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              "caraNa 
                calita janitam nee sahaja vilaasam 
                jwalita kiraNa kalitam soundarya vikaasam 
                nee abhinaya ushOdayam tilakincina ravi nayanam 
                gagana sarasi hrydayamlO 
                vikasita sata daLa sObhala SUVARANA KAMALAM" 
                 
              Thus 
                described the poet the concept of "swarna kamalam" in 
                the movie swarna kamalam. Swarna kamalam was not something that 
                was awarded to Meenakshi for her exemplary dancing prowess; swarna 
                kamalam did not allude to the proverbial lotus in her heart upon 
                the realization of the artistic satisfaction following "naaTya 
                nirvaaNam"; swarna kamalam was justfied as something 
                that the world would bloom as (gagani sarasi lO ravi nayanam), 
                by witnessing the brilliance of art performed by one, who was 
                baptized by fire.  
              Abstraction 
                - the ability to distill an idea to the core, beautifying the 
                distilled idea with another totally unrelated concept and ultimately 
                justify the original idea, or the ability to detach completely 
                from the original concept, rise above it and explain the trappings 
                of the idea. This process of digging into the minutia of an idea 
                or drawing oneself out of the concept to observe things on a macro 
                level, brings to fore the different shades of an idea by focusing 
                on unforeseen dimensions. Consider the thought process that went 
                into 
                "kaLLalOki kaLLu peTTi" 
                song from Nuvve Kaavaali, which squeezes the essence of the movie 
                into a few words and shows the inner turmoil and the deep conflict 
                that the character undergoes.  
               
                "gaalipaTam gaganaanindaa 
                egaraesae ee naeladaa 
                naa hrudayam nee celimidaa 
                muDi vaesae inkokaridaa" 
              Looking 
                glass - the poet looks at the world through a different lens. 
                Where the world sees night, he sees slumber, where the world light, 
                he sees rejuvenation, where the world sees defeat, he sees optimism, 
                where the world sees victory, he sees humility. Add to that the 
                symbiotic relationship that he shares with nature, the poet abstracts 
                the terrestrial ideas in ethereal terms, explaining the earthly 
                wordly relationships in surreal terms. Abstraction does not merely 
                confine to relating an idea to something bigger and grandiose 
                or splitting the idea to the point that the entire scheme becomes 
                malnourished. It grabs hold of the fine thread that runs through 
                the idea, understands the intrinsic nature of the concept and 
                then starts to prop the key element with a relationship in the 
                immediate vicinity that is closest to the central concept. Observe 
                the number of ways that the poet describes the dark night and 
                the sunrise the day after 
              "paamu 
                laanTi seekaTi paDaga dinci pOyindi 
                saavu laanTi seekaTi sooru daaTi pOyindi" - 
                tellarindi leganDoy from kaLLu 
                 
              "seekaTamma 
                seekaTi yeccanina seekaTi 
                muddugaa iddarike oddikaina seekaTi" - nammaku 
                nammaku from rudra veeNa 
               
                "karagaka pOdugaa cikkani ceekaTi 
                minuguru rekka caatu cinna kaantiki" - evarO okaru 
                from ankuram  
                 
              "mellagaa 
                mellagaa taTTi melukO melukO 
                manToo toorupae talupulae teeyangaa" - aasa aasa aasa 
                  
              Context 
                - no other ingredient is more essential to the fundamentals of 
                abstraction than context. The same items that pervade the poet's 
                universe take on different shapes, images and metaphors suiting 
                the changing needs and serving the purpose of the context. The 
                same sea works as an inexhaustible source of eternal hope in an 
                optimistic context; the same sea assumes the role of an unstoppable 
                force of devastating strength in a more pronounced context; the 
                same sea doubles as a vast mystery hiding the storms and whirlpools 
                within. The same set of tools that are at his disposal lend themselves 
                to be 'metaphorized' in different ways through different looking 
                glasses set in different contexts. By matching up the pattern 
                of the idea with what he finds around him and dressing it with 
                a proper context, the poet tends to throw light on the hidden 
                facets of the concept. Follow the flow of this thought when the 
                poet tries to equate incessant rocking of the waves in a sea to 
                the eternal optimism that nature inherently possesses 
              "nee 
                geeta menta taDimina 
                silalu sangeeta kaLalu kavanee 
                enta naadaamrutaana taDisina 
                isuka ravvanta karaga laedani telisi 
                astamistunna soorya taejaanni 
                kaDupulO mOsi nityamu  
                kotta aayuvistunna amrutamlaanTi aaSatO  
                egasi aavirai ashTa dikkulU daaTi 
                mabbulanu meeTi niluvuna nimirite  
                gaganamu karagada" - ae raagamundi from manusulO maaTa 
                 
              Poetry 
                consists in expression elevated in thought; poetry lies in equating 
                the extremities; poetry is defined as the art of make believe. 
                If a poet is to be measured for his ease with the language, eloquence 
                of expression and fluidity of thought, the yardstick that sizes 
                him up is the power of abstraction.. 
              Srinivas 
                Kanchibhotla  
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