http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20080915&fname=Booksa&sid=1

 Miss Nimboopani, Sweet And Sour  
 Mario Miranda extracted humour from every nook of life. A sun-warmed 
compendium.  
  
  
 Gautam Bhatia 
 A literary production on a working life as prodigious and varied as Goan 
artist Mario Miranda’s can barely do justice to the artist’s life. Countless 
books on great artists like Da Vinci or Picasso only skim the surface. The 
process of creation is far more difficult to display than just the final work 
of art. Miranda has been luckier. In a new compilation of his work that is more 
diary and scrapbook than formal artistic odyssey, publisher Gerard da Cunha, 
himself a Goan,  
  
 realised the vastness of his task, and chose a different course. He gathered a 
handful of the artist’s long-time friends—Manohar Malgaonkar, Nissim Ezekiel, 
Ranjit Hoskote and others whose words matter—and in a literary goulash, set out 
a spread of writing, reflection and presentation. An artistic feast under a 
blue Goan sky. 
 Ever since there has been popular drawing in India, there has been Mario 
Miranda. In barber shop Illustrated Weeklies, in the Times of India, a Mario 
drawing leapt out at you with all its excesses: Miss Nimboopani, big-breasted 
and full-lipped; obese politicians, shifty-eyed and small-brained—Mario’s 
tableau underscore his conviction that nothing is sacred: people, religion, 
politics, history, taste, aspiration. Everything under the sun is potential 
target for lampoon. The book charts the extraordinary facility of the man. From 
diary sketches and cartoons that take playful potshots at small-town life and 
small-minded communities, to elaborate renderings of Goa that are complete 
stories in themselves, the pages are filled with energetic and teeming 
statements of Indian situations. 
 The artist in Miranda is driven by two impulses. To make a cartoon, spare and 
focused by humour, or to construct an elaborate drawing, painterly in intent, 
and defining space. Between the two, there are limitless explorations of human 
conditions—politics, religion, and the happy hypocrisy and humbug that define 
urban life. Known for the etching-like drawing style, the sketchbooks exhibit a 
variety that is as much M.C. Escher as Le Corbusier or Canaletto. As much Punch 
as they are The New Yorker. And of course, as much Mario. 
 At the outset Mario admits,"I just love to draw." Few people today would echo 
such a sentiment. In an age when Photoshop and Corel Draw have replaced the 
skill of drawing, few give it the attention it deserves. Yet with Mario there 
is the perennial artistic impulse to experiment with expression for its own 
sake. The travel series that includes New York, Japan, London, Paris is perhaps 
his most varied. Each scene is viewed from an outsider’s vantage, and 
deliberately constructed in outlines that resemble engravings. In some, lines 
are layered to create the effects of a painting; others evolve as vivid prints, 
filled with an animated light, graphic and precise. 
 His Goan record, drawn with loving care, is his most prolific and detailed. 
The darkness of church interiors, the white light on pastel houses, pudgy and 
self-absorbed holiday crowds—each fleeting moment consolidates into multiple 
and cumulative impressions. Mario records Goa like a doting father, faithfully 
recording every change into the family album. Growing up under its tropical 
lushness and pastel colonialism, the Goa drawings are a longing—a benign and 
pastoral hankering for the slow life, the Goa of childhood, where "there was 
music, love and laughter". The care with which each scene is constructed 
invariably resounds with celebration—weddings, feasts, funerals—and links you 
to a time before murder and drugs also became synonymous associations. 
 The excesses of Indian life at times overwhelm Mario’s art. In some of the 
more elaborate and overworked drawings it is hard to distil a single idea.And 
the distinction between ugly, beautiful, grotesque, delicate, brutal, or 
fanciful, all becomes clouded in superfluous detail. Is the artist deliberately 
confusing the viewer, or is he merely making a truthful representation of 
life’s messiness? Mario’s skill lies in the masterful austerity of line in his 
less finished drawings and the incisive wit of his cartoons. 
 I’ve always admired the artist’s deformations of Indian life, the perennial 
exaggeration of scenes from naughty to obscene, the delicate flourishes that 
mark out stereotypes. Drawing has been for Mario the first reaction—an intimate 
and spontaneous reflection of daily life made visible. In a career spanning 
five decades, few urban Indian homes have not resounded with the laughter of a 
Mario view of their local world. Even today many of the cartoons—devoid of 
politics and regional character—are fresh. The book is a pungent record of 
India, laced with infinite compassion. A bellyful of laughs and stinging 
truths, without cynicism or despair. An artist—a human first—sharing his 
provocative reflections with others in his own drawing room.

