ARTIST STATEMENT
EXHIBITION HISTORY
GALLERIES
MY FAVORITES


Artist Statement -



George Oommen: The Image as the key

Born in Munnar, Kerala, India, and educated in India, Mexico, and the United States, George Oommen continues to derive artistic inspiration from the lush green landscapes of his homeland. Every winter, Oommen visits Mankotta, a small island in the inland waters of Kerala in southwestern India, ten miles from Oommen’s ancestral home. The weeks spent there fuel his painting year round.

What follows is a series of questions and answers by Oommen about his work. The conversation took place over a series of days but reflects a lifetime of thinking about the meaning of his art.

Q: What is the goal of your art? What inspires and motivates you as an artist?
A: My painting is fundamentally about communicating what I see in my mind’s eye. While verbal expression is the predominant form of communication, from early childhood, I have had a facility with visual expression. Painting is my vehicle for this.
The specific goal of my art changes with each series I embark upon, but the general objective is always to transfer the image in my mind to the canvas There are many sources of inspiration for me—it could be a situation, a landscape, or a figure that catches my eye. However, it must be an image that stays with me.

Q: Yes, your homeland, India, and specifically, Kerala, obviously have special meaning to you. What is it you are trying to capture in your work?
A: Yes, it is a very special place. My aim has been to capture the essence and the spirit of the visual Kerala .
I want to serve as an ambassador for this region, recreating this special place for the vast audience that has not had the privilege to experience it first hand.
Kerala, one of India’s twenty eight states, is a narrow strip of land lining the South West corner of India. Physically, the region is characterized by numerous rivers and backwaters that are quite panoramic. The network of waterways is lined with dense, verdant foliage in some places, but in others, there is an open latticework of fringed palm trees. Serving as the primary mode of transport, the channels are heavily trafficked during the day. However, very early in the morning the waters become perfectly still. When the waters are that placid, they become mirrors, reflecting the sky, greenery, and tranquility that abounds. This is my favorite time of day and scene to paint. In fact, some of my paintings have been hung inverted in galleries and printed upside down in publications because these mirrored images appear to be so real.

Q: What artists or genres have influenced your work?
A: My earliest and most formative influences were introduced to me through my Aunt--who was a Bengali. These influences include Sanyal, Shanti Niketan, Nandalal Bose, Subramanyam, Amrita Sher Gil, Jamini Roy, and Satyajit Ray in films. North Indian artists include Gujral, Pai, De, Kulkarni, Raza, Omprakash, and Hussain. Western artists include Touisiant, Molinari, Hertubise from Canada, and Klee, Miro, Mondrian, and Bauhaus artists. Among contemporary artists, I have long admired and been influenced by the work of Sir Howard Hodgkins.
What is interesting about Hodgkins work is how he captures the essence and the spirit of Kerala. His layering of paint captures the light and glow of the rural Kerala without resorting to any graphic representation. Kerala summer is live in his painting.
Indian music and textiles serve as additional influencing genres. In India, many forms of art are intertwined, such that practices in sculpture, textiles, drama, and music influence each other’s development. There are many traditions in all of the above. My effort has been to be aware of them while creating my own vocabulary.

Q: Your work has evolved through several series, can you describe the evolution of these phases?
A: Yes, I work in series. Series last with me until the image is resolved, about four to five years, sometimes longer. My paintings over the last decade or so, fall loosely into three categories: a series of large-scale landscapes; a series of small-scale expressionist works called Sacred Places Within You; and my most recent series of miniature paintings.
The large-scale landscapes are characterized by strong composition and vivid colors. Color very much reflects the place where I come from and is an important compositional element throughout all of my work.
The Sacred Places Within You series is evocative of a Hindu temple. In contrast to western ecclesiastical architecture, the eastern temple is designed such that as one proceeds into the temple, natural light begins to disappear—the farther one goes, the less light there is. This environment feels dark but intimate and somewhat mystical. The lack of peripheral vision encourages one to be introspective and to look into oneself to find "the divine", rather than to look for "the divine" in something external to oneself.
This newest series of miniatures is an idea borrowed from Northern Indian miniatures. In these small works (approximately 4"x4"), I am attempting to recreate ideas from my larger works in a smaller, more concentrated format. When one first looks at these miniatures, there appears to be a limited vocabulary used to create the painting. After an extended period of exposure to the image, the viewer experiences the visual energy that I am aiming to create through the use of layering of paint, and luminescent paint. It makes for an unusually dense and dynamic image. Layering for me is an important devise.

