did a special set of paintings of flora and one of Mother Teresa for a talk I was doing about India to the  English Club of Oulu in 1984.






Mother Teresa (1984)

She continued still life paintings whenever she got time from her many other activities.





When Annikki started showing signs of dementia in 2016, our elder daughter, Susanna visited her and tried to  resurrect her atmosphere that Annikki would restart her art. 

The art was still there but it was difficult for her to concentrate as can be seen from some of what she did with Susanna



















The skill of an artist never goes away, even with dementia , but unfortunately she cannot concentrate for any length of time any more. 

I thank our dear Lord for giving me such a beautiful collection of her art to live with us. 

Annikki only sold just one of her art works, and even till today I regret having parted with it! 

Part 2 of this series will highlight Annikki's creative designer of house interiors.