Sketches from the past
  • * Sketches from the past *

    NOSTALGIA Gopulu recalls the time when the city was a village, everything
    was simple, when you knew all your neighbours, and when coffee — not
    cappuccino — ruled!



    * Gopulu recreates scenes from yore (Clockwise from topmost left) A tram
    driver; typical Mylaporean office-goers; meeting over filter kaapi;
    rickshaws - a popular local transport; a toddy vendor *

    When I came to Chennai in 1941, I was but a 17-year-old student who wanted
    to learn about art. I met the legendary artist Maali of Ananda Vikatan, who
    was impressed by my cartoons. He asked me to do a few paintings for that
    year's Deepavali Malar, and the first I did was ‘Rama Pattabishekam'. Thus
    began my tryst with Ananda Vikatan.

    I stayed in Purasaiwalkam with a couple of friends in a house that was
    previously owned by Seshachalam, R.K. Narayanan's uncle. I did a lot of art
    work for private publishers, and spent most of my days walking from
    Purasaiwalkam to Royapettah and back — it was only a 20-minute walk then! It
    would be so silent you could hear the sounds of crickets and other insects.

    I would dine at Pankaja Lodge in Purasaiwalkam, where two meals and tiffin
    for a whole month would cost me only Rs. 7. Two bondas and a coffee in the
    evenings would cost an anna. Even then, I would have no money to spare; I
    lived frugally.

    When evacuation was announced because of World War II, I went back to
    in Madras on December 31, 1944, when Maali offered me a job in Vikatan. I
    joined on January 1, 1945, and stayed put for another twenty years.

    My first salary was Rs. 100 and even with that amount, I was able to save
    about Rs. 50 to send home to my father. Later when I shifted to Mylapore, I
    enjoyed food at the popular Krishna Lodge. I lived close to Venkatesa
    Agraharam near the tank. I would take a bus to Mount Road, where our office
    was. The area wasn't fully commercial yet, and was very thinly populated.


    * *

    * *

    Around 1946, when Mahatma Gandhi came to Madras, he held prayer meetings in
    an open area near Boag Road. People came from all over the South to listen
    to him..

    In 1953-54, writer Saavi and I did a series of travel pieces wherein we
    would visit places all over the country — he would write, while I did the
    sketches. We went to Ajanta, Ellora, Delhi, Jaipur, Calcutta, and many other
    places. The series became popular.

    Around 1956, I moved from Mylapore to R.A. Puram, where I've been staying
    for over 50 years now.

    Everything was simple back then — Madras was like a village, and you knew
    all your neighbours. Everyone walked to everywhere. Coffees were good, and
    there were no cappuccinos!
    *

    (As told to ANUSHA PARTHASARATHY)
    *

    *I REMEMBER*

    In those days, when you asked for directions, you'd be surprised at the way
    people would direct you. I remember that anyone who wanted directions from
    Alwarpet to St. Mary's Road got the same answer - `go left and you will see
    C.P. Ramaswamy Aiyar's house. A bit further down, you will reach C.V.
    Raman's house. Then you must turn left'. There were other such `sirs' whose
    houses people referred to as landmarks!

    *S. GOPALAN (GOPULU)* Born in Thanjavur in 1924 he was with Ananda Vikatan
    from 1945 to 1968, after which he shifted to advertising. He is known for
    his sketches of `Thillana Mohanambal' and `Washington-il Thirumanam'. A
    versatile artist, he has moved across genres - politics, social, humour etc.
    He started Ad Wave Advertising in 1972. In 1994, he left the advertising
    field, and became a freelance cartoonist for Kalki, Ananda Vikatan and other
    magazines.
    http://www.poetryinstone.in
    “*Here the language of stone surpasses the language of man*” – Nobel
    laureate, Rabindranath Tagore
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