  

 A literary production on a working life as prodigious and varied as Goan 
artist Mario Miranda’s can barely do justice to the artist’s life. Countless 
books on great artists like Da Vinci or Picasso only skim the surface. The 
process of creation is far more difficult to display than just the final work 
of art. Miranda has been luckier. In a new compilation of his work that is more 
diary and scrapbook than formal artistic odyssey, publisher Gerard da Cunha, 
himself a Goan,  
  
 realised the vastness of his task, and chose a different course. He gathered a 
handful of the artist’s long-time friends—Manohar Malgaonkar, Nissim Ezekiel, 
Ranjit Hoskote and others whose words matter—and in a literary goulash, set out 
a spread of writing, reflection and presentation. An artistic feast under a 
blue Goan sky. 
 Ever since there has been popular drawing in India, there has been Mario 
Miranda. In barber shop Illustrated Weeklies, in the Times of India, a Mario 
drawing leapt out at you with all its excesses: Miss Nimboopani, big-breasted 
and full-lipped; obese politicians, shifty-eyed and small-brained—Mario’s 
tableau underscore his conviction that nothing is sacred: people, religion, 
politics, history, taste, aspiration. Everything under the sun is potential 
target for lampoon. The book charts the extraordinary facility of the man. From 
diary sketches and cartoons that take playful potshots at small-town life and 
small-minded communities, to elaborate renderings of Goa that are complete 
stories in themselves, the pages are filled with energetic and teeming 
statements of Indian situations. 
 The artist in Miranda is driven by two impulses. To make a cartoon, spare and 
focused by humour, or to construct an elaborate drawing, painterly in intent, 
and defining space. Between the two, there are limitless explorations of human 
conditions—politics, religion, and the happy hypocrisy and humbug that define 
urban life. Known for the etching-like drawing style, the sketchbooks exhibit a 
variety that is as much M.C. Escher as Le Corbusier or Canaletto. As much Punch 
as they are The New Yorker. And of course, as much Mario. 
 At the outset Mario admits,"I just love to draw." Few people today would echo 
such a sentiment. In an age when Photoshop and Corel Draw have replaced the 
skill of drawing, few give it the attention it deserves. Yet with Mario there 
is the perennial artistic impulse to experiment with expression for its own 
sake. The travel series that includes New York, Japan, London, Paris is perhaps 
his most varied. Each scene is viewed from an outsider’s vantage, and 
deliberately constructed in outlines that resemble engravings. In some, lines 
are layered to create the effects of a painting; others evolve as vivid prints, 
filled with an animated light, graphic and precise. 
 His Goan record, drawn with loving care, is his most prolific and detailed. 
The darkness of church interiors, the white light on pastel houses, pudgy and 
self-absorbed holiday crowds—each fleeting moment consolidates into multiple 
and cumulative impressions. Mario records Goa like a doting father, faithfully 
recording every change into the family album. Growing up under its tropical 
lushness and pastel colonialism, the Goa drawings are a longing—a benign and 
pastoral hankering for the slow life, the Goa of childhood, where "there was 
music, love and laughter". The care with which each scene is constructed 
invariably resounds with celebration—weddings, feasts, funerals—and links you 
to a time before murder and drugs also became synonymous associations. 
 The excesses of Indian life at times overwhelm Mario’s art. In some of the 
more elaborate and overworked drawings it is hard to distil a single idea.And 
the distinction between ugly, beautiful, grotesque, delicate, brutal, or 
fanciful, all becomes clouded in superfluous detail. Is the artist deliberately 
confusing the viewer, or is he merely making a truthful representation of 
life’s messiness? Mario’s skill lies in the masterful austerity of line in his 
less finished drawings and the incisive wit of his cartoons. 
 I’ve always admired the artist’s deformations of Indian life, the perennial 
exaggeration of scenes from naughty to obscene, the delicate flourishes that 
mark out stereotypes. Drawing has been for Mario the first reaction—an intimate 
and spontaneous reflection of daily life made visible. In a career spanning 
five decades, few urban Indian homes have not resounded with the laughter of a 
Mario view of their local world. Even today many of the cartoons—devoid of 
politics and regional character—are fresh. The book is a pungent record of 
India, laced with infinite compassion. A bellyful of laughs and stinging 
truths, without cynicism or despair. An artist—a human first—sharing his 
provocative reflections with others in his own drawing room.
 http://www.outlookindia.com/full.asp?fodname=20080915&fname=Booksa&sid=1

 Miss Nimboopani, Sweet And Sour  
 Mario Miranda extracted humour from every nook of life. A sun-warmed 
compendium.  
  
