Acrylic on Canvas
24 x 12 in
It seems like it is a wonderful experience to become a muse of any artist. To be admired and portrayed on their canvas seems surreal. Manandhar does not paint women in a representational sense. Instead, he evokes it—the feminine principle — through layers of color, texture, and gesture. He paints the women not just in form but in feeling. He does not direct his brush; instead, he allows it to follow its path, akin to a flowing river.
There is no single muse in these paintings. Rather, there is an archetype — a merging of Shakti, mother, goddess, and lover — whose presence is felt rather than seen. This feminine energy flows like a current beneath the abstraction, guiding the viewer into a space of contemplation, where love is not romanticized but revered as a force of awakening.
Over time, one realizes that the works are not about femininity — they are femininity. They speak of longing, creation, destruction, and rebirth. They are hymns to the unsaid, compositions made from memory, emotion, and intuition.