ADVERTISEMENT

Dubai-based Indian student makes special Modi portrait as Republic Day gift

Published - January 23, 2021 04:51 pm IST - Dubai

The six-layered stencil portrait made by Saran Sasikumar was handed over to V Muraleedharan on the concluding day of his three-day visit to the UAE.

Minister of State for External Affairs and Parliamentary Affairs V. Muraleedharan with young artist Saran Sasi Kumar from Kerala now a resident in Dubai. Saran presented the beautiful portrait of a six-layered stencil painting of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a Republic Day gift. Twitter@VMBJP

A 14-year-old Indian student in Dubai has made a special portrait of Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a gift for the Republic Day.

The six-layered stencil portrait made by Saran Sasikumar from Kerala was handed over to Minister of State for External Affairs and Parliamentary Affairs V Muraleedharan on the concluding day of his three-day visit to the UAE on Thursday.

“Happy to meet in #Dubai the talented young artist Saran Sasi Kumar from Kerala, now a resident in #UAE. He presented this beautiful portrait, a 6 layered stencil painting, to our PM @narendramodi ji as a Republic Day gift. Truly inspiring! My best wishes to him,” Muraleedharan tweeted on Friday, sharing a photograph of him accepting the portrait from the boy and his parents.

ADVERTISEMENT

In the portrait, Prime Minister Modi is seen saluting, wearing a wide-brimmed cavalry hat with the logo of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF).

According to a Gulf News report, the portrait measures 90 cm by 60 cm.

It took around six hours to draw the picture with layers of six colour shades, said Saran, who has drawn 92 portraits including those of top UAE leaders during the COVID-19 pandemic.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is not the first Modi picture that Saran has drawn.

The grade nine student of Dubai-based New Indian Model School had also made a five-layered stencil portrait of Modi — which measured 1.5m by 1m — in October last year. He has bagged a grandmaster certification from Asia Book of Records and another certificate from India Book of Records for that stencil art portrait, the report said.

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT