The Score Magazine March 2020 issue | Page 48

MUKESH AMARAN ALBUM ARTicle AKSHAY AGRAWAL Hello, a little bit about yourself and your background in arts and music? I am Akshay Agrawal and I am a Wonder Junkie! Amidst the engineering trauma, I became a self-taught designer! I started off doing UI/UX designs for projects, posters, illustrations and branding for college events like TEDx, pushing me out of my comfort zone every time. Also, the love for art, philosophy, and music has always intrigued me to imagine the meaning behind them, thus giving me opportunities to render my imaginative fantasies! At this point in your career, what role did music have to play in you getting to where you are? Visual representation of music has always been part of my life directly and indirectly! My other passion, dance has always taught me how the music makes you feel, learning the right intention always helps you to deliver the right message. I wanted to convey the same story in the art using similar metaphors. Darkness and Bright Sky representing integral part of life, Sun and Moon to describe beauty in both situations, Stars and Birds to represent opportunities and freedom, Dead and Blooming Flowers in the heart to represent one’s own grief and desires, and absence of stars in front of eyes to show that how a person becomes blind to opportunities and happiness because of self- doubts! Bringing all this together to convey the meaning and exporting the last iteration at 4 am surprised me with output, thus ironically clearing my own self-doubts! Tell us a little bit about the process that is involved in making a piece by Akshay . Music is an integral part of my work-life, as every project nudges me to hunt for the right playlist to set the mood. Music and Pop culture have always fascinated me, I always wanted to part of it and visual arts has helped me make my way into it. I always believe in investing the major time in researching and understanding the concept. Curiosity helps in boosting creativity. Without the research, anything remains meaningless. Once the idea is there, It just takes playing with tools to portray it. Tell us about your collaboration with Kenji Distobot from conception to creation and the end product. Tell us about your art style and the concepts behind your artworks. Kenji is a good friend of mine and we have previously worked together on other projects. When he pitched me the concept, it was quite experimental than his other projects and he allowed me the liberty to experiment myself. The song Khoj is about a person’s introspection 46 of his own split nature. How he views the world in a negative way and motivates himself to look for the positive side. It was an attempt to spread awareness about self-care and mental health. The lyrics are very metaphorical and relatable to my own life on goings. The Score Magazine highonscore.com Good storytelling always gets sold. I try implementing this with vector arts, typography, and minimal approach. Photography makes one relate to reality, and illustrations let them imagine, and I always aim for that.