Q: There is a spiritual and/or metaphysical component to your art, can you share something about this?
A: Yes. We touched upon it when we discussed the Sacred Places Within You series This fascination with intensity, whether through image, color, or line, is something that permeates my work. I’m also fascinated by images, and how we process images. Whether these are retained in the retina or in the brain has been of continual interest

Artist Exhibitions



Selected Participant
by INDO AMERICAN CULTURAL COUNCIL
Painters without Borders 2012
Travelling Exhibition, Venues �and dates to be announced soon in 2012
�
Solo Exhibition George Oommen �
Agora Art gallery in �NYC
Nov1- Nov 21, 2012
opening on Nov 8, Thursday 2012 at 6.00 PM to 8.00 PM
Agora Art Gallery
530 West 25th Street
New York , NY
Tueday - Saturday 11.AM -6PM
Tel �212 226-4151
�





George Oommen
Attleboro Arts Museum
Entire month of November 2010
opening reception November 20, 2010 1-4PM
httpharvard magazine.com202009tropical-abstractions

ARKA gallery,
in collaboration with
The United States Consulate General in Vladivostok
introduces an
American Painter in Russia
Diplomacy through Art
Paintings of
GEORGE OOMMEN


Opening reception
Wednesday, June 30, 2010 from 17.00-20.00
Exhibit held for the month of July

Non-profit foundation of Culture

Contemporary Art Gallery Arka
5, Svetlanskaya str. Vladivostok, 690091, Russia
Tel. +7 4232 41 05 26, Fax +7 4232 32 06 63
info@arkagallery.ru
httpwww.artnet.comarka.html
www.arkagallery.ru

This exhibition coincides with the 150th anniversary of Vladivostok
and
the 4th of July, Americas Independence Day

George Oommen
A Kerala born Boston based Harvard educated Architect Painter
has worked for Harvard University for three decades and
has had his Retrospective in 2009 at
The Whistler Museum of Art in Lowell Mass
and has shown his work internationally


The art of George Oommen is nostalgic in the best unsentimental sense. His paintings evoke a kind of sheer unearthly beauty. They are inspired by a place on the planet, however. One of the impulses behind them is to evoke an atmosphere that is at an opposite pole from the austere ambiance of Boston where he resides most of the time.
Already George Oommen has been a painter for several decades and he has explored many styles and attitudes. In a very real sense he is a complete artist he is at a point where his work, though intensely retinal, has a wide range of meaning. Rooted in sensuousness, and realized in an everyday manner, Oommens vision of Kerala, has given him a concentrated approach to art and enabled him to achieve a conspicuous spiritual dimension. A series was entitled Sacred Places within You. And one can expect George Oommen to be preoccupied for some time exploring enchanted places.

William Zimmer, Contributing Art Critic to NY Times, New York City


--
George Oommen
painter.oommen@gmail.com
www.goommen.com
ARKA gallery,
in collaboration with
The United States Consulate General in Vladivostok
introduces an
American Painter in Russia
Diplomacy through Art
Paintings of
GEORGE OOMMEN


Opening reception
Thursday July 1, 2010 from 17.00-20.00
Exhibit held for the month of July

Non-profit foundation of Culture

Contemporary Art Gallery Arka
5, Svetlanskaya str. Vladivostok, 690091, Russia
Tel. +7 4232 41 05 26, Fax +7 4232 32 06 63
info@arkagallery.ru
httpwww.artnet.comarka.html
www.arkagallery.ru

This exhibition coincides with the 150th anniversary of Vladivostok
and
the 4th of July, Americas Independence Day

George Oommen
A Kerala born Boston based Harvard educated Architect Painter
has worked for Harvard University for three decades and
has had his Retrospective in 2009 at
The Whistler Museum of Art in Lowell Mass
and has shown his work internationally