  
 Gautam Bhatia 
 A literary production on a working life as prodigious and varied as Goan 
artist Mario Miranda’s can barely do justice to the artist’s life. Countless 
books on great artists like Da Vinci or Picasso only skim the surface. The 
process of creation is far more difficult to display than just the final work 
of art. Miranda has been luckier. In a new compilation of his work that is more 
diary and scrapbook than formal artistic odyssey, publisher Gerard da Cunha, 
himself a Goan,  
  
 realised the vastness of his task, and chose a different course. He gathered a 
handful of the artist’s long-time friends—Manohar Malgaonkar, Nissim Ezekiel, 
Ranjit Hoskote and others whose words matter—and in a literary goulash, set out 
a spread of writing, reflection and presentation. An artistic feast under a 
blue Goan sky. 
 Ever since there has been popular drawing in India, there has been Mario 
Miranda. In barber shop Illustrated Weeklies, in the Times of India, a Mario 
drawing leapt out at you with all its excesses: Miss Nimboopani, big-breasted 
and full-lipped; obese politicians, shifty-eyed and small-brained—Mario’s 
tableau underscore his conviction that nothing is sacred: people, religion, 
politics, history, taste, aspiration. Everything under the sun is potential 
target for lampoon. The book charts the extraordinary facility of the man. From 
diary sketches and cartoons that take playful potshots at small-town life and 
small-minded communities, to elaborate renderings of Goa that are complete 
stories in themselves, the pages are filled with energetic and teeming 
statements of Indian situations. 
 The artist in Miranda is driven by two impulses. To make a cartoon, spare and 
focused by humour, or to construct an elaborate drawing, painterly in intent, 
and defining space. Between the two, there are limitless explorations of human 
conditions—politics, religion, and the happy hypocrisy and humbug that define 
urban life. Known for the etching-like drawing style, the sketchbooks exhibit a 
variety that is as much M.C. Escher as Le Corbusier or Canaletto. As much Punch 
as they are The New Yorker. And of course, as much Mario. 
 At the outset Mario admits,"I just love to draw." Few people today would echo 
such a sentiment. In an age when Photoshop and Corel Draw have replaced the 
skill of drawing, few give it the attention it deserves. Yet with Mario there 
is the perennial artistic impulse to experiment with expression for its own 
sake. The travel series that includes New York, Japan, London, Paris is perhaps 
his most varied. Each scene is viewed from an outsider’s vantage, and 
deliberately constructed in outlines that resemble engravings. In some, lines 
are layered to create the effects of a painting; others evolve as vivid prints, 
filled with an animated light, graphic and precise. 
 His Goan record, drawn with loving care, is his most prolific and detailed. 
The darkness of church interiors, the white light on pastel houses, pudgy and 
self-absorbed holiday crowds—each fleeting moment consolidates into multiple 
and cumulative impressions. Mario records Goa like a doting father, faithfully 
recording every change into the family album. Growing up under its tropical 
lushness and pastel colonialism, the Goa drawings are a longing—a benign and 
pastoral hankering for the slow life, the Goa of childhood, where "there was 
music, love and laughter". The care with which each scene is constructed 
invariably resounds with celebration—weddings, feasts, funerals—and links you 
to a time before murder and drugs also became synonymous associations. 
 The excesses of Indian life at times overwhelm Mario’s art. In some of the 
more elaborate and overworked drawings it is hard to distil a single idea.And 
the distinction between ugly, beautiful, grotesque, delicate, brutal, or 
fanciful, all becomes clouded in superfluous detail. Is the artist deliberately 
confusing the viewer, or is he merely making a truthful representation of 
life’s messiness? Mario’s skill lies in the masterful austerity of line in his 
less finished drawings and the incisive wit of his cartoons. 
 I’ve always admired the artist’s deformations of Indian life, the perennial 
exaggeration of scenes from naughty to obscene, the delicate flourishes that 
mark out stereotypes. Drawing has been for Mario the first reaction—an intimate 
and spontaneous reflection of daily life made visible. In a career spanning 
five decades, few urban Indian homes have not resounded with the laughter of a 
Mario view of their local world. Even today many of the cartoons—devoid of 
politics and regional character—are fresh. The book is a pungent record of 
India, laced with infinite compassion. A bellyful of laughs and stinging 
truths, without cynicism or despair. An artist—a human first—sharing his 
provocative reflections with others in his own drawing room.

  

 A literary production on a working life as prodigious and varied as Goan 
artist Mario Miranda’s can barely do justice to the artist’s life. Countless 
books on great artists like Da Vinci or Picasso only skim the surface. The 
process of creation is far more difficult to display than just the final work 
of art. Miranda has been luckier. In a new compilation of his work that is more 
diary and scrapbook than formal artistic odyssey, publisher Gerard da Cunha, 
himself a Goan,  
  
 realised the vastness of his task, and chose a different course. He gathered a 
handful of the artist’s long-time friends—Manohar Malgaonkar, Nissim Ezekiel, 
Ranjit Hoskote and others whose words matter—and in a literary goulash, set out 
a spread of writing, reflection and presentation. An artistic feast under a 
blue Goan sky. 
 Ever since there has been popular drawing in India, there has been Mario 
Miranda. In barber shop Illustrated Weeklies, in the Times of India, a Mario 
drawing leapt out at you with all its excesses: Miss Nimboopani, big-breasted 
and full-lipped; obese politicians, shifty-eyed and small-brained—Mario’s 
tableau underscore his conviction that nothing is sacred: people, religion, 
politics, history, taste, aspiration. Everything under the sun is potential 
target for lampoon. The book charts the extraordinary facility of the man. From 
diary sketches and cartoons that take playful potshots at small-town life and 
small-minded communities, to elaborate renderings of Goa that are complete 
stories in themselves, the pages are filled with energetic and teeming 
statements of Indian situations. 
 The artist in Miranda is driven by two impulses. To make a cartoon, spare and 
focused by humour, or to construct an elaborate drawing, painterly in intent, 
and defining space. Between the two, there are limitless explorations of human 
conditions—politics, religion, and the happy hypocrisy and humbug that define 
urban life. Known for the etching-like drawing style, the sketchbooks exhibit a 
variety that is as much M.C. Escher as Le Corbusier or Canaletto. As much Punch 
as they are The New Yorker. And of course, as much Mario. 
 At the outset Mario admits,"I just love to draw." Few people today would echo 
such a sentiment. In an age when Photoshop and Corel Draw have replaced the 
skill of drawing, few give it the attention it deserves. Yet with Mario there 
is the perennial artistic impulse to experiment with expression for its own 
sake. The travel series that includes New York, Japan, London, Paris is perhaps 
his most varied. Each scene is viewed from an outsider’s vantage, and 
deliberately constructed in outlines that resemble engravings. In some, lines 
are layered to create the effects of a painting; others evolve as vivid prints, 
filled with an animated light, graphic and precise. 
 His Goan record, drawn with loving care, is his most prolific and detailed. 
The darkness of church interiors, the white light on pastel houses, pudgy and 
self-absorbed holiday crowds—each fleeting moment consolidates into multiple 
and cumulative impressions. Mario records Goa like a doting father, faithfully 
recording every change into the family album. Growing up under its tropical 
lushness and pastel colonialism, the Goa drawings are a longing—a benign and 
pastoral hankering for the slow life, the Goa of childhood, where "there was 
music, love and laughter". The care with which each scene is constructed 
invariably resounds with celebration—weddings, feasts, funerals—and links you 
to a time before murder and drugs also became synonymous associations. 
 The excesses of Indian life at times overwhelm Mario’s art. In some of the 
more elaborate and overworked drawings it is hard to distil a single idea.And 
the distinction between ugly, beautiful, grotesque, delicate, brutal, or 
fanciful, all becomes clouded in superfluous detail. Is the artist deliberately 
confusing the viewer, or is he merely making a truthful representation of 
life’s messiness? Mario’s skill lies in the masterful austerity of line in his 
less finished drawings and the incisive wit of his cartoons. 
 I’ve always admired the artist’s deformations of Indian life, the perennial 
exaggeration of scenes from naughty to obscene, the delicate flourishes that 
mark out stereotypes. Drawing has been for Mario the first reaction—an intimate 
and spontaneous reflection of daily life made visible. In a career spanning 
five decades, few urban Indian homes have not resounded with the laughter of a 
Mario view of their local world. Even today many of the cartoons—devoid of 
politics and regional character—are fresh. The book is a pungent record of 
India, laced with infinite compassion. A bellyful of laughs and stinging 
truths, without cynicism or despair. An artist—a human first—sharing his 
provocative reflections with others in his own drawing room.




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