The art of George Oommen is nostalgic in the best unsentimental sense. His paintings evoke a kind of sheer unearthly beauty. They are inspired by a place on the planet, however. One of the impulses behind them is to evoke an atmosphere that is at an opposite pole from the austere ambiance of Boston where he resides most of the time.
Already George Oommen has been a painter for several decades and he has explored many styles and attitudes. In a very real sense he is a complete artist he is at a point where his work, though intensely retinal, has a wide range of meaning. Rooted in sensuousness, and realized in an everyday manner, Oommens vision of Kerala, has given him a concentrated approach to art and enabled him to achieve a conspicuous spiritual dimension. A series was entitled Sacred Places within You. And one can expect George Oommen to be preoccupied for some time exploring enchanted places.

William Zimmer, Contributing Art Critic to NY Times, New York City


--
George Oommen
painter.oommen@gmail.com
www.goommen.com
George Oommen
American Painter in Russia
Diplomacy through Art
Sponsored also by The US consulate in Vladivostok
ARK Gallery in Vladivostok
July1- August 1 2010




Whistler Musueum of Art George Oommen A Retrospective
243 worthen street
Lowell Mass USA
978 452 7641
httpwww.whistlerhouse.org
Wednesday -saturday 11.00AM to 4.00PM
July 1- July 31 2009
George Oommen Paintings
Reception July 18, 2009
5-7PM
In the Parker art gallery

Visions of Kerala George Oommen
Exhibitions in 2007-2008
Dec 24-30 2007 New Delhi India
followed by exhibitions in Hyderabad, Bangalore and Thiruvanthapuram
Sponsored by Kerala Tourism
painter.oommen@gmail.com




CONCURRENT SHOWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT George Oommen, 617.592.3941
www.goommen.com


George Oommen Visions of Kerala
September 1, 2005 through October 15, 2005 @ Locco Ritoro Gallery
Opening Reception September 9, 5-7 p.m.

George Oommen Sacred Places
September 16, 2005 through October 12, 2005 @ Harvard University
Artist�s Reception September 17, 5-7 p.m.
George Oommen is pleased to announce two concurrent showings of his work in September 2005. George Oommen Visions of Kerala opens at the Locco Ritoro Gallery on September 1. This exhibit will feature both large and small-scale paintings inspired by the artist�s homeland in India. Oommen�s newest series, Kanjeevaram, will be featured for the first time. The classic Southern-Indian bridal saris known for their bold, bright color inspire these new works.
Across the Charles River, in Harvard Square, George Oommen Sacred Places will be on view until October 12. These paintings echo an earlier series called, The Sacred Places Within You. These color-field works, created with muted, numinous hues, pose the question, �where does the inner sanctuary reside Each painting has a bright and luminous spot, or small area, that stands out against the surface of the picture plane. The area becomes a focal point, created through color and composition, where the viewer�s eye naturally comes to rest. Individually, and collectively, these works encourage the viewer to reflect on his or her own spirituality.
Born in Munnar, Kerala, India, and educated in India, Mexico, and the United States, George Oommen continues to derive artistic inspiration from the lush green landscapes of his homeland. Every winter, Oommen visits Mankotta, a small island in the inland waters of Kerala in southwestern India, ten miles from Oommen�s ancestral home. The weeks spent there fuel his painting year round.

20 of the proceeds from sales of Oommen�s work will be donated to the Association for Indias Development AID, specifically to the Relief Rehabilitation Fund. AID is a voluntary non-profit organization committed to promoting sustainable, equitable and just development in India, by working with grassroots organizations and movements in India.

THE ART OF GEORGE OOMMEN

By William Zimmer, contributing Art critic for the New York Times

�The art of George Oommen is nostalgic in the best, unsentimental sense. His paintings evoke a kind of sheer, unearthly beauty. They are inspired by a place on the planet, however�For a few weeks every year Oommen goes to Kerala, at the southern tip of India, where he was born and raised. Kerala is not that well-trafficked but is known far and wide as an earthly paradise. He immerses himself in the tropical climate and rich color and this supplies him with images and sensations to take back to New England and convert into paintings.�



By Dominique Nahas, Critic for Art in America, New York editor for dArt International

�Cyclic time and linear time poetically intermesh in Oommens lush panoramas and intense close-ups. This is sensed through the artists syncopated interplay of dominant verticals and horizontals and the effective use of colored, drizzled light and shadow in the work. Perhaps it is the abstract visual expression of what one might call intimate distance which is most compelling in Oommens work.
There is an elegiac wistfulness in the painters work, a sense of passing time that is deeply and paradoxically grounded in his works luminous depictions of eternal Kerala. It is this unfolding drama which is at the core of George Oommens vision. It gives his work humanity, momentum and depth that is rare in landscape work.�

George Oommen Visions of Kerala
Locco Ritoro Gallery
450 Harrison Avenue. SoWa District
Boston, MA 02118
loccoritoro@aol.com

George Oommen Sacred Places
Holyoke Center Exhibition Space
Holyoke Center Arcade
1350 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
For more information about George Oommen�s work, please visit
www.absolutearts.comportfoliosggeorgeoommen and www.goommen.com
George Oommen Visions of Kerala
September 1, 2005 through October 15, 2005
Gallery hours Tuesday through Saturday 11.00AM-5.00PM
Artists reception September 9, 2005 5.30PM-8.30PM
Locco Ritoro Gallery 450 Harrison Avenue, Storefront 37,Boston, MA 02118
t 617.542.1010 f 617 542.8090 e-mail locoritoro@aol.com

George Oommen Sacred Places within you
September 15 to October 15
Artists Reception September 17
Harvard University Information Center
1350 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138


www.absolutearts.comportfoliosggeorgeoommen

www.goommen.com

Locco Ritoro Gallery is the brainchild of Paul Lam. This new gallery opened in November of 2004 at 450 Harrison Avenue in the South End of Boston. With 19 other galleries in the same building, hundreds of visitors attend their monthly Friday evening opening receptions. However, Lam plans on promoting more than just visual arthe will include live music and other hip events think fashion shows to create a total cultural destination.

For more information please contact Paul Lam 617.542.1010

...

Artist Publications




http://harvardmagazine.com/2010/09/tropical-abstractions


Monsoon Magic/ Rain Painter

http://www.hindu.com/mag/2006/07/09/stories/2006070900140200.htm

ARTICLE 535 - Monsoon magic
[July 09, 2006] SHALEENA KORUTH for THE HINDU.

George Oommen paints to reawaken the feeling the image brought when he first saw it. Once the feeling returns, the painting is over.

His works are impressionistic in their fidelity to colour and light.



Sensory and tactile: "Kerala Altered Reflections"
KERALA'S oldest memory — the monsoon — is also George Oommen's. In his landscapes, the rain falls in all colours. The insane wetness, glistening mornings, and rivers, now stunned, now set in motion, but always receiving Kerala's quintessential light — this is the stuff of Oommen's art. As unprecedented prices and ongoing media attention award Indian contemporary art a place to reckon with in the international scene, Oommen is a visual ambassador for Kerala, with his "extravagantly charged vitality reminiscent of the sensual worlds of Henri Matisse", according to Dominique Nahas, critic for "Art in America". His most recent exhibitions, held in September and October 2005 were in Boston, Massachusetts.

Sensory awakening

Looking at one of Oommen's pieces, one is aware of a sensory awakening. In "Kerala Altered Reflections" (2002, acrylic on canvas) hoary thickets of rain-deluged palms intensify at the canvas's centre; the monsoon weaves both sky and land into a luminous wash that drizzles tropical yellows, blues and greens into murky, many-layered water. The suggestion of torrential rain places you feet first in the squelching palm grove. This tactile dimension of Oommen's landscapes is most striking. Most of the inspiration for Oommen's landscapes comes from Mankotta, a secluded resort in Haripad that he visits regularly in the winters. Not given to much emotional display, Oommen lit up as he discussed his plans for the future: a visit in summer to pursue the harvest's radiant yellows. "Kerala", a painting by British artist Sir Howard Hodgkin, has haunted and challenged Oommen since he first saw it in New York in the early 1990s. It uses a shade of yellow that Oommen calls `spectacular'. Oommen refuses to identify with an artistic movement or even define his style, which is largely abstract. His works are expressionistic in their nostalgia for Kerala and a heightened spiritual awareness; they are impressionistic in their fidelity to colour and light as it might appear on a rippling sari or river. The difference does not matter, because he paints to reawaken the feeling the image brought when he first saw it. Once the feeling returns, the painting, or series, is over. At Mankotta, Oommen immerses himself in the visual and physical details of Kerala. Often waking as early as 4.00 a.m., Oommen records the unfolding of a typical day with photographs, sketches and his mind's eye. The backwaters are quietest and most still at dawn; these are the moments Oommen draws upon. He paints though only in Boston, painting only if his remembrance justifies creation. "If it (the feeling) is lost, it's not worth painting", he says. As if the lush nostalgia on his canvases is not testament enough to his affection for Kerala, Oommen's recollections — even his earliest — are. With unmistakable fondness, he recounts learning to draw Malayalam letters in the sand at the village school in Mepral, his hometown. A favourite of Oommen's pieces is a three-panelled landscape "Mankotta Reflections" (2000, 12 ft x 6 ft, acrylic on canvas). Unlike most of his work, which uses bright, vibrant hues, this is a muted construction of whites, creams, blacks and browns with smatterings of gold. Oommen's intention here was to capture a moment in the water when its reflections were flowing away with it. It started out as an experiment in detail, but was executed on a large scale.



Oommen in his workspace with "Mankotta Reflections" in the background.
Oommen's "Kanjeevaram" series, he says, are more universal in appeal, especially in the West. When asked where he finds saris to inspire him, he smiled and showed a scrapbook of sari advertisements he has collected! Here, Oommen is experimenting in colour, texture and technique. "I'm letting it go... I'm learning what colours on top of what colours produce what kind of effect... I'm learning, but there's a very definitive framework. It's a border, it's a sari, it's got to be silk-like."

Formative years

Oommen's years at the Delhi School of Architecture were artistically formative. His aunt, a painter, introduced Oommen to the works of Jamini Roy and Nandalal Bose from Shanti Niketan. Elizabeth Gauba, teacher and founder of Shiv Niketan, a well-known school in Delhi, introduced him to contemporary Western art. Satish Gujral's yellows, inspired by the colours of Mexico, caught Oommen's eye and was instrumental in his choice of San Miguel Allende, his future art school. Oommen's studio in Arlington, a Boston suburb, is a converted garage that opens out into a wild overgrown yard. A wooden stand doubles as an easel and can be adjusted to hold different sized canvases. A narrow gutter runs through the floor of the studio on one side to catch the drips that Oommen's sprays create. He uses a variety of spray guns with different nozzles to spray colour, turpentine or water on his paintings, depending on whether the medium is oil or water-based. The result is Oommen's signature drip effect. Paintings hang on all walls, and among them was "Sacred Places 1"(1997, Oil on canvas), a composition in green and yellow with an absorbing, meditative quality.



Sacred Places 1.
In the early 1970s, Oommen saw a series of films by Louise Malle titled "Phantom India". One featured a young girl in a Hindu temple, performing with an intensity that deeply impressed Oommen. Later visiting a temple, he was struck by the architecture of its inner sanctum. Oommen, who was raised a Christian, found that unlike the floodlit altars in churches, the temple is entered from a larger, well-lit space to a much smaller, dark space where the only source of light is the gleaming idol. "You're in a space where you completely lose your peripheral vision and you can hear your heartbeat." This inspired Oommen to create "Sacred Places Within You", paintings where he literally excavates a bright, saturated spot of colour from a surrounding darkness. A "Sacred Places" painting collapses the viewer's sense of space, chipping away at it till there is nothing but canvas and the discussion of colour and light within. It demands quiet contemplation before granting an understated grace. After creating more than 60 pieces, Oommen now owns only four or five that he will not part with. It is among his most successful and resonant series. According to Dr. John Bowles, a contemporary art historian from UCLA, "Oommen is creating something that's a precious, devotional object. There is a lushness ... the brushstrokes are active, but not hectic." As he showed me around, I asked Oommen if he intends to stay with his favourite theme, Mankotta. No, he replied. Always restless, he wants to grow and keep learning. But surely, the Kerala of Oommen's memory can earn no rebuff in his plans for paintings to come, for the past must certainly be the hinge the future swings upon.

Article Courtesy: THE HINDU.

posted by SB at 10:43 AM 0 comments


The art of George Oommen

From a short essay by William Zimmer (contributing critic for the New York Times) April 2003

The art of George Oommen is nostalgic in the best, unsentimental sense. His paintings evoke a kind of sheer, unearthly beauty. They are inspired by a place on the planet, however. One of the impulses behind them is to evoke an atmosphere that is at an opposite pole from the austere ambiance of Boston where he resides most of the time. For a few weeks every year Oommen goes to Kerala, at the southern tip of India, where he was born and raised. Kerala is not that well-trafficked but is known far and wide as an earthly paradise. He immerses himself in the tropical climate and rich color and this supplies him with images and sensations to take back to New England and convert into paintings.
At present Oommen is inspired by two main forces. The first is the stylistic one of Indian miniatures. This influence is felt in the compact format he often favors, a square within a square. Although as in the miniatures the emphasis is on line, an American viewer might be reminded of abstract expressionists such as Newman and Rothko whose compositions reflect geometry whose canvases evoke a limitless space. It is not surprising that Oommen's art has underpinnings of geometry for he is an architect and city planner and these are both rational disciplines. But his elemental images, even if they are details made grand or washes of various shades of green, hint at an unbounded hedonism.
The second main influence is a contemporary painter: Sir Howard Hodgkin, one of the foremost British artists. He is a painter who has gone to Kerala. Hodgkin mines everyday reality for his imagery which initially reads as abstraction. Likewise, something in an Oommen painting that might at first seen like an abstract exercise in achieving luminosity could turn out to be a near-precise description of light striking a river in Kerala.
Metaphors in paint for the nature of memory
William Zimmer Contributing Art Critic To NY Times. New York City April 2003

Kerala As Proustian Madeleine: The Landscapes Of George Oommen
By Dominique Nahas , Critic for Art in America, New York editor for d'Art International and is based in Manhattan.

In his abstracted landscapes George Oommen depicts the area of his birthplace, the Spice Coast of Kerala. He pays at times particular homage to the memory of the feelings and sights of Mankotta, a small island in the inland waters of his favorite region. We are made, as viewers, to participate in Oommen's re-creation of his native land's heartbeat : its reflections, colors, light, shadows, natural life and, most importantly, its radiant intensity.
In the artist's paintings and drawings the eye floats amidst a panoramic network of sun and moon - lit waterways and lush foliage. These primordial images are composites pictorially reconstituted from the memories of many years' real-time experiences in the area. (The artist no longer lives in India, but returns to Kerala on a regular basis). The images before us depicts the places and spaces of Kerala, in the southwestern Munnar region of India, where the artist was born. This is a fact. Yet there is so much more to Oommen's world than empirical reality.
It is evident that the artist's journey into the self are mirrored in the landscapes of his beginnings. Oommen's repeated imagery, with its drenched pools, drizzles and pockets of color, suggests an extravagantly charged vitality reminiscent of the sensual worlds of Henri Matisse and of Howard Hodgkin. Equally important is Oommen's painterly capacity to invoke as well as to evoke a spiritual (and changeable) center as well as a specific natural habitat in the real life-world.
In his writings the artist has stated that one of his main considerations is" Whether (images) are retained in the retina or in the brain. Also of importance to me is the spiritual self. Where does the inner sanctuary lie?" The artist has also often noted how he has been inspired by this habitat and how he has shaped his ambition to become Kerala's "chief ambassador" to the world. The work at hand is also a map of Oommen's ongoing interior and changeable journey into the self and its awareness of such. It is this displacement between what is known of a life-world geographic place called "Kerala" , actually, by...

Artist Collections



IN THE COLLECTION OF

A ABRAHAM AND GRACY ABRAHAM, Trivandrum, India
MODUPE NYIKOALE AKINOLA Cambridge Mass
DEENA ANDERSON Mass USA
EBRAHIM ALKAZI , London ,UK
DONU ARAPURA , Chicago USA
SHERYL BARNES CAMBRIDGE MASS
THARANA BARKATT , New Jersey ,USA, Mumbai India
PAKHI AND SHEKAR BHATIA , New Delhi ,India
DIANNA BHOMER , Boston Mass USA
MALAINA BOWKER Mass
LAURA TENNY BROGNA Mass USA
CHRIS CARVELL, Denver, Col,USA
JAI AND LAILA CHACKO, Mankotta, Kerala, India,
XAN CHACKO,NYC, NEWYORK
ANONYMOUS COLLECTOR
JOHN CARLSON Cambridge, Mass USA
BILL AND JO CLEARY Arbundale Mass USA
AILEEN CONNOLY Dorchester MASS
SHIELA CONNOR , Mass, USA
ROBERT COOK , Mass, USA
LEE COTT Cambridge Mass USA
VIJAY CULAS
ALAXANDRA DAILEY, Mass, USA

WENDY DAVIDSON , New York ,USA
LOU DELORENZO, Florida, USA
KATE DEVITO Mass
Dianne and Arthur Dickerman, Newton,Mass USA
BOB BRADLEY AND MARIA DOUNELLIS, Boston Mass USA
LAUREN DOUGHERTY Boston Mass USA
NICHOLAS DOWN, UK
SUSAN DUNEK, Chicago
ALAN AND FRANCOISE DUNEFSKY , New York
LINDA EVANS , New York
ROGER FERRIS,Connecticut USA
EMIL FREI ANDOVER MASS
STEPHANIE FILLIOS CAMBRIDGE MASS
TORY FLETCHER Mass
SANTHA AND YOHAN JOHN , Hyderabad, AP, India
JEFF GANNEM Mass USA
MARA GEOGHEGAN, Arlington Mass USA
ANN GEOGHEGHAN AND SLATER ANDERSON, Cambridge, Mass USA
TERESA GOODE Kingston Mass, USA
BILL AND KATHY GOODE Dorchester Mass USA
RAZIA GROVER, New Delhi, India
SATISH GROVER, New Delhi India USA
PAT HENRY Sudbury Mass
JACK HARNEY MASS USA
HARVARD UNIVERSITY Cambridge Mass
CYNTHIA JENSEN, Cambridge Mass
STEPHANIE AND DAVID KATZ, Somerville Mass USA
Senator JOHN F KERRY Boston MASS
NAOMI KRASNER,Newton Mass USA
KATE LOOSIAN,Arlington Mass USA
ACHLA MADAN AND ASHOK HINGORANI ,Concord Mass USA
RUCHIKA MADAN,SOMERVILLE MASS,
DR AND MRS K.T. MATHEW, Waltham Mass USA
MR. AND MRS P.M.MATHEW , Chennai India
DR SALIM MATHEW Washington DC USA
MARY MATHEW Sharon Mass
JIM MCGRATH , New Hampshire USA
GREG MILLER , Watertown Mass USA
RESHMA NARULA
LAURA NUNN, Chelmsford Mass USA
SUE OATEY, New Jersey USA
ALEXANDRA OFFIONG Mass USA
CYNYHIA PATTERSON,New Mexico USA
RAM PRASAD Seattle Washington USA
JACK AND JANE REARDON Cohasset ,Mass,USA
MIA REYNOLDS , Washington DC USA
CHRISTIE REYNOLDS, Washington DC USA
JOHN PLOTKIN AND JAIME RICH, Newton, Mass ,USA
PAUL RICCARDI Mass USA
PETER RILEY Brookline Mass USA
TINA AND JAN ROLFF Cambridge Mass USA
LAURA ROME Maynard Mass
BOB and MARY JO SARGENT Mass USA
JEANICE SHERMAN Worester Mass USA
RICK SCHUBERT MASS USA
SEAN STEWART milton Mass USA
MARTHA FRIEND AND EDWARD SMITH Cambridge Mass USA
NOMI AND JOHN STADLER New Hamshire USA
GENERAL SUNDERJI New Delhi, India
ERMANNO TEDESCHI Torino ITALIA
RENU THOMAS New Delhi, India
MARY ANN THOMPSON Cambridge Mass
NISHAT KOSHY VERGHESE California,USA
MARK VERKENNIS Salem Mass
DEWIE WEINER Lexington Mass,USA
PETER WHITE Mass USA
TOTTA AND SUZANNE ZETTURLUND Toronto Ontario Canada




SUZANNE AND TOTTA ZETTERLUND Toronto Canada